Pubdate: Wed, 31 May 2000
Source: Los Angeles Times (CA)
Copyright: 2000 Los Angeles Times
Contact:  Times Mirror Square, Los Angeles, CA 90053
Fax: (213) 237-4712
Website: http://www.latimes.com/
Forum: http://www.latimes.com/home/discuss/
Author: David Rosenzweig, Times Staff Writer

MEXICAN MAFIA MEMBER DESCRIBES GANG'S ACTIVITIES

Court: Prosecution's first witness in trial of 11 suspected members says he
killed three people. He calls the organization the "gang of all gangs."

A young man who once toted a book bag and attended classes at Cal State Los
Angeles testified in federal court Tuesday that he authorized the executions
of as many as 40 people as a rising star in the Mexican Mafia. Max Torvisco,
24, took the stand as the government's first witness in the trial of 11
suspected Mexican Mafia members and associates, describing the organization
as the "gang of all gangs."

The defendants are being tried on charges ranging from racketeering to drug
trafficking in a high-security courtroom equipped with a metal detector and
staffed by an extra complement of guards.

Torvisco told jurors that he personally carried out three murders and
participated in numerous shootings and stabbings as a Mexican Mafia member.

Under questioning by Assistant U.S. Atty. Daniel Levin, Torvisco told jurors
that he agreed to testify in hopes of receiving a lenient sentence for
racketeering and other charges to which he has already pleaded guilty.

In doing so, he said, he is violating the Mexican Mafia's No. 1 rule: never
betray a fellow member.

Other strictly enforced rules, he said, forbid having sex with a fellow
member's wife or girlfriend, any homosexual behavior and any unsanctioned
attack on another Mexican Mafia member.

Torvisco, sporting a mustache and dressed in khakis and a madras shirt, said
he joined a street gang at age 11, started selling drugs at 13 and was
recruited into La Eme, by which the Mexican Mafia is also known, while a
student at Cal State L.A.

An "associate" at first, he said he was promoted to full membership in 1998
and rose rapidly through the ranks. He identified two defendants on trial
Tuesday as his sponsors.

With little prompting from the prosecutor, Torvisco eagerly described La Eme
as a powerful gang that controls drug trafficking within California prisons
and taxes street gangs for the right to sell drugs on their turf.

Those who disobey the Mexican Mafia are given a "green light," he said, a
term for punishment that can range from a simple beating to murder.

"Everything the Mexican Mafia does is criminal," he testified.

Defense attorneys objected frequently to his comments as lacking foundation,
but for the most part they were overruled by presiding U.S. District Judge
David Carter.

In opening remarks to the jury earlier in the day, one defense lawyer
characterized Torvisco as a "sadistic serial killer" who was testifying for
the prosecution to save his own neck from capital punishment.

Eight other defendants in this case face charges that carry a possible death
penalty. Their trial was put off pending the outcome of an appeal.

Defense attorney Manuel Araujo, who represents alleged Mexican Mafia member
Frank Fernandez, scoffed at the government's claim that the Mexican Mafia is
a tightly controlled racketeering enterprise.

To the contrary, Araujo said, the Mexican Mafia is "disorganized crime" with
no structure, no cohesiveness and no loyalty among its alleged members.

"The issue," he said, "is not whether Eme exists but whether Eme is
organized crime."

He described its members as "a collection of thugs" constantly mouthing
threats to "bump one another off."

Fernandez might have trafficked in drugs, he said, but he never seriously
plotted to kill anyone and was not part of a racketeering operation.

Also on trial is Sally Peters, the wife of the Mexican Mafia's reputed
godfather, Benjamin Peters, who is serving a life term at Pelican Bay State
Prison.

She is accused of carrying messages between her husband and Mexican Mafia
members on the outside, including one that allegedly authorized a reprisal
slaying.

She is also accused of collecting taxes imposed on drug dealers and
possessing illegal drugs. Her lawyer, George W. Buehler, dismissed those
allegations as untrue.

He said she got to know Peters when she volunteered to drive his elderly
mother to visit him at the Los Angeles County Jail. As a result of those
visits, he said, they fell in love and married.

"She's not part of the world of the Mexican Mafia," he told the jury.

In addition to the testimony of Torvisco and other informants, the
government is expected to present hours of secretly recorded telephone
conversations involving the defendants.

The trial is expected to last four to six months.
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