News and Press Releases

Men Sentenced for Holding Illegal Aliens Hostage at Las Vegas Motel

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
October 6, 2009

Las Vegas, Nev. – Two men were sentenced today for their guilty pleas to holding seven illegal aliens in a Las Vegas motel room against their will and for ransom, announced Daniel G. Bogden, United States Attorney for the District of Nevada.

Victor Manual Morales-Velazquez, 22, was sentenced to 37 months in prison and Angel Rigoberto Uribe-Ibarra, 48, was sentenced to 41 months in prison. They pled guilty on July 9, 2009, to Conspiracy to Harbor Illegal Aliens for Private Financial Gain. Two other men also charged with the crime, Orlando Jimenez, 21, and Felipe de Jesus Flores-Villela, 33, are scheduled to be sentenced on October 16 and December 11, respectively. All of the defendants, except Jimenez, who is a U.S. citizen, are Mexican nationals who entered the United States unlawfully.

On April 23, 2009, U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) Agents received information that illegal aliens from Mexico were being held against their will in Las Vegas. Family members of the victims had been contacted by the captors and advised that they had to pay $2,800 in order to secure the release of each victim. ICE Agents, working with local and federal law enforcement authorities, determined through telephone records that the individuals were being held in a room at the Aruba Motel in Las Vegas. On April 23, 2009, law enforcement officers knocked and entered the motel room and encountered 12 individuals, four of whom were the defendants. Agents took all 12 individuals into custody, and determined that 11 were illegal aliens and seven were victims who had been smuggled into the U.S. by the defendants in exchange for a fee. The defendants required the victims to contact family members or to provide the defendants with contact information for family members. The defendants also subjected the victims to physical assault and intimidation in the presence of other victims, displayed what appeared to be firearms in order to maintain physical control of the victims and to coerce them to persuade family members to pay ransom money, and made threats of death and other physical violence against the victims and members of the victims' family. Agents recovered from the motel room, three pellet firing replica pistols and an automatic opening bladed knife.

The case was investigated by ICE, DEA, and the Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department, and prosecuted by Assistant U.S. Attorneys Kimberly M. Frayn, Christina M. Brown, and Bradley Giles.

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