logo
19 charged in alleged Mexican Mafia conspiracy to kill L.A. rap artist

19 charged in alleged Mexican Mafia conspiracy to kill L.A. rap artist

Los Angeles County prosecutors on Wednesday charged 19 people with conspiring to murder a rapper who allegedly angered a member of the Mexican Mafia, a prison-based syndicate of Latino gang members.
According to a complaint filed in Los Angeles County Superior Court, accused Mexican Mafia member Manuel 'Snuffy' Quintero issued an order in 2022 to kill Nelson Abrego, who performs under the name Swifty Blue.
In the complaint, prosecutors described a sprawling conspiracy that played out over TikTok messages and recorded jail calls, drawing in prisoners from Kern County, jail inmates in downtown Los Angeles and gang members in Paramount, the southeast Los Angeles County city that both Quintero and Abrego call home.
Quintero, 49, was arrested Wednesday and has yet to enter a plea. It wasn't clear from court records whether he has a lawyer. A longtime member of the Paramount Varrio gang, Quintero has served prison time for assault, manufacturing methamphetamine and false imprisonment, court records show.
On New Year's Eve in 2022, an alleged subordinate of Quintero, Giuseppe 'Clever' Leyva, told an informant he'd notified gang members in Paramount, Compton and downtown L.A. that they had instructions to attack Abrego 'on sight,' the complaint says.
Leyva, 34, is now in custody on an unrelated federal case that charges him with selling drugs and guns in Imperial County. He pleaded guilty to trafficking methamphetamine in March and has yet to be sentenced. His attorney in the federal case didn't immediately return a request for comment.
After the informant asked if 'Snuffs is mad' at the rapper, Leyva allegedly said of Abrego: 'F— him.'
It's unclear why Quintero was angry with Abrego, who could not be reached for comment Wednesday.
In a 2024 interview with The Times, the rapper declined to discuss any potential issues with the Mexican Mafia or 'jailhouse politics.'
Abrego previously said his music resonates with people because 'everybody wants to be a gangster.'
'Whether you're a lawyer, a police or a kid going to school, everybody wants to be big, bad and tough,' he said in 2024.
Eight months after he spoke to the informant, the complaint says, Leyva warned another person in a TikTok message to stay away from the rapper.
'Let me give u a lil 411 s u won't get mis guided with the internet,' he wrote, according to the complaint. 'With Swifty his career is done.'
'I talked to him tried to guide him but he didn't listen,' Leyva allegedly continued, adding that now the rapper was 'getting his blues' in Men's Central Jail.
In November 2023, Abrego was jailed on a gun possession charge. Onesimo 'Vamps' Gonzalez, held two cells down from the rapper, called his mother and told her to ask an associate if 'the one who sings' was 'still good,' according to the complaint.
Gonzalez's mother hung up. When her son called back, she allegedly said, 'He's no good.'
Both Gonzalez and his mother are charged in the conspiracy. Gonzalez was already in custody; Dominga Gonzalez, 66, was arrested Wednesday at her Bellflower home, according to a statement from the FBI.
Two days after mother and son spoke, another jail inmate, Jonathan 'Dreamer' Quevedo, called a man imprisoned in Kern County who was using a contraband cell phone, according to the complaint.
After mentioning 'Swifty Blue,' Quevedo allegedly asked Jacob 'Eagle' David if he recalled a 'raza rapper' who was 'in the shower.'
Prosecutors believed this was a reference to Jaime Brugada Valdez, a rapper known as MoneySign Suede who was stabbed to death in the showers at the Correctional Training Facility in Soledad in 2023.
'The end result should be the same,' allegedly replied David, who was imprisoned for carjacking and robbery.
The next day, the complaint says, David instructed Quevedo to tell the attackers: 'Handle that s— with prejudice... You know how that's like a court term? Well, this s— [is] with prejudice.'
Quevedo allegedly confirmed it was 'already in motion.'
When inmates were let out of their cells at 5:50 the next morning to take a shower, Adrian 'Slick' Bueno, Andrew 'Largo' Shinaia and Jude 'Crazy' Valle entered Abrego's cell, the complaint says. While Michael 'Weasel' Ortiz obstructed a nearby camera, Bueno, Shinaia and Valle beat the rapper and 'sliced' him, prosecutors charged.
About five hours later, Quevedo called a woman from jail and asked her to tell David in state prison that 'old boy got his rap session,' according to the complaint.
'They didn't really get a good show,' Quevedo allegedly said. 'Expect them to be performing in probably the 4000 floor' — another area of the jail — 'here soon.'
The attempt on Abrego's life was unsuccessful, and by March 2024, the complaint says, Leyva told Joshua 'Demon' Euan in a TikTok message the rapper was recording a live stream outside his family home 'as we speak.'
Euan drove to the house at 1 a.m. and sent Leyva a photograph of a gun in the cup-holder of a car, according to the complaint. 'He ain't here,' he wrote to Leyva.
Later, Euan allegedly told Leyva he sent people to vandalize Abrego's family home. According to the complaint, he sent photographs of graffiti that read, 'Swifty Blue 187,' a reference to the California penal code section for murder.
Euan, 37, eluded arrest Wednesday and remains at large, according to the FBI.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Woman Placed Daughter for Adoption—10 Years on Shares 'Unbearable Struggle'
Woman Placed Daughter for Adoption—10 Years on Shares 'Unbearable Struggle'

Newsweek

timean hour ago

  • Newsweek

Woman Placed Daughter for Adoption—10 Years on Shares 'Unbearable Struggle'

Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. Ten years after signing away her parental rights, Aspen Rawson is using her voice to shed light on what she describes as the complex and often painful truths of the American adoption system. In a video shared to TikTok on July 3—which has since garnered more than 700,000 views—Rawson, 27, of Denver, Colorado, marked the anniversary of placing her daughter for adoption with a deeply personal reflection that has resonated with tens of thousands of viewers. Speaking directly to the camera, she said: "Ten years ago today, I signed away my parental rights placing my newborn daughter up for adoption in the state of Texas...I was 17, basically homeless...I think about my daughter every single day." She added: "A piece of my heart lives outside of me, I do not get to contribute to how she is raised and that is an unbearable struggle." The video sparked discussion among viewers, with many reflecting on the emotions, logistics and lasting consequences of adoption in the U.S. Rawson spoke with Newsweek about the chain of events that led her, at 17, to make a decision that still shapes her life. "When I was 16, in 2014, I left my parents' home and became homeless," Rawson said. "For a few months, I was living in my then-boyfriend's car, and during that time, I got pregnant." Though Roe v. Wade was still in effect at the time; Rawson said the restrictive abortion laws already in place in Texas created insurmountable barriers. "To access abortion, I would have needed either parental consent or a judge's approval," she said. "I didn't believe my parents would approve of me making that choice, or that I would be able to get in front of a judge quickly enough." She eventually made her decision while sitting in a mall bathroom. "I saw the test say 'positive' and I knew what I needed to do," she said. "I went straight up to my boyfriend, and told him we were placing our baby for adoption." Despite her determination, Rawson said it was weeks before any agency responded to her outreach. Most would not engage until she was through her first trimester. Eventually, a family friend of her boyfriend's mother helped connect her to prospective adoptive parents. Their first meeting took place at a Starbucks in early 2015. Aspen Rawson speaks in a TikTok video; and smiles for a photo outdoors. Aspen Rawson speaks in a TikTok video; and smiles for a photo outdoors. @that1gorl From there, Rawson said she was matched with a social worker who helped her access food and medical care through her pregnancy. She described the adoptive parents—the two men she chose—as "loving, kind, compassionate, and smart people who will do anything for their baby girl." At the hospital, Rawson chose not to hold her daughter first, hoping to minimize the emotional weight of the impending separation. "But it turns out that no amount of safeguarding will protect you from the post-birth hormonal crash and physical pain that comes with placing a deeply loved child," she said. In the decade since, Rawson has remained in contact with her daughter, a rarity in open adoptions. "Most birth parents are cut off when their child turns 7," she had said in the video. "I still have contact with my daughter at 10 years old. I am one of the lucky ones." Now based in Colorado, Rawson took to social media to share her experience with her growing audience. She began speaking online in 2020 and in the last year alone more than a million people have heard her story. She hopes that her newfound platform is seen not just a personal journal—but as a form of advocacy. Rawson now uses her voice to challenge widely held narratives about the adoption system, and to highlight how the profitable state of the adoption industry can incentivize it to lobby against abortions. "I learned that the industry brings in over $1 billion per year and that there are no legal protections for birth parents," she said. "Many people place wanted children simply because they cannot afford to raise another child." As abortion access has narrowed in many parts of the country, Rawson believes the national conversation about adoption has failed to keep pace. "I share my story to bring attention to the complex and traumatic reality of the U.S. private adoption industry," she said. "Especially as abortion access is being continually restricted and penalized. "I think the conversation around adoption is more important than ever." Rawson emphasized that her intent is not to seek praise or to raise eyebrows, but to encourage a dialogue that many people are keen to sweep under the rug. "I don't believe strangers should be proud of me for a choice I made under duress," she said. "I don't believe I am brave for sharing my story, I am just doing what needs to be done." With each post and video, Rawson said she aims to provoke thought, not sympathy. She added: "I share my story as a birth parent not to center my experience, but to encourage people to think about the impacts of a system we were all taught was beautiful and good." Since Rawson's daughter was born, more than 100,000 private adoptions have occurred—impacting at least three times that many people. "This is not a small issue," Rawson said. "We need comprehensive reform in our country that works to keep families together, educates teenagers about pregnancy prevention, and ensures that promises made to birth parents before placement are legally enforceable." If you have a family dilemma, let us know via life@ We can ask experts for advice, and your story could be featured on Newsweek.

Trump Envisions Jailing Obama
Trump Envisions Jailing Obama

Time​ Magazine

time4 hours ago

  • Time​ Magazine

Trump Envisions Jailing Obama

Donald Trump, who openly campaigned in 2016 against Hillary Clinton on chants of 'lock her up' but was ultimately persuaded not to pursue her prosecution, now appears to be fantasizing about throwing his predecessor, former President Barack Obama, in jail. And his Administration is actively taking steps in that direction. The current President shared on his Truth Social platform on Sunday a video from TikTok user @neo8171 that starts with a montage of Democratic politicians, including Obama, saying, 'No one is above the law,' to the tune of Luciano Michelini's 'Frolic' (made famous as the theme song of sitcom Curb Your Enthusiasm). After about 40 seconds, the soundtrack changes to the Village People's 'Y.M.C.A.,' as apparently AI-generated video depicts Trump and Obama sitting in the Oval Office, and Federal Bureau of Investigations officers handcuffing Obama while Trump laughs. It ends with an AI-generated depiction of Obama pacing around a jail cell. Trump also shared an AI-generated image attributed to X user @sirtemplemount that showed fake mugshots of Obama and officials from his Administration with the words 'The Shady Bunch.' And the President shared a screenshot from X of user @Real_JaredMarsh, who responded to a clip of Rep. Anna Paulina Luna (R, Fla.) saying on Fox News that 'there needs to be criminal prosecution and arrests.' Marsh posted, 'I agree with @RepLuna!' alongside an image of men being arrested outside the U.S. Capitol with the words 'Unless this happens, nothing will change' overlaid on the image. Trump's posts come after his Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard, a former Democrat turned MAGA Republican, on Friday announced that she was turning over evidence of an 'Obama Administration Conspiracy to Subvert Trump's 2016 Victory and Presidency' to the Department of Justice 'for criminal referral.' 'President Obama and his national security cabinet members manufactured and politicized intelligence to lay the groundwork for what was essentially a years-long coup against President Trump,' she alleged in a DNI press release. What Tulsi Gabbard claims about Obama officials Gabbard's office declassified a number of documents and released a memo outlining a timeline of alleged information 'manipulated and withheld' by the U.S. Intelligence Community beginning in 2016. In a series of social media posts summarizing her findings, she said the documents 'detail a treasonous conspiracy by officials at the highest levels of the Obama White House to subvert the will of the American people and try to usurp the President from fulfilling his mandate.' The announcement backs Trump's longtime contention that he was the victim of a 'witch hunt,' which the President has previously dubbed the 'Russiagate hoax.' Gabbard's announcement comes after Fox News reported earlier this month that the FBI is investigating its former director James Comey as well as former CIA director John Brennan for possible false statements to Congress after current CIA director John Ratcliffe released a review in June that was critical of a 2017 Intelligence Community Assessment that claimed Russia attempted to influence the 2016 election to help Trump. Intelligence agencies in 2017 had assessed that 'Russia's goals were to undermine public faith in the US democratic process, denigrate Secretary Clinton, and harm her electability and potential presidency.' Gabbard alleges that Obama Administration officials leaked false statements to media outlets and manufactured information for the 2017 assessment. Gabbard's office asserts that there was 'no indication of a Russian threat to directly manipulate the actual vote count,' though the earlier assessment never suggested that. Gabbard's report is based on newly-declassified intelligence assessments and internal communications prior to the 2016 election that assessed that Russia and other foreign adversaries would 'probably not' try to influence the election through cyber means, as well as emails concerning an intelligence assessment at Obama's request after Trump's victory in November 2016 into 'tools Moscow used and actions it took to influence the 2016 election.' The Obama Administration openly accused Russia of trying to influence the election through hacking campaigns, including of the DNC, in October 2016, and it was publicly reported in early 2017 that Obama Administration officials had scrambled to preserve evidence related to the then-ongoing probe of Russian interference and potential coordination with Trump and his associates. 'This was politicized intelligence that was used as the basis for countless smears seeking to delegitimize President Trump's victory, the years-long Mueller investigation, two Congressional impeachments, high level officials being investigated, arrested, and thrown in jail, heightened US-Russia tensions, and more,' Gabbard's office said. 'It's worse than even politicization of intelligence. It was manufactured intelligence that sought to achieve President Obama and his team's objective, which was undermining President Trump's presidency and subverting the will of the American people. So, yes, next week we will be releasing more detailed information about how this took place and the extent to which this information was sought to be hidden,' Gabbard told Fox News on Sunday, in a clip that was also shared by Trump. 'For the American people to have any sense of trust in the integrity of our democratic republic, accountability, action, prosecution, indictments for those who were responsible for trying to steal our democracy is essential for us to make sure that this never happens to our country again.' How Republicans have reacted Fox News called Gabbard's announcement 'a potential blockbuster scandal,' and Trump shared the clip alongside the latter two words in all caps. A number of Trump allies have also supported Gabbard's declassifications and call for prosecutions. 'This is potentially Watergate-esque,' Rep. Pat Fallon (R, Texas) told the right-leaning news network over the weekend. 'Makes Watergate look like amateur hour,' Rep. Pat Harrigan (R, N.C.) posted on X. White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt boosted Gabbard's posts on X, writing 'Every American should read this.' White House deputy chief of staff for policy Stephen Miller said in a post on X that Gabbard 'exposed the startling depths of a seditious coup against the Republic. The forces behind this coup have done and will do anything to protect their grasp on illegal & illegitimate power. Do not underestimate their capabilities or depravities. But WE are stronger.' 'These tyrants are finally being called out for what they've done,' Sen. Mike Lee (R, Utah) posted on X. 'The Russiagate hoax was a far more effective attack on our republic & our elections than any foreign adversary could have managed. Those who sold this lie to the American people became the very same villains they invented,' he added from his official account. 'The corruption runs deep in the Swamp. Thank goodness we have a President and administration committed to truth and accountability,' posted Rep. Troy Nehls (R, Texas). 'EVERYONE involved must be held to account,' Rep. Andy Biggs (R, Ariz.) posted. Added Rep. Greg Steube (R, Fla.): 'This is only the beginning. Much more will be revealed.' How Democrats have reacted Democrats have criticized the report as misleading and politically motivated. Rep. Jim Himes of Connecticut, the ranking Democrat on the House Intelligence Committee, called the report 'baseless' and an attempt to rehash 'decade-old false claims about the Obama Administration.' 'Few episodes in our nation's history have been investigated as thoroughly as the Intelligence Community's warning in 2016 that Russia was interfering in the election,' Himes said in a statement. 'Every legitimate investigation, including the bipartisan Senate Intelligence Committee investigation, found no evidence of politicization and endorsed the findings of the 2016 Intelligence Community Assessment.' Himes referred to a Republican-led Senate report in 2020 that agreed with the 2017 findings of Russian influence. That report was backed by now-Secretary of State Marco Rubio and found 'no evidence' of collusion between Trump and the Russian government in the 2016 election but did find 'irrefutable evidence of Russian meddling.' There have been several other reviews since 2017 that also backed the assessment. Even the CIA report last month that criticized the 2017 assessment as rushed and potentially biased did not dispute the assessment's conclusion that Russia favored Trump in the 2016 election. Himes also seemed to suggest that the report is an effort to distract from controversy rocking the Trump Administration surrounding Trump's links to convicted sex offender and alleged sex trafficker Jeffrey Epstein. 'It's a day that ends with 'y' and Donald Trump desperately wants to change the subject,' Himes said in his statement. Himes told CBS News that he doubted any charges against Obama Administration officials would actually come, saying: 'They won't, because there's not a judge in the land—not a single judge—who will treat this with anything other than laughter that will be heard from the Atlantic to the Pacific.' Himes related the outrage Republicans are now ginning up among their supporters over alleged 'treason' to the conspiracy theories Republicans had previously fanned about Epstein before Trump and his Administration told them the case was closed and to move on. 'This is Epstein all over again.' Read More: Why Trump Can't Put Out the Epstein Fire He Helped Ignite Sen. Mark Warner of Virginia, the ranking Democrat on the Senate Intelligence Community, told the New York Times: 'This is one more example of the Director of National Intelligence trying to cook the books.' He added that a March Intelligence Community report 'acknowledged that Russia's effort to meddle goes on. That was an assessment under [Gabbard's] watch.' 'Moscow probably believes information operations efforts to influence U.S. elections are advantageous, regardless of whether they affect election outcomes, because reinforcing doubt in the integrity of the U.S. electoral system achieves one of its core objectives,' the annual threat assessment had said. 'It is sadly not surprising that DNI Gabbard, who promised to depoliticize the intelligence community,' Warner said in a statement, 'is once again weaponizing her position to amplify the President's election conspiracy theories.'

Ecuador extradites leader of violent Ecuadorian drug gang to the United States

time9 hours ago

Ecuador extradites leader of violent Ecuadorian drug gang to the United States

QUITO, Ecuador -- Ecuador on Sunday extradited to the United States the leader of a violent Ecuadorian gang who relied on hitmen, bribes and military weapons to do business. José Adolfo Macías Villamar, whose nickname is 'Fito,' escaped from a prison in Ecuador last year and was recaptured late June. In April, a U.S. Attorney indicted him in New York City on charges he imported thousands of pounds of cocaine into the United States. Macías 'was removed from the La Roca Detention Center under the custody of the National Police and Armed Forces for the appropriate proceedings in the context of an extradition process,' Ecuador's government agency responsible for overseeing prisons, SNAI, said in a message sent to journalists. Details of the handover were not specified. A photograph released by SNAI showed Macías wearing a T-shirt, shorts, a bulletproof vest and helmet. Several police officers were guarding him at an undisclosed location. The Ecuadorian will appear Monday before Brooklyn's federal court "where he will plead not guilty,' Macías' lawyer Alexei Schacht told The Associated Press via email. After that, he will be detained in a prison yet to be determined, Schacht added. The extradition decision came after the United States sent a document to Ecuador offering guarantees for the respect of the rights of the 45-year-old criminal leader. Since 2020, Macías has led 'Los Choneros,' a criminal organization that emerged in the 1990s. The gang employed people to buy firearms and ammunition in the United States and smuggle them into Ecuador, according to April's indictment. Cocaine would flow into the United States with the help of Mexican cartels. Together, the groups controlled key cocaine trafficking routes through Ecuador, violently targeting law enforcement, politicians, lawyers and civilians who stood in the way. Macías escaped from a Guayaquil prison where he was serving a 34-year sentence for drug trafficking, organized crime, and murder. He was recaptured a year and a half later on the country's central coast. Macías has cultivated a cult status among fellow gang members and the public in his home country. While behind bars in 2023, he released a video addressed to 'the Ecuadorian people' while flanked by armed men. He also threw parties in prison, where he had access to everything from liquor to roosters for cockfighting matches. Macías is the first Ecuadorian to be extradited to the U.S. from Ecuador, prison authorities said. Two other Ecuadorian drug traffickers have previously been handed over to the United States but from Colombia, where they were arrested.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store