Source: Dallas Morning News (TX) Contact: http://www.dallasnews.com/ Pubdate: Sun, 13 Sep 1998 Author: David Mclemore / The Dallas Morning News DISORGANIZED CRIME SAN ANTONIO - On a hot August night last year, a cramped apartment on a faded block of West French Place became a slaughterhouse. Inside, police found five bodies, four of them teenagers. Each lay face-down, tightly bound with duct tape, shotgunned to death. It was the worst mass murder in San Antonio in recent memory. It also was a mistake, police said. One that would prove costly to the Texas Mexican Mafia, a violent, prison-born crime organization that calls San Antonio home. Also known as La Eme (Spanish for the letter M), the Texas Mexican Mafia long ago spilled out of the Texas prison system, where it began as a protective organization for Latino inmates in the early 1980s. Through intimidation and brute violence, La Eme has gained control over heroin trafficking, extortion and prostitution in San Antonio and throughout South Texas. Now, thanks to aggressive recruiting in and out of prison, La Eme seeks new territory in El Paso, Lubbock, Bryan, Dallas and Fort Worth. At the same time, the apparent pointlessness of the French Place murders underscores faltering discipline within La Eme, authorities say. And it signals a dangerous instability in what the FBI calls the most powerful crime organization in South Texas. On July 20, following a lengthy investigation by the FBI and San Antonio police, a federal grand jury indicted 16 La Eme members, including key leaders. They were charged with racketeering, extortion and murder in connection with the French Place slayings. Federal prosecutors believe the indictments severely damaged the leadership of the gang. Among those arrested was Robert "Beaver" Perez, an alleged La Eme general, who, according to prosecutors, has orchestrated 14 murders since 1994. They include the assassination of a gang rival and the five people killed on French Place - where the gang mistakenly thought drugs were stashed. "French Place didn't break the case on the Mexican Mafia. But it lit the fuse," said FBI Special Agent Mike Appleby, who has investigated the organization for nearly six years. "It does show just how La Eme has changed. "Five years ago, retribution was dealt out only to the offender, not his family," Agent Appleby said. "Today, they largely kill each other in disputes over drugs and money or in power struggles for gang leadership. If family members or bystanders get hit, too, that's tough." Like some homegrown Cosa Nostra, La Eme has operated for more than a decade in a shadowy world of drug dealing, extortion and assassination. In 1992, the known membership of La Eme in Texas prisons totaled about 700. Today, prison officials confirm 1,425 members, making La Eme the largest of 10 active prison gangs, said Sam Buentello, director of the anti-gang division for the Texas Department of Criminal Justice. Membership in La Eme outside prison is less precise. Law enforcement officers estimate it's in the low thousands. In 1993, when gang warfare sent San Antonio homicides spiraling above 200, La Eme was considered responsible for 73 murders. Now, with homicides averaging about 120 a year, La Eme is still responsible for about 10 percent of the city's violent deaths, according to San Antonio police homicide Lt. Ed Quintanilla. "They look like any street thug. But the big difference between La Eme and the regular street criminal is that the street criminal is only in it for himself," Lt. Quintanilla said. " La Eme is in it for the organization. They've taken the pledge. It's their way of life." Taking a hit Heroin remains the drug of choice for La Eme, both to sell and to use. "Almost every one of them is a heroin user. They shake down the small-time street dealers. They prey on people in the housing projects. They pretty much stay in their own neighborhoods and don't branch out to the rest of the city," Agent Appleby said. "They're like fire ants, though. Get in their way and they swarm all over you," he said. "If you are driving around on the weekend and stop at a convenience store to get a Coke and look funny at these guys, they will kill you." Inmates take La Eme home with them when they leave prison, Mr. Buentello said. From San Antonio headquarters, tentacles reach out to Corpus Christi, El Paso, Houston and Dallas and smaller cities in South Texas. La Eme also has a small presence in California and the Midwest, thanks to the federal prison system. "La Eme is now actively recruiting youth gangs. For many of these kids, moving up to La Eme is seen as a promotion," Mr. Buentello said. Dallas connections In Dallas, La Eme's presence is felt but isn't a major factor in gang-related crime, according to Lt. Victor Woodberry, head of the Dallas Police gang unit. "We know they're there, particularly in the Southeast side of Dallas," he said. "We have 8,700 street gang members in the city, and 63 percent of them are Hispanic. Our biggest concern is their recruitment of young gang members to move heroin and marijuana." La Eme is the brainchild of San Antonio native Heriberto Huerta, who formed the gang in 1984 in the state prison at Huntsville while serving a sentence for drug distribution, authorities said. In his Constitution of the Texas Mexican Mafia, hand-drafted in Spanish in his cell in Huntsville, Mr. Huerta articulated a manifesto to a life of crime - and a strict code of unquestioned obedience to the organization. Despite spending the last two decades in state and federal prisons, Mr. Huerta, 44, remains La Eme's president and chief executive officer, according to federal investigators and prison officials. Commander in chief Under his command, La Eme is overseen by a hierarchy of generals, captains, lieutenants and soldiers, who imposed a 10 percent street tax, called "the dime," on criminal enterprises working in gang territory. Allegiance to La Eme is for life. Violation of the rules is treason. Mr. Huerta also conceived La Eme as a quasi-religious organization, overlaid with deep strains of racial pride, Latino mysticism and references to Aztlan, the mythic homeland of descendants of the Aztecs. Members are known as Mexikanemi, street slang for "free Mexican." He directed the organization's business from behind bars through coded messages to trusted generals, through prison mail or via conference calls conducted during routine phone calls to his mother in San Antonio, according to some of the 17,000 intercepts the FBI had on the phones, pagers and cell phones of La Eme members. In echoes of the current indictments, federal prosecutors charged Mr. Huerta and 31 others affiliated with La Eme in 1993 on multiple criminal racketeering and drug trafficking charges. On Feb. 24, 1994, a federal jury in San Antonio found Mr. Huerta guilty. Also convicted were Mr. Huerta's wife, Cindy Huerta, and mother, Sofia Nanez, who helped smuggle heroin to him in prison. Now serving a life sentence at the maximum security federal facility at Florence, Colo., Mr. Huerta is isolated from other inmates and can make only one call per week, federal investigators said. "It's cut down on his effectiveness" Agent Appleby said. "But Herbie is still the boss." The disruption in the leadership caused by the 1994 convictions didn't end La Eme, Agent Appleby said. It, however, put cracks in La Eme's leadership and structure. "Herbie lost a lot of respect internally when he got his mom and wife sent to prison. There are also questions of how the money collected from the 'dime' is being spent," Agent Appleby said. "Factions have developed, and there's not that sense of total allegiance to a leader or to the organization." For example, the murder contract was once considered an honorable act within La Eme, Agent Appleby said. "They call it 'bringing down the light,' and it was for serious violations of the gang's laws and required a vote by the membership and approval by the membership," he said. "Now, minor infractions that used to get you a beating will get you killed. We've seen where a dispute over an $80 dope deal results in a green light." How deeply La Eme has changed emerged during the French Place investigation. Binding victims hand and foot with tape and the overkill brutality were unmistakable trademarks of the Texas Mexican Mafia, according to authorities. Rodolfo Vara, 49, a disabled veteran, lived at the duplex with his daughter, Elbira Vara, 19, and her boyfriend, Ricardo Gonzalez, 18. None were associated with La Eme or drug dealing. Neither was Chris Tobias, 18, and Edward Mendel, 18, who had dropped by to see the younger couple at the wrong time. "It wasn't supposed to be a hit. We have information that the local leadership heard drugs or money were at the apartment and sent six soldiers to rob it. They apparently had the wrong address or bad information," an investigator said. "As the soldiers ransacked the place and roughed up the older man, the daughter insulted their manhood with an insult in Spanish. They went berserk and killed them all." Paying the price On Aug. 14, 1997, six days after the killings on French Place, the body of Robert de los Santos, identified by police as one of the shooters, was found dumped on a road in an isolated part of south Bexar County. He had been choked, stabbed and run over by a car. Another shooter, Adam Tenorio, was found stabbed to death a week later. "We believe they were ordered killed because they'd been talking too much," an investigator said. "There are some indications, however, they were hit because higher-ups wanted to know what happened to the drugs or money that was supposed to be at French Place." La Eme's unpredictability makes doing business with the gang a scary venture, said an attorney who once defended gang members years ago. "The new guys are loose cannons," said the attorney, who asked that his name not be used. "I stay as far away from them now as I can. One day, you're great; the next day, they think you're a federal snitch because you didn't get them out of jail." Although he acknowledged that gang members engaged in criminal activity, the attorney said that the older members held certain admirable values. "The old guys would treat you with respect and expect the same. They acted like gentlemen. This new bunch has no respect," the attorney said. "They kill people based on rumor. The old guys didn't kill the innocent." San Antonio police say they are pleased they've been able to hit La Eme hard twice in four years. They say they're glad to see the leaders behind bars. But they harbor no illusions. "They are part of an organization where everyone is expendable. When you take them out, whether it's the leaders or the soldiers, there is someone to take their place," Lt. Quintanilla said. "They're not going away." Mr. Huerta said as much in La Eme's constitution. "Above these sacrifices, in bad times or good times, there is no one or anyone that can kill or destroy our sacrificing spirit," he wrote. "Brothers, truthfully I say to you, we will win." - --- Checked-by: Don Beck