crime

Cinthya Garcia-Cisneros trial: Defendant's boyfriend, brother testify about night of Forest Grove fatal crash

The passengers riding with Cinthya Garcia-Cisneros felt an odd bump as she drove over a large leaf pile on the night of Oct. 20.

Garcia-Cisneros, on trial in the fatal crash that killed two young girls in Forest Grove, cried as her boyfriend and brother took the witness stand Thursday and recalled that night’s events....

...At the leaf pile his sister had driven through, he said, he saw a man screaming. He saw a child on the ground. The man spoke to him briefly....

...On their way back home, he said, he turned into Kaady Car Wash – “to eliminate evidence, if there was any.”  He didn’t discuss it with his girlfriend, he said, and she said nothing about it.

Echeverria, 18, pleaded guilty to hindering prosecution last week and is serving a 13-month prison sentence.

Trial resumes Tuesday.

  Read more about Cinthya Garcia-Cisneros trial: Defendant's boyfriend, brother testify about night of Forest Grove fatal crash

Cinthya Garcia-Cisneros trial: Victim's dad testifies about finding girls killed in Forest Grove crash

...In the hit-and-run trial of Cinthya Garcia-Cisneros on Thursday, Tom Robinson told jurors it was close to 8 p.m. Oct. 20, a Sunday, when he went outside with the girls to play in the leaves. He snapped pictures of them, while his wife was at a board meeting....

About 20 minutes later, Robinson testified he took the camera back in the house. He heard a car drive down the street and accelerate, he said. He checked on the girls, looking behind the house first....

Both girls died from closed head injuries....  Garcia-Cisneros, 19, is charged with two counts of felony hit and run in the crash.  Her attorney told jurors Thursday that when Garcia-Cisneros drove through the large leaf pile, she didn’t know the girls were there.

She learned of the crash, defense attorney Ethan Levi said, when her brother went home and told her what he had witnessed on Main Street.

Trial continues Tuesday. Read more about Cinthya Garcia-Cisneros trial: Victim's dad testifies about finding girls killed in Forest Grove crash

Colorado pot shops likely targets of cartels, say experts

As the smoke settles from the first week of legal marijuana sales in Colorado, experts are warning that sanctioned pot dealers could become targets for the very folks they put out of business.

Taking over a trade once ruled by drug cartels and turning it into an all-cash business could make pot shops prime targets for extortion, black-market competition and robbery. One veteran border narcotics agent told FoxNews.com Colorado's legal pot industry will find it hard to keep the criminals from horning in on a lucrative business they once controlled.

"What is quite possible is that cartels will hire straw owners who have clean records who can apply for a license, then sell large quantities both legally and on the black market."

- Denver DEA office spokesman Albert Villasuso

"Mexico is already in Colorado without the risks," the agent, who requested anonymity, said of the state's heavy pre-existing cartel presence. "Legal businesses will likely see a rise in extortion attempts while law enforcement will see a lot of backdoor deals being made."

Cartels, especially the Juarez and Sinaloa, who have a strong presence in Colorado, could not have been happy with the estimated $1 million in sales Jan. 1, the first day of legalized retail sales. In 2012 the Mexican Competitiveness Institute issued a report saying that Mexico’s cartels would lose as much as $1.425 billion if Colorado legalized marijuana. The organization also predicted that drug trafficking revenues would fall 20 to 30 percent, and the Sinaloa cartel, which would be the most affected, would lose up to 50 percent.

Faced with such losses, the violent cartels could force their way in as black market wholesalers or simply rob pot dispensaries, which take only cash and have not been able to establish accounts with banks because of lenders' fears of violating federal laws. But the general consensus is that the Mexican cartels will not quietly relinquish the Denver market.

The owner of the Colorado Springs dispensary told the Denver Post he is planning to get a concealed-weapons permit, for protection when he has to move money out of the store.

"Any way you plan it out, there's going to be a large amount of cash around," he said. "And that's extremely scary."

Denver police are taking a wait-and-see posture as to what may emerge.

“It’s only been a week, so we still have to sit back and see how this will play out,” Denver Police spokesman Sonny Jackson told FoxNews.com. “We’re a police department, we’re always concerns about what may happen.”

Jackson said he would not speculate as to if or which cartels may decide to infiltrate the legitimate businesses or how.

“We’re concerned with the public consumption right now,” Jackson said.

The Marijuana Enforcement Division of the Colorado Department of Revenue, the primary enforcement office responsible for overseeing the production and sale of the retail marijuana, did not return repeated attempts by Fox News.com for comment.

Denver DEA office spokesman Albert Villasuso said with some 50 retail outlets in operation, the agency can only monitor if, how and when the cartels decide to move in to the legalized retail industry in Colorado.

"What is quite possible is that cartels will hire straw owners who have clean records who can apply for a license, then sell large quantities both legally and on the black market," Villasuso said. "We still don't know what the fall out will be but when there is this much money involved the potential is great for groups to want capitalize."

Villasuso also said that even if legal stores do face extortion efforts by cartel groups it is unlikely law enforcement will even be made aware of it if merchants are too frightened to come to police. Extortion has proven to be a lucrative ancillary enterprise for cartels in Mexico resulting in thousands of businesses closing rather than pay the quota, as it is called, or the store owners face the threat of death, which too has occurred.

One group who hopes to mitigate any risks is the Blue Line Protection Group, which specializes only in security for the marijuana stores.

Seeing a growing market, Ted Daniels started the company and uses ex-military and law enforcement to provide security for the stores' money and supply shipments, and the growing operations. The highly-trained and combat-experienced guards are heavily-armed with assault rifles and protective vests.

"This was an industry here that created a lot of challenges," Daniels told WDVR television news in Denver Jan. 7. "This group I put together is designed specifically to protect product, people, and money." Read more about Colorado pot shops likely targets of cartels, say experts

Forest Grove fatal crash: Jury chosen to hear Cinthya Garcia-Cisneros hit-and-run case

Nearly everyone seated on the jury had already heard about the case – the one with the driver and the pile of leaves.

They remembered some of the news reports about the Oct. 20 crash in Forest Grove: Two stepsisters, 6 and 11, were killed....

Upon questions from the prosecutor, most everyone professed to strongly believe in personal accountability....

  Read more about Forest Grove fatal crash: Jury chosen to hear Cinthya Garcia-Cisneros hit-and-run case

Forest Grove fatal crash: Cinthya Garcia-Cisneros hit-and-run case goes to trial

Attorneys took up pre-trial issues Tuesday morning in the case of Cinthya Garcia-Cisneros, the 19-year-old driver charged in an October crash that killed two young girls in Forest Grove...

...Garcia-Cisneros faces two counts of felony hit and run. Authorities say she was driving her boyfriend’s mother’s SUV Oct. 20, when she she plowed through a pile of leaves on Main Street – the same spot where stepsisters Anna Dieter-Eckerdt and Abigail Robinson were playing....

...Mario Echeverria, Garcia-Cisneros’ boyfriend, has already pleaded guilty to hindering prosecution. In court last month, he admitted to trying to cover up evidence of the crash by taking the vehicle to a car wash the next day. He took a plea deal and a 13-month prison sentence...

  Read more about Forest Grove fatal crash: Cinthya Garcia-Cisneros hit-and-run case goes to trial

Officers in Eastern Oregon arrest masked man on Interstate 84

BOARDMAN, Ore. — Law enforcement officers in northeastern Oregon say they chased and eventually arrested a masked man who had been reported swerving in and out of traffic on Interstate 84.

Morrow County Undersheriff Steven Myren says law enforcement cars tried to stop westbound blue SUV on Tuesday afternoon...

Spike strips that flattened the vehicle's two front tires eventually ended the chase.

...Officers found a loaded handgun on the passenger seat, a machete...

Adolfo Mendez Lopez - ICE HOLD

Read the full article.

  Read more about Officers in Eastern Oregon arrest masked man on Interstate 84

Hillsboro police officer justified in fatal shooting of man during traffic stop, DA says

Court records indicate that Victor Torres-Elizondo, killed by a Hillsboro police officer after he fired a shot at police during a traffic stop, had a criminal history that involved multiple drug-related crimes but no violent offenses....
 

...Torres-Elizondo, 30, who also goes by Victor Torres, had multiple drug-related convictions in Oregon and Washington state during the past 10 years, according to court records....

Read more about Victor Torres-Elizondo.
  Read more about Hillsboro police officer justified in fatal shooting of man during traffic stop, DA says

Forest Grove fatal crash: Mother of girls killed takes guilty plea from driver's boyfriend as apology

...18-year-old Cinthya Garcia-Cisneros.... had driven through a leaf pile minutes earlier, she’d struck some children....driving her boyfriend’s mother's Nissan Pathfinder that evening. Her boyfriend, Mario Echeverria, 18, and Garcia-Cisneros' younger brother were also in the vehicle.

After they examined the vehicle with a flashlight, they drove it to Echeverria’s mother’s home in Cornelius. Then the three went out for ice cream.

The next day, Echeverria took the SUV to a Hillsboro car wash, where he paid for the deluxe wash that included undercarriage cleaning....

...Garcia-Cisneros faces charges of felony hit and run. Her case is scheduled for trial next month.
 

Read more about this hit and run tragedy.

 


  Read more about Forest Grove fatal crash: Mother of girls killed takes guilty plea from driver's boyfriend as apology

Medford man charged with heroin, cocaine possession

A Medford man was arrested Tuesday on heroin- and cocaine-related charges by local drug enforcement officers, authorities said.

Medford Area Drug and Gang Enforcement police arrested Zeus Apolo Guzman-Aguilar, 36, of the 1200 block of Bens Lane, after conducting a raid at a residence in the 3300 block of Table Rock Road, said a MADGE news release.

According to court records, Guzman-Aguilar lives on Bens Lane in Medford, but he is being considered an illegal immigrant, according to Jackson County Jail records.

The raid netted 2 ounces of cocaine, 1 ounce of heroin and weight scales, the release said.

Before obtaining a search warrant for the property, police conducted a two-month investigation.

"Other occupants on the premises were found not to be involved in the criminal behavior," the release said.

Guzman-Aguilar is lodged in the Jackson County Jail without bail on charges of possession, delivery and manufacture of heroin; possession, delivery and manufacture of cocaine; a parole violation for delivery of heroin; and being in the country illegally, jail records show.

According to online court records, Guzman-Aguilar was charged in 2011 with delivery, manufacture and possession of heroin, but was only convicted of possession of heroin in Jackson County Circuit Court.
 

Zeus Apolo Guzman-Aguilar - ICE hold Read more about Medford man charged with heroin, cocaine possession

Massive marijuana grow in eastern Oregon forest nets guilty verdicts for defendant

A 34-year-old man was found guilty by a federal jury in Portland on Monday in connection with a massive marijuana growing operation that covered a mile-and-a-half stretch in eastern Oregon's Wallowa Whitman National Forest.

Fredy Figueroa-Montes was the only one of six defendants to choose to go to trial for what is believed to be the largest marijuana grow ever found in Oregon, according to the U.S. Attorney's Office....

....Authorities discovered more than 91,000 plants in the marijuana grow. The defendants had torn out trees and underbrush to develop several pods of plants.....and used more than 500 pounds of illegal pesticides, herbicides, fertilizer and rodent-killing chemicals for the operation. Damage to the area along the Wildcat Creek was estimated at $97,000....

  Read more about Massive marijuana grow in eastern Oregon forest nets guilty verdicts for defendant

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