Justice Department: Over 100 Suspected MS-13 Members Charged This Year
Federal prosecutors have charged 127 suspected members of the violent MS-13 street gang this year, and six face sentences of life in prison after being convicted in 2020, the Justice Department said Wednesday.
The statistics — detailed in a report released by the Justice Department on Wednesday — emphasize the priority the Trump administration has given to prosecuting members of MS-13 and the aggressive effort by the FBI and other law enforcement agencies to dismantle the gang.
MS-13, also known as Mara Salvatrucha, is considered one of the top organized crime threats in the United States.
The Justice Department’s statistics show that federal prosecutors brought cases against 749 defendants in MS-13 cases since 2016. Six defendants convicted this year were sentenced to life in prison and 26 others received sentences of over five years in federal prison.
Attorney General William Barr has also directed prosecutors to seek the death penalty in two MS-13 cases, including the case against Alexei Saenz, an MS-13 leader on Long Island.
Saenz was charged in seven killings in New York, including those of teenagers Nisa Mickens and Kayla Cuevas, who were slashed with machetes and beaten to death with baseball bats in September 2016.
The gang has been blamed for dozens of killings on Long Island since 2016.
The statistics show federal agents believe MS-13 has been active in about two dozen states in the U.S., primarily on the East Coast.
The gang, generally known for extortion and violence, has long been present in California, New York, New Jersey, Maryland and Virginia.
MS-13 recruits young teenagers from El Salvador and Honduras, though many gang members were born in the U.S. Long Island has a large population of unaccompanied minors from Central America.
MS-13 is believed to have been founded as a neighborhood street gang in Los Angeles in the mid-1980s by immigrants from El Salvador.
That country’s Supreme Court defined the gang as a terrorist group in 2015, allowing courts there to give tougher sentences to its members.
The Justice Department’s 17-page report details how “leaders of MS-13 based in Central America have directed MS-13 criminal activities in the United States.”
“These leaders — many of whom were previously deported from the United States — operated with impunity because of failure of the rule of law and law enforcement corruption in these countries; a lack of law enforcement training; and a lack of coordination between U.S. law enforcement and their Central American counterparts,” the report says.
Federal and local law enforcement officials have been working with partners in El Salvador to identify suspected MS-13 leaders for years and to share intelligence.
Barr visited the country in May 2019 to meet with his counterparts from El Salvador, Guatemala and Honduras to discuss how to combat the surge of MS-13 violence.
The Western Journal has reviewed this Associated Press story and may have altered it prior to publication to ensure that it meets our editorial standards.
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