TRANSNATIONAL
GANG MEMBER WANTED FOR MURDER AND ATTEMPTED MURDER OF POLICE
IN ZACATECAS, MEXICO, CAPTURED IN LOS ANGELES AND DEPORTED
A man wanted by the Mexican government
for the murder of a police officer and the attempted murder
of two others in Zacatecas, Mexico, was captured and turned
over to the custody of Mexican law enforcement officials
today, announced J. Stephen Tidwell, Assistant Director in
Charge of the FBI in Los Angeles.
Odilon Carlos, also known as Odilon Carlos-Marquez,
27, of Zacatecas, Mexico, was taken into custody yesterday
morning by the FBI’s Fugitive Task Force near his girlfriend’s
residence in Huntington Park, with the assistance officers
from U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE).
Carlos, a member of the 18 th Street “transnational” gang
in Los Angeles, was previously deported in 2005 after serving
five years in prison for a 1999 felony conviction of possession
of an UZI automatic weapon. On 12/28/2006, Carlos allegedly
used an UZI 9 mm machine gun to fire on three Zacatecas Municipal
officers. One officer was killed and the others sustained serious
injuries. An exhaustive manhunt ensued after Carlos was thought
to have fled into the mountains near Zacatecas. Police there
searched several days for Carlos utilizing helicopters and
canines, but were unable to locate him in the rugged terrain.
In March 2007, Agents with the FBI’s
Mexico City Legal Attaché, stationed in Guadalajara,
Jalisco, were contacted by Mexican law enforcement authorities
who had developed information that Carlos had illegally returned
to the United States and had been residing in Los Angeles.
FBI officials contacted the Fugitive Task Force in Los Angeles
who located Carlos and took him into custody, accompanied by
ICE Agents.
“This capture should send a message
to fugitives from justice that crossing the U.S.-Mexican border
does not provide sanctuary,” said J. Stephen Tidwell,
Assistant Director in Charge of the FBI in Los Angeles. “The
FBI has and will continue to work jointly with Mexico and other
foreign governments, and our partners in the United States,
to apprehend violent criminals whose capture serves the interest
of law-abiding citizens in any country.”
Carlos, a convicted felon, was previously
removed from the United States in 2005. ICE reinstated that
previous removal in order to carry out his deportation today.
ICE Agents and members of the Fugitive Task Force transported
Carlos to the border crossing at San Ysidro today, where he
was turned over to Mexican immigration officials.
“Since January of last year, ICE’s
Los Angeles fugitive operations teams have taken custody of
39 foreign nationals who were being sought in their native
countries for serious crimes, including rape and murder,” said
Jim Hayes, Director for ICE’s Los Angeles Field Office. “As
a result of these efforts, these suspects have been returned
to their home countries to face justice. The message for violent
fugitives who flee to the United States is clear – you
can’t outrun the law.”
This successful apprehension was the result
of a joint operation by Mexican law enforcement authorities
working cooperatively with the FBI’s Legal Attache in
Mexico City; the FBI’s Fugitive Task Force in Los Angeles,
assisted by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement. Agents
with the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation
- Division of Adult Parole Operations provided assistance,
and analytical support was provided by L.A. CLEAR. The FBI’s
Fugitive Task Force in Los Angeles is made up of officers with
the Los Angeles Police Department and Agents with the FBI.