2 leaders of a group suspected of smuggling 20,000 immigrants are arrested in Los Angeles
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This article was published 03/03/2025 (287 days ago), so information in it may no longer be current.
LOS ANGELES (AP) — Federal authorities in Los Angeles arrested two alleged leaders of a criminal organization suspected of smuggling 20,000 people from Guatemala to the U.S. and charging each person as much as $18,000 to get them into the country.
Eduardo Domingo Renoj-Matul, known as “Turko,” and his lieutenant, Cristobal Mejia-Chaj, were taken into custody Friday. They have each pleaded not guilty to multiple charges related to smuggling migrants across the border over five years, the U.S. Attorney’s Office said.
A federal judge ordered the men, who themselves are in the country illegally, jailed without bond until their trial in April.
The indictment names Renoj-Matul as the head of one of the largest human smuggling organizations in the U.S., a vast ring operating for at least a dozen years that primarily transported people to the U.S. from Guatemala.
The criminal network was responsible for the deaths of seven immigrants without legal status — including a 4-year-old child — who were killed in a November 2023 vehicle crash in Oklahoma, prosecutors said.
A driver who’s been in custody in Oklahoma since that crash, Jose Paxtor-Oxlaj, was also charged in the California indictment, according to the court documents. Another man, Helmer Obispo-Hernandez, a lieutenant in the organization and a supervisor of a team of drivers, faces charges as well. He’s believed to be in Guatemala, officials said.
Attorneys for the four men could not be located Monday for comment.
Renoj-Matual was assisted by associates in Guatemala who solicited people who each paid between $15,000 and $18,000 to be smuggled to the U.S. through Mexico, prosecutors said.
For an additional fee, the migrants were transported and moved to various destinations in the United States, including Los Angeles and Phoenix. Some of the migrants who weren’t able to pay the fees were held hostage in a stash house near downtown Los Angeles, according to prosecutors.
“These smuggling organizations have no regard for human life and their conduct kills,” Acting United States Attorney Joseph T. McNally said in a statement. “The indictment and arrests here have dismantled one of the country’s largest and most dangerous smuggling organizations.”
If convicted of all charges, the defendants could face a statutory maximum sentence of death or life imprisonment.