LOS ANGELES — More than two dozen suspected members of a gang that terrorized a housing project for a half century and controlled drug dealing in an East Los Angeles neighborhood were arrested Wednesday on charges related to a federal racketeering indictment.
The indictment named 38 members of the Big Hazard gang with ties to the Mexican Mafia who authorities say are linked to crimes ranging from drug dealing to extortion to murder.
"For the last two decades, my office has been fighting the influence of the Mexican Mafia both in prison facilities and on the streets of Southern California," Acting U.S. Attorney Stephanie Yonekura said at a news conference. "The indictment unsealed today is the latest salvo in that battle. We will continue our crackdown on the Mexican Mafia and the Hazard gang as long as they continue to threaten our communities."
The Mexican Mafia is a powerful collection of prison inmates from various Latino gangs who call shots on violence behind bars and drug dealing and crime on the streets.
The FBI and Los Angeles police led early morning raids, dubbed "Operation Resident Evil," at more than a dozen homes. They nabbed 24 of those named in the indictment, along with four others charged with crimes related to the gang.
Seven people, including the gang's leader, were already in custody. One defendant was killed in a shooting over the weekend that is being investigated.
The arrests culminated a four-year investigation that began after a car crash and shooting on Interstate 10.
Police searching the car, which belonged to a suspected drug dealer, found letters written in code from Manuel Larry Jackson, a Hazard gang member serving time at a super maximum-security federal prison in Colorado for bank robbery and attempting to kill another inmate.