Two men pleaded
guilty on Friday, March 2, to conspiracy to commit hostage taking, while seven
others entered guilty pleas to conspiring to harbor illegal aliens, announced
U.S. Attorney Kenneth Magidson, Southern District of Texas. The investigation
was conducted by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement's (ICE) Homeland
Security Investigations (HSI), and the Mission Police Department.
After receiving a
ransom demand on Sept. 20, 2011, the relative of an illegal alien contacted law
enforcement authorities the next day. The investigation led authorities to an
area around Moorefield Road
in Mission , Texas , where surveillance was initiated.
Afterwards, three men were discovered in the vicinity, two of whom were later
apprehended: Juan De Dios Cedillo-Narvaez, 30, and Luis Fernando
Cedillo-Narvaez, 43, both Mexican citizens. At that time, the cell phone used
to make the ransom calls was found in the possession of Cedillo-Narvaez who
admitted that aliens were being held in a nearby apartment.
Consent was given
to search the apartment by its renter, Martha Guadalupe Quiroga, 32, also a
Mexican citizen. At the apartment, HSI special agents discovered 18 illegal
aliens being held hostage; they were from Ecuador ,
Guatemala and Honduras . The
victims stated they had been kidnapped from another location and forced to call
their families and ask for money or they were going to be injured or something
bad would happen to them.
The investigation
by HSI and the Mission Police Department led to the identification and arrest
of the following seven other suspects: Pablo Zepeda-Lechuga, 41, Balatazar
Arcos-Torres, 35, and Jose Luis Lopez-Villanueva, 28, all citizens of Mexico
illegally present in the United States; and Jose Angel Lopez, 21, Ricardo Lopez,
19, Osvaldo Ivan Rodriguez, 22, and Sarai Torres-Hernandez, 25, all U.S.
citizens.
Juan De Dios
Cedillo-Narvaez and Luis Fernando Cedillo-Narvaez were responsible for guarding
the aliens at the stash house and having them call their families for ransom money
in addition to organizing the hostage-taking operation. Quiroga provided her
apartment to harbor the victims and also provided food and water to them.
Rodriguez and Torres-Hernandez collected the ransom and smuggling fees from
different Western Union locations.
Zepeda-Lechuga, Lopez-Villanueva, Arcos-Torres and Ricardo Lopez took the
victims from their original location and transported them to the stash house
where they were ultimately held for ransom.
On Mar. 2, Juan De
Dios Cedillo-Narvaez and Luis Fernando Cedillo-Narvaez pleaded guilty to
conspiracy to commit hostage taking before U.S. District Judge Randy Crane.
Sentencing is scheduled for May 16, at which time they face up to life in
prison, a $250,000 fine or both. Quiroga, Zepeda-Lechuga, Lopez-Villanueva,
Arcos-Torres, Ricardo Lopez, Rodriguez and Torres-Hernandez pleaded guilty to
conspiracy to harbor illegal aliens and face a maximum of 10 years in prison, a
$250,000 fine or both. They are also set for sentencing on May 16.
The case against Jose
Angel Lopez is still pending. He faces charges of conspiracy to commit hostage
taking and conspiracy to harbor illegal aliens. He is presumed innocent unless
and until convicted through due process of law.
Assistant U. S.
Attorneys Patricia A. Rigney, Kristen Rees and Jimmy Leo, Southern District of
Texas, prosecuted the case.
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