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Feds: L.A.-based Latino gangs waged 'racist campaign'Daily News Wire Services Updated: 05/21/2009 02:12:56 PM PDT
In what federal officials called the ``largest gang
takedown in United States history,'' 63 alleged gang members in the Hawaiian
Gardens area were arrested today on drug and racketeering charges.
The gang was targeted following the murder of Los Angeles sheriff's
Deputy Jerry Ortiz four years ago, said U.S. Attorney Thomas P. O'Brien.
The early morning raids were aimed at 88 reputed gang members who were
among 147 named in five federal indictments unsealed today, he said.
``A year and a half ago I announced a major federal indictment that
charged 102 members of the Valencia 13 street gang here in Los Angeles,''
O'Brien said at a news conference at the sheriff's Lakewood Station.
``At that time it was the largest federal gang sweep in history and
caused a significant impact on a South Los Angeles street gang in this
community,'' he said. ``Today I'm here to announce an even larger sweep,
something that is certain to have a tremendous and positive impact on the city
of Hawaiian Gardens.
He said about 1,400 law enforcement officials, including members of 17
separate SWAT teams, fanned out across Hawaiian Gardens and nearby communities
to arrest 88 people linked to a gang that has plagued the area for 50 years.
``Today's arrests stem from a series of federal indictments that charge
147 separate defendants, making this operation the largest federal gang sweep
in the history of the Department of Justice,'' he said.
Central to the case is a racketeering indictment against 57 leaders and
members of Barrio Hawaiian Gardens, which O'Brien called a criminal enterprise.
Ortiz, a 35-year-old member of the anti-gang detail at the Lakewood
Station, was gunned down on June 24, 2005, while investigating a shooting at a
Hawaiian Gardens home.
In May 2007, 29-year-old gang member Jose Orozco was sentenced to death
for Ortiz's murder.
The multi-agency operation included personnel from the FBI, the Drug
Enforcement Administration, the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department and the
Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives.
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