Posted By CotoBlogzz
Rancho Santa Margarita, CA - The
last of three defendants charged with racketeering offenses was sentenced today
by the Honorable Lawrence J. O’Neill, according to announcement by Attorney
General Leslie R. Caldwell of the Justice Department’s Criminal Division and
Acting U.S. Attorney Phillip Talbert of the Eastern District of California.
Gary
Anthony Romero, 50, of Stockton, California, was sentenced on April 11, to 20
years imprisonment for racketeering conspiracy. Today, Judge O’Neill
sentenced Joe Anthony Felix, 36, of Modesto, California, to 151 months’
imprisonment for racketeering conspiracy, and Jesus Gomez Felix, 32, of
Modesto, to 30 months’ imprisonment for Assault With a Deadly Weapon in Aid of
Racketeering Assistant
Nuestra
Familia is a prison gang that originally formed in the California state prison
system in the 1960s. Nuestra Familia leaders control and direct the
gang’s criminal activities both inside and outside of the prison system.
According
to court documents, Romero has been a member of Nuestra Familia for about 20
years and has reached one of the highest levels of authority in Nuestra
Familia. He ordered various crimes to be committed for the benefit of the
gang in Stanislaus County, including aggravated assaults, robberies and drug
dealing. Romero ordered a home invasion robbery in Turlock in which the
robbers wielded firearms and made off with a vehicle and several other
items. While Romero was in custody at the Stanislaus County Jail, he
ordered the “removal” of several Nortenos who had violated Nuestra Familia
rules. A “removal” involved assaulting the individuals with homemade
weapons, as well as fists and feet. Several of the victims suffered stab
wounds. Romero also directed a gang member to set up subsets of the gang
throughout Stanislaus County, to collect money from the members, including from
their drug trafficking activities and to put the funds on Romero’s books at
Stanislaus County Jail.
Joe
Felix was a Norteno, a gang under the Nuestra Familia umbrella, who was in
charge of Stanislaus County and provided direction to other Nortenos to commit
various crimes, including attempted murder and drug trafficking in
Modesto. Joe Felix participated in an assault of two individuals who had
dropped out of the gang. As a result of the attack, one of the victims
suffered a fractured orbital bone and injury to his eye. Joe Felix also
provided direction to other Nortenos regarding the sales of methamphetamine,
and profited from the drug trafficking operation.
Jesus
Felix went armed to the assault of the two gang drop-outs. He exchanged
gunfire with someone from the opposing side during the incident. No one
was shot..
This
case was investigated by the Central Valley Gang Impact Task Force under the
FBI’s Safe Streets Initiative, with the assistance of the Stanislaus County
District Attorney’s Office, Stanislaus County Sheriff’s Office, Modesto Police
Department, Ceres Police Department, the California Highway Patrol, the California
Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation, the Bureau of Prisons and the
Stanislaus County Probation Department.
The
case was prosecuted by Trial Attorneys Louis A. Crisostomo and Kelly Pearson of
the Criminal Division’s Organized Crime and Gang Section and Assistant United
States Attorneys Kimberly A. Sanchez and Laurel J. Montoya of the Eastern
District of California.
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