DD: We reported earlier in the week on the opening statements in the federal trial of two of the men on trial in Ft Worth, Texas accused of Interstate Stalking with intent to kill and conspiracy to commit murder of a Mexican cartel lawyer who was slain in a murder-for-hire plot in Southlake, a suburb of Ft. Worth.
The trial has proceeded pretty much as expected but with some surprises in the testimony Murders and violence have been going on across Mexico and also some in the U.S. for decades that involve family members of 2 cartel leaders that are not drug or cartel related but a result of a family fued.
Below are excerpts from the Dallas Morning News covering testimony on Wed., Thursday, and today.
Excerpts from Dallas Morning News Wed. testimony:
Below are excerpts from the Dallas Morning News covering testimony on Wed., Thursday, and today.
Excerpts from Dallas Morning News Wed. testimony:
FORT WORTH — The men on trial in the hunting down of a Mexican drug cartel lawyer as part of a murder-for-hire plot left behind valuable clues in a Southlake shopping center, investigators testified on Wednesday.
A magnetic GPS tracker stuck to the frame underneath Guerrero Chapa’s Range Rover helped Ledezma Cepeda and his son locate and follow the victim to Southlake Town Square, where he was gunned down by a two-man cartel hit squad.
That same tracker also led federal agents to Cepeda Cortes, who prosecutors say set up an account for that device and five other trackers using a fake name but a real email address.
Jeff Lloyd, a DEA analyst, testified that the devices were purchased from a spy shop in McAllen.
Cepeda Cortes lived in nearby Edinburg.
The FBI and DEA use the same Blackline GPS trackers to follow suspects accused of crimes as part of their routine investigations, Lloyd said.
Agents identified Ledezema Cepeda in part through email he exchanged with his cousin, investigators said during the trial. They said they then matched a palm print left on Guerrero Chapa’s Range Rover to Ledezma Cepeda’s prints taken after his arrest.
Guerrero Chapa was Gulf cartel kingpin Osiel Cárdenas Guillen’s personal emissary and attorney, and he was also involved in drug trafficking, according to sources. He also was a U.S. informant who provided agents with key information about the Gulf cartel and its former paramilitary arm, Los Zetas, sources say.
Thursday testimony
The shadowy and sinister Beltran Leyva cartel leader known as “El Gato” waited years to get permission to take out the Southlake lawyer he wanted dead, and he spent about $1 million of his money on the effort.
So when he learned that Juan Jesus Guerrero Chapa was gunned down in May 2013, Gato threw a big party in Mexico with as much beer as he could get his hands on, according to testimony from the government’s star witness Thursday during a murder trial.
At the party was Gato’s top surveillance man, Jesus Gerardo Ledezma-Cepeda, who had spent about two years tracking (DD searching for then following) Guerrero Chapa using public records and high-tech spy gadgets, authorities say. Ledezma-Cepeda also tracked at least nine other men for Gato who later vanished or were found murdered, prosecutors said.
Thursday’s star witness was Ledezma-Cepeda’s son, Jesus Gerardo Ledezma-Campano Jr., 32. Ledezma-Cepeda and his cousin, Jose Luis Cepeda-Cortes, 59, are being tried on charges of interstate stalking and conspiracy to commit murder for hire in connection with the Guerrero Chapa slaying.
After the party, Gato, whose real name is Rodolfo Villarreal Hernandez, had Ledezma-Cepeda try to find some of Guerrero Chapa’s family members in the U.S., according to authorities.
When he was arrested in September 2014 with GPS trackers in his car while trying to enter the U.S., Ledezma-Cepeda was still working for Gato, his son said.
Gato hired Ledezma-Cepeda to find Guerrero Chapa because he held the lawyer responsible for his father’s murder about a decade earlier.
Ledezma-Campano, who helped his father track the victim, has pleaded guilty to a lesser charge and agreed to testify in exchange for protection for his wife and young children. They are believed to be living in the U.S. with visas that were arranged by the U.S. government.
Cepeda-Cortes, who lived in South Texas, is accused of providing logistical support to the father-and-son surveillance team.
Ledezma-Cepeda wiped tears from his eyes after his son, wearing an orange jumpsuit, was led into the courtroom Thursday by U.S. marshals.
Ledezma-Campano also became emotional when he first spoke about his father, who he last saw when they were arrested in September 2014 while trying to enter the U.S. from Mexico.
Ladezma Campino (The son) |