Mexican human smuggling rings busted nationwide

Spread the love

Mexican-based human smuggling rings have been busted in multiple states. One involved smuggling hundreds of people from Central America, Africa and the Middle East into Arizona; another involved holding hostage foreign nationals in a ransom scheme where they were killed. Another involved a $200 million forced labor scheme on U.S. farms.

California-Mexico hostage taking and murder

In California, San Diego resident Isaac Jimenez pleaded guilty to a transnational human smuggling conspiracy in which foreign nationals were held hostage in Mexico, families paid “tens of thousands of dollars in vain” in ransom payments only for their loved ones to “never to be seen again.”

“In at least two cases, the victims – a father of four U.S. citizen children and a young woman from Tijuana – disappeared after their families made multiple ransom payments to secure their freedom,” the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of California announced.

In one case in September 2024, he “personally collected $15,000 in ransom payments from the U.S. citizen wife of the father of four who was being held against his will in Mexico by the smuggling organization,” and transported and delivered the money to coconspirators in Mexico. After ransom demands were met, more demands were made. Once the family couldn’t pay any more, communication was cut off, and the man is believed to have been killed, according to the complaint.

In December 2024, he agreed to coordinate the smuggling of a 20-year-old woman from Tijuana, Mexico, in exchange for $7,000. Instead, she was held hostage with a $30,000 ransom demand. Smugglers sent video calls to her “fiancé and family members showing them pointing firearms at her and kicking her in the chest and head” and threatened to kill her if the ransom wasn’t paid. After her family sent $10,000, she wasn’t released and is believed to have been killed, the complaint states. Sentencing is scheduled for September.

From Central Asia, Africa and the Middle East to Yuma, Arizona

In Arizona, the latest of two Mexican nationals involved in a transnational human smuggling ring extradited from Mexico was sentenced to 87 months in prison. The scheme involved smuggling foreign nationals from Central Asia, Africa and the Middle East into the U.S. between 2018 and 2022, charging each “as much as tens of thousands of dollars.”

They smuggled hundreds from Bangladesh, Yemen, Pakistan, Eritrea, India, the United Arab Emirates, Uzbekistan, Russia, Egypt, Brazil, Peru, Ecuador, Colombia, Costa Rica, Nicaragua, Honduras, El Salvador, Guatemala, and Mexico, according to the indictment.

The latest to be sentenced is Mexican national Raul Saucedo-Huipio, a manager or supervisor overseeing the smuggling route. He and his co-conspirators directed foreign nationals to illegally cross into the U.S. from Mexico through the U.S. Customs and Border Protection Yuma Sector of Arizona – a region hard hit during the Biden administration. Foreign nationals were provided a ladder to climb over a border fence, directed to crawl through holes in the fence and use a plank for waterway crossings. They were also robbed at gun and knifepoint, according to the indictment.

He and his coconspirator, Ofelia Hernandez-Salas, were arrested in Mexico in response to a March 2023 U.S. extradition request. In December 2024, he pleaded guilty to human smuggling charges. Hernandez-Salas was sentenced to 11 years in prison in May.

From Mexico and Central America to forced labor on U.S. farms

In Georgia, three people were sentenced to between 10 and 51 months in prison for their roles in a human smuggling and labor trafficking operation that involved illegally transporting foreign nationals to work on South Georgia farms as agricultural workers.

The scheme dates to 2015, involving conspirators engaging “in mail fraud, international forced labor trafficking, and money laundering, among other crimes,” and fraudulently using the H-2A work visa program to transport foreign nationals from Mexico, Guatemala, and Honduras into the U.S. under the guise of agricultural work, according to the charges.

The sentencing is part of a larger multi-state fraudulent visa, forced labor and money laundering scheme being prosecuted in the Southern, Middle, and Northern Districts of Georgia, the Middle District of Florida, and Southern District of Texas. Crimes are also being prosecuted in Mexico, Guatemala, Honduras and elsewhere, the Department of Justice said.

The scheme involved requiring foreign nationals to pay fees for transportation, food, and housing and once they got to the U.S., withholding their travel and identification documents. They were then forced to perform “physically demanding work for little or no pay,” live in crowded, unsanitary, and degrading living conditions” and threatened with deportation and violence, according to the charges.

The conspirators earned more than $200 million through the scheme, laundering the funds through cash purchases of land, homes, vehicles, and businesses; cashier’s checks and funneling millions of dollars through a casino, according to the charges.

In other cases in Florida, North Carolina and Virginia, three Mexican nationals were charged on 35 counts of trafficking Mexican farmworkers into forced labor conditions and detaining them after their visas expired for financial gain, The Center Square reported. In another case, six people in Washington state were indicted on 61 charges of operating a similar scheme, also abusing the H-2A visa program, The Center Square reported.

Leave a Comment





Latest News Stories

Horton resigns from DeKalb County School District

Horton resigns from DeKalb County School District

By Kim Jarrett | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – Dr. Devon Horton resigned from the DeKalb County School District, a week after he was indicted by...
Second nationwide ‘No Kings Day’ protest set for Saturday

Second nationwide ‘No Kings Day’ protest set for Saturday

By Morgan SweeneyThe Center Square In thousands of locations across the country and even some across the world, millions are expected to gather in protest of what they see as...
Trump, Patel tout 'historic' crime crackdown

Trump, Patel tout ‘historic’ crime crackdown

By Sarah Roderick-FitchThe Center Square The FBI has overseen the arrests of nearly 8,700 violent criminals as part of Operation Summer Heat, President Donald Trump and FBI Kash Patel said...
Illinois quick hits: Business optimism index declines; Medicare open enrollment help offered

Illinois quick hits: Business optimism index declines; Medicare open enrollment help offered

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square Business optimism index declines The NFIB Small Business Optimism Index declined 2.0 points in September to 98.8, which remains just above...
WATCH: California seeks investigation into big tech merger

WATCH: California seeks investigation into big tech merger

By Madeline ShannonThe Center Square California Attorney General Rob Bonta said Wednesday he was joining 12 other Democratic state attorneys general in intervening in a $14 billion merger between rival...

WATCH: IL legislator blames Pritzker, Johnson rhetoric for ‘bounties’ on ICE

By Greg Bishop | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – Federal law enforcement agents in Chicago conducting immigration enforcement are the targets of bounties from Mexican cartels,...
Voters concerned about prices amid tariff rollout, upcoming midterms

Voters concerned about prices amid tariff rollout, upcoming midterms

By Brett RowlandThe Center Square As President Donald Trump's tariffs go into force and midterm elections come into focus, voters are more concerned about how much things cost than about...
Supreme Court won't let lawmaker intervene in tariff challenge

Supreme Court won’t let lawmaker intervene in tariff challenge

By Brett RowlandThe Center Square The U.S. Supreme Court denied a move from a Montana lawmaker seeking to intervene as the high court takes up a challenge to President Donald...

WATCH: Lawmakers differ on ‘affordability issues’ plaguing Illinois

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – Illinois House Speaker Emanuel “Chris” Welch says state lawmakers need to address the state’s affordability issues, but...
Senate GOP leaders switch tactics as govt funding bill fails for 9th time

Senate GOP leaders switch tactics as govt funding bill fails for 9th time

By Thérèse BoudreauxThe Center Square As Democrats in the Senate repeatedly tank Republicans’ bill to reopen and extend funding for the federal government, Senate Majority Leader John Thune, R-S.D., is...
Federal judge blocks Trump from firing employees during shutdown

Federal judge blocks Trump from firing employees during shutdown

By Andrew RiceThe Center Square A federal judge temporarily blocked the Trump administration from firing employees during the partial government shutdown. U.S. District Judge Susan Illston, who is based in...
Colorado to receive $56.5 million for EV chargers

Colorado to receive $56.5 million for EV chargers

By Elyse ApelThe Center Square Colorado has officially secured nearly $60 million in federal funding for electric vehicle chargers. The funding is part of the National Electric Vehicle Infrastructure Grant...

WATCH: Illinois transit agencies face ‘trust cliff’ along with fiscal cliff

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – State lawmakers are questioning transit agency leaders over their revised fiscal cliff numbers and spending of operational...
Illinois quick hits: Stallantis to invest in four states; DHS: Bounties put on ICE

Illinois quick hits: Stallantis to invest in four states; DHS: Bounties put on ICE

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square Stallantis to invest in four states Stellantis has announced plans to expand its U.S. production by 50% with investments in Illinois,...
WATCH: DHS: cartel placing bounties on agents; prison mail scanned; House floor politics

WATCH: DHS: cartel placing bounties on agents; prison mail scanned; House floor politics

By Greg Bishop | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – In today's edition of Illinois in Focus Daily, The Center Square Editor Greg Bishop shares the latest...