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Puerto Vallarta News NetworkAmericas & Beyond | August 2008 

US Turns Over Mexican Man Accused in 1998 Massacre
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In this photo released by the Mexican Attorney General's Office, shows Jesus Ruben Moncada, 33, a Mexican national wanted in connection with a decade-old, drug-related massacre of 19 people in the Baja, Calif. resort town of Ensenada. Moncada has been captured and turned over to Mexican authorities, U.S. immigration officials said Sunday. (AP/Mexican Attorney General's Office)
 
Los Angeles — A Mexican national wanted in connection with the 1998 drug-related massacre of 19 people in the Baja California resort town of Ensenada has been captured and turned over to Mexican authorities, U.S. immigration officials said Sunday.

Officers confronted Jesus Ruben Moncada, 33, at his Los Angeles home Thursday night as he took out the garbage.

Moncada, who did not resist arrest, was taken into custody on administrative immigration violations and was returned under heavy security Friday to Mexico where he faces first degree murder, attempted murder and kidnapping charges.

He was being held at a Tecate, Baja California prison pending court proceedings, according to the Mexican Attorney General's Office.

Moncada told officers he fled to the United States in 1998, illegally crossing the border near San Ysidro, according to the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement.

"This man is suspected of being involved in one of the most heinous mass killings in recent times," Brian DeMore, a field office director for ICE, said in a statement.

Authorities believe Moncada was among several gunmen who raided the compound of an alleged drug trafficker near the Baja California beach resort of Ensenada in 1998. They lined the alleged trafficker and 18 members of his family up against a wall and shot them. Eight children were among those killed.

Prosecutors contend Moncada was a high-ranking member of a Felix Arellano gang, which carried out the killings to prevent the rival gang's marijuana-smuggling operation from becoming too competitive with theirs.

Moncada had been using his real name while living in the U.S., DeMore said.

Associated Press writer Alexandra Olsen in Mexico City contributed to this report.

On the Net: U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement



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