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LAREDO, Texas –
    A total of 18 defendants have entered guilty pleas in recent weeks to various charges to include conspiracy to possess with intent to distribute marijuana, possession with intent to distribute marijuana and conspiracy to launder drug proceeds, announced U.S. Attorney Kenneth Magidson. The members of this drug and money laundering organization were part of the conspiracy that occurred from on or about June 2011 through June 2013.
    The pleas are the culmination of a long term Organized Crime Drug Enforcement Task Force Investigation dubbed Operation Trena Sin Trono spearheaded by the Drug Enforcement Administration and IRS-Criminal Investigation with the assistance of Homeland Security Investigations, Laredo Police Department and the Zavala County Sheriff’s Office.
    Erasmo Abdon Trejo-Nava was the head of a transportation cell that operated out of Laredo and was one of the primary transporters of marijuana shipments for the Zetas Cartel in Nuevo Laredo, Tamaulipas, Mexico. The Trejo-Nava drug trafficking organization utilized commercial trucks and trailers to transport multi-thousand pound quantities of marijuana from Laredo to the Dallas area. The investigation revealed that beginning from on or about June 10, 2011, and continuing through June 4, 2013, Trejo-Nava conspired with others to possess with intent to distribute in excess of 1,000 kilograms of marijuana and conspired to launder money.
    Trejo-Nava transported loads of marijuana for himself, Jaime Montalvo-Ruiz and Ovidio Rodriguez. Joshua Sanchez and Ricardo Ramirez were identified as subjects who were tasked with receiving marijuana loads from Trejo-Nava for Montalvo-Ruiz. Salvador Saldaña Medrano was identified as a co-conspirator who assisted Montalvo-Ruiz in coordinating the delivery of marijuana to Trejo-Nava for transportation to the Dallas area and  also coordinated the receipt of drug proceeds from Trejo-Nava on behalf of Montalvo-Ruiz.
    The organization used various stash houses and business fronts in the Laredo area to receive and prepare the drugs for transportation via personal vehicles to a local warehouse. Gerardo Moreno Recio was identified as assisting at stash houses used by the organization. Juan Manuel Vargas-Aguilar wrapped and prepared marijuana at stash houses and marked the bundles for identification once they arrived in the Dallas area. Victor Hugo Trejo was identified as assisting in the transportation of the marijuana from the stash houses to a local warehouse.
    Francisco Colin supplied tractor trailers and was also identified as providing willing truck drivers to transport marijuana loads. Mario Alberto Rodriguez and Jose Angel Trejo were identified as assisting with loading of marijuana into crates at a warehouse and traveling to Dallas to assist in receiving the marijuana. Angel Trejo was also identified as recruiting a driver to transport a load of marijuana for the organization. Arturo Alfonso Lozano and Leocadio Ruiz received the marijuana loads in Dallas on behalf of Trejo-Nava, Montalvo-Ruiz and Ovidio Rodriguez and were responsible for sorting and distributing the marijuana in Dallas and collecting the proceeds.
    The investigation  also revealed that the Trejo-Nava organization frequently transported drug proceeds from the Dallas area to Laredo and then to Mexico. The marijuana loads were fronted to distributors in the Dallas area to include Lozano and Ruiz. After the sale and distribution of the drugs, they received payment through co-conspirators in Dallas who collected, stored and prepared the drug proceeds for transportation via personal vehicle or tractor trailer to Laredo and  then to into the Republic of  Mexico. Erika Alvarez was identified as a courier of drug proceeds who traveled to Dallas to transport drug proceeds back to Laredo. Laura Heredia Garcia was also identified as a courier for drug proceeds who was tasked with transporting the drug proceeds received in Laredo to the Republic of Mexico via her own personal vehicle.
    As part of the money laundering scheme, Trejo-Nava, Raquel Margarita Ramos Jimenez and Leslie Bernice Trejo knowingly and intentionally conducted financial transactions designed to conceal and disguise the nature, ownership, control and source of the proceeds and to avoid a transaction reporting requirement. They knew the property involved in the financial transactions represented the proceeds of drug trafficking. The proceeds from the sale of marijuana  were also used to acquire real estate and improve real estate and services.
    Erasmo Trejo-Nava, Angel Trejo, 42, Ovidio Rodriguez, 41, Hugo Trejo, 41, Colin, 41, Saldaña-Medrano, 36, all of  Laredo, entered pleas of guilty to conspiring to possess with intent to distribute in excess of 1,000 kilograms of marijuana and conspiracy to launder drug proceeds as did Montalvo-Ruiz, 44, of Nuevo Laredo, Mexico, and Ruiz, 47, of Dallas.
    Vargas-Aguilar, 45, Rodriguez, 29, and Ricardo Ramirez, 33, all of Laredo; Lozano, 47, of Dallas; and Sanchez, 32, of Nuevo Laredo, all pleaded guilty to one count of conspiracy to possess with intent to distribute in excess of 1,000 kilograms of marijuana, while Recio, 48, of Nuevo Laredo, entered pleas of guilty to two separate counts of possession with intent to distribute in excess of 100 kilograms of marijuana.
    Garcia, 50, of Nuevo Laredo, and Alvarez, 38, and Jimenez, 44, and Trejo, 22, both of Laredo, pleaded to one count of conspiracy to launder drug proceeds.
    Assistant U.S. Attorney Mary Lou Castillo is prosecuting the case.

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LA MARQUE, Texas (AP) —
    A 14-year-old boy accused of killing his pregnant mother had twice been removed from her custody because of the woman's substance abuse and her partner's domestic violence, child welfare officials said Tuesday.
    La Marque Police Chief Kirk Jackson said investigators believe the boy acted alone in killing the woman. Jackson did not release a possible motive for the slaying of the mother, 33, whose body was discovered Saturday in her home. Her son was found Sunday in Houston, along with a vehicle from the family's home, then charged with a juvenile count of murder, police said.
    "There's no indication that there was anybody involved in this," Jackson said Tuesday.
    Details of the woman's death have not been released.
    Estella Olguin, spokeswoman for Harris County Child Protective Services, said another son also was removed from the woman's custody less than a month after his birth for the same reasons as the older boy.
    The teenage suspect was first removed from her custody in October 2005 and was in foster care until his paternal grandmother received custody of him in March 2007, she said. He again was removed from his mother's custody in April 2010 and was in foster care until his father was awarded custody in February 2011.
    Jackson declined to say whether police found weapons or any signs of a struggle at the residence, where mother and son recently moved. Police had not previously received any disturbance calls at that home, according to the police chief.
    "They had just moved to this house not too long ago. We don't have any prior history at that house," Jackson said.
    Jackson had no information about the boy's father or an attorney for the teen, who remained in juvenile custody and has cooperated with investigators, the police chief said.
    Prosecutors are waiting until the criminal investigation is complete to decide whether to seek to prosecute the teen as an adult, said Paul Love, chief of the misdemeanor and juvenile division of the Galveston County District Attorney's Office.

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EL PASO, Texas (AP) —
    A former U.S. Border Patrol agent has been found guilty in the shooting of his estranged wife's boyfriend in El Paso.
    Forty-one-year-old Alberto Montelongo was convicted Tuesday of one count of attempted capital murder and one count of continuous family violence. The sentencing phase of his trial is scheduled to begin Wednesday. He faces up to 99 years in prison.
    Authorities say that in February, Montelongo went to his wife's home and got into an altercation with her and her boyfriend, Jesus Rodriguez. Prosecutors say Montelongo shot Rodriguez in the head and struggled with his wife over a knife, resulting in several cuts to her hands. Rodriguez survived.
    Authorities say Montelongo took his wife and Rodriguez hostage and a standoff with El Paso law enforcement lasted for several hours before he was arrested.

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