FBI offers US$3 million reward for first alleged Tren de Aragua leader on its most wanted list
Giovanni Vicente Mosquera Serrano is an alleged senior leader of the Tren de Aragua transnational gang, a designated foreign terrorist organization which originated in Venezuela and now operates throughout Latin America and the United States. FBI via CNN Newsource
Giovanni Vicente Mosquera Serrano, an alleged senior leader of the Venezuelan criminal gang Tren de Aragua has been added to the Federal Bureau of Investigation's Ten Most Wanted list.
Known as 'El Viejo,' the old man, Mosquera Serrano is the first member from the gang on the FBI's top fugitives list, according to the agency.
The FBI is offering a $3 million reward for information leading to the arrest and/or conviction of Mosquera Serrano, 37, who faces federal charges that include conspiring to provide and providing material support to a foreign terrorist organization, as well as conspiracy and distribution of cocaine in Colombia intended for distribution in the US, the agency announced on Tuesday.
Tren de Aragua, also known as TdA, allegedly sends gang members to the US to engage in drug, human and weapons trafficking, as well as violent crime, the FBI said.
TdA was designated as a foreign terrorist organization after an executive order was signed by President Donald Trump on January 20. The criminal organization originated in a Venezuelan prison and has slowly spread both north and south in recent years. It now operates in the United States.
Investigators believe Mosquera Serrano may be in Venezuela or Colombia, the agency said.
Tren de Aragua has not only terrorized Venezuela for years but also countries such as Bolivia, Colombia, Chile and Peru, CNN has reported.
In Colombia, Tren de Aragua and a guerrilla group known as the National Liberation Army 'operate sex trafficking networks in the border town of Villa del Rosario' and Norte de Santander, according to a U.S. State Department 2023 Trafficking in Persons Report about Colombia.
The criminal groups exploit Venezuelan migrants and displaced Colombians in sex trafficking, taking advantage of economic vulnerabilities and subjecting them to 'debt bondage,' the report stated. Police in the region reported the organization has victimized thousands through extortion, drug and human trafficking, kidnapping and murder.
Insight Crime, a think tank dedicated to organized crime, said in October that Tren de Aragua's 'reputation appears to have grown more quickly than its actual presence in the United States.'
'Additionally, there is no evidence, thus far, of cells in the United States cooperating with one another or with other criminal groups,' according to Insight Crime.
Tren de Aragua adopted its name between 2013 and 2015 but its operations predate that, according to a report by Transparency Venezuela, an anti-corruption nonprofit.
'It has its origin in the unions of workers who worked on the construction of a railway project that would connect the center-west of the country and that was never completed' in both Aragua and Carabobo states, according to the report.
The gang's leaders operated out of the notorious Tocorón prison, which they controlled, the report said. Venezuelan authorities say they have dismantled the leadership of Tren de Aragua and freed Tocorón prison, one of the largest in the country, from the control of its members.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


CTV News
7 hours ago
- CTV News
Police helicopter helps in arresting teenager after fleeing traffic stop
A 16-year-old boy has been arrested following assistance from the Winnipeg Police Service's Air1 helicopter after fleeing a traffic stop. Shortly after midnight on June 29, North District patrol officers tried to stop the driver of a 2005 Honda Civic after going through a red light at Euclid Avenue and Austin Street. Police said the driver continued to the 1-99 block of Higgins Avenue and fled on foot after abandoning the vehicle. The Air1 helicopter responded and tracked the teenager to the 100 block of Agnus Street where officers took him into custody. A search during the arrest resulted in the seizure of cash, a drug score sheet, multiple cell phones and 34 individually packaged rocks of cocaine with an estimated value of $1,200. The teenager was charged with several Highway Traffic Act offences and possessing drugs for the purpose of trafficking. He was released on an undertaking.


National Post
12 hours ago
- National Post
A Canadian helped design the 'two-state solution.' This Canadian says it remains the only answer in Israel
Former Canadian diplomat Norman Spector doesn't have a reputation for wishful thinking. So when he proposes we talk about how the issues around terrorism, atrocities and hostages are being framed in the aftermath of the October 7 attacks in Israel, I know I'm in for a stiff shot of realpolitik. Article content 'By chance, I had the good fortune of being Canada's first representative to the Palestinian Authority shortly after I landed in Israel as ambassador in 1992,' Norman says, setting the context for our virtual conversation. Article content Article content 'I have some fond as well as some scary memories of walking around Gaza back then,' he continues, 'but these days, I mostly wonder how Israeli-Palestinian relations would have unfolded in the wake of the Oslo accords had Yitzhak Rabin not been assassinated.' Article content Article content Appointed by then-prime minister Brian Mulroney as Canada's ambassador in 1992, the year before the Oslo accords were signed, Norman had the good fortune of living in the Middle East during a period of peace. Article content Reflecting back, Norman says he's not sure the two-state solution for Israel and Palestine, envisioned in the Oslo accords, ever had a chance after the Rabin assassination. Rabin, the prime minister of Israel, was assassinated in 1995 by an Israeli extremist opposed to his peace efforts. Article content 'I think Rabin came to the conclusion that there was no alternative — and he had the credibility that allowed him to take a chance with Arafat whom Israelis did not trust,' Norman says. 'After October 7,' he muses, 'there is even less trust of Palestinians and there's no Rabin in sight.' Article content Article content There is a faint hint of wistfulness in Norman's tone; his assessment of the current situation is deeply unsettling. Article content Article content From October 7 on, we've seen growing division and polarization and hatred in our own country. Progressives have made Gaza their cause (no one more than Alberta's own NDP MP, Heather McPherson) and conservatives hold loyal to Israel. Media outlets pick a lane and stick with it. Article content Talking about Israel and the Palestinians has become so prickly, many refuse to wade into the conversation for fear of being attacked. The rhetoric is all part of the conflict, Norman accurately points out, 'Folks chanting or spray painting 'genocide' are generally not in favour of two states, one Jewish, one Palestinian, between the river and the sea.'


CTV News
a day ago
- CTV News
Over $200K in drugs, cash seized by Sarnia police
An investigation into suspected drug trafficking in Sarnia has ended in charges for one man. According to police, the Sarnia Police Major Case Action Team (MCAT) arrested a 23-year-old man from Scarborough on Thursday during a traffic stop. Police say a search of the man's vehicle yielded the following: 10.5 oz of cocaine 13 oz methamphetamine 8oz of fentanyl - half of that 8oz was uncut fentanyl The estimated street value of the seized drugs is approximately $222,069. Police also seized $7,900 in cash. Police also searched an Airbnb the man was staying in and seized $12,140 in currency, food coloring, Ziploc bags (packaging), 7.34grams of MDMA and functioning digital scale. The accused was charged with four counts of possession of a controlled substance for the purpose of trafficking and possession of property obtained by crime over $5,000.