Federal agents bust reputed smuggling ring with ties to L.A. gang will racial profling be brought up?

Federal authorities said this afternoon they have arrested eight people — and are seeking a ninth — with ties to the Drew Street clique of the Avenues gang on suspicion of drug trafficking and human smuggling.

Agents with U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement served search and arrest warrants Tuesday night and this morning at locations in the Imperial Valley and Los Angeles.

One of the sites in the 2800 block of Avenue 34 in northeast L.A. was the base of operations for the alleged smuggling ring and served as a "drop house" before illegal immigrants were taken to their final locations, ICE spokeswoman Virginia Kice said in a prepared statement.

The ring charged people up to $4,500, provided phony immigration papers and smuggled the human cargo into the United States from Mexico by concealing them in trucks and hidden compartments of vehicles.

Some of the defendants face up to 30 years in federal prison if convicted on all counts.
A federal grand jury indictment names Teodoro Alvarez-Estrada, 56, and his wife, Aquilina Alvarez, 56. They were arrested after a search of their northeast Los Angeles home turned up three firearms, including a semiautomatic handgun and a .357 Magnum revolver, ICE officials said.

Also arrested were Eduardo Alvarez-Marquez, 35, of Los Angeles, and Holtville residents Martina Araceli Carreon, 44, and Jose Carreon, 47. Others in custody included Calexico residents Ruben Servin-Mejia, 37, and Maria Toledo-Fierros, 49, and Yesenia Rubi Mendoza-Gonzalez of Mexicali, Mexico.

The investigation into the smuggling ring began in August 2008 from information developed by the Los Angeles Police Department and federal authorities in their probe of crime tied to the Avenues street gang.

The ring is alleged to have smuggled over 200 illegal immigrants into the U.S. annually. Federal investigators said at one point the alleged smugglers were negotiating with Avenues gang members to bring Maria Leon, matriarch and shot-caller of the Drew Street clique, into the United States from Mexico.

Leon, now serving an eight-year federal prison sentence for racketeering crimes related to the Avenues street gang, eventually used another smuggling group, federal authorities said.

“This case illustrates the disturbing ties we’re increasingly finding between local street gangs and criminal organizations,” said Kevin Kozak, deputy special agent in charge of the Los Angeles ICE office. “ICE is working not only to target and dismantle violent street gangs, but also the criminal organizations that support the gangs’ illegal activities.”
Blanca Zendejas Nienhaus, an ACLU of California spokesperson, told about 15 people who huddled in the square during a rain-soaked morning press conference. "This has led to an atmosphere of terror where immigrants are afraid to contact police."

Racial profiling has a bad rap. This system is employed in Israel in the airline industry and they have never had a terrorist take control or destroy an airplane.

If you investigating a Korean gang, or a Mexican gang, or a White Supremacist gang….. shouldn’t you look for suspects that fit the description??? People in regular society discriminate and racially profile each other on a daily basis, shouldn’t the police?

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6 Responses to Federal agents bust reputed smuggling ring with ties to L.A. gang will racial profling be brought up?

  1. james says:

    Racial profiling has a bad rap. This system is employed in Israel in the airline industry and they have never had a terrorist take control or destroy an airplane.

    If you investigating a Korean gang, or a Mexican gang, or a White Supremacist gang….. shouldn’t you look for suspects that fit the description??? People in regular society discriminate and racially profile each other on a daily basis, shouldn’t the police?
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    I hate this "touchy feel good" society that is emerging. You are going to piss people off with some of the things you do, it doesn’t make you a bad person if you do it, just don’t abuse it!

  2. molkey says:

    Of course it will be brought up ,what other defense have they got. To me racial profiling should be used without fear in law enforcement. It should be encouraged.*
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  3. Bunny D. says:

    There is a difference between "Immigrants" and "Illegal Immigrants"…………Illegals break our federal laws when they set forth illegally on our soil. If I had entered a country by breaking their laws…hello…I would be afraid to contact police also. Leave it up to the ACLU to back law breakers…….And yes, RACE will be brought up. No matter what the color…….RACE is always brought up. Very sad.
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  4. Jimmy Dean-SAUSAGEman says:

    Yep, racial profiling surely will be brought up-it always is by illegals…Some of those "sausage" brains may be sentenced to 30 years in prison?..That`s like half to one million dollars cost to tax payers each…Much more economical solution is to send them over to my meat grinder, and I`ll make delicious breakfast links out of them – for export to Mexico.
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  5. George L says:

    it already has. you just brought it up.
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  6. Sasori says:

    Blanca Zendejas Nienhaus, an ACLU of California spokesperson, told about 15 people who huddled in the square during a rain-soaked morning press conference. "This has led to an atmosphere of terror where immigrants are afraid to contact police."

    When have illegal aliens ever contacted the police! A large majority have openly lived here for decades. Does anyone truly believe they fear being deported if they contact law enforcement? They only ones deported are those using fake, stolen or borrowed ID’s and socials.
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