Posted on 09/13/2010 2:28:01 PM PDT by La Lydia
Maria 'Chata' Leon, mother of 13 kids, ruled over a criminal empire with connections to a human smuggling ring...Leon, the then-44-year-old mother of 13 children, and the much-feared head of a drug-dealing dynasty, was stuck in the border town of Mexicali. It was one of her children, Danny "Clever" Leon, who, wielding an AK-47, had died in the 2008 shoot-out with police, and now she wanted to attend his funeral in the United States.
Eventually, she would get her way right in front of LAPD gang officers. As politicians on all sides of the political spectrum argue about illegal immigration, an ongoing federal case in Los Angeles, prompted by an earlier investigation into the Leon family's criminal activities, shows the extent to which some gang members and human smugglers in Southern California have established a paralleland largely invisiblereality, shifting like shadows across the Mexican border, eluding capture for crimes committed on both sides...
Maria Leon sat like the queen spider in a web spun across the border from north to southhead of a massive criminal enterprise of drug-dealing and murder, some of it backed by the militant revolutionary group known as the Mexican Mafia, according to investigators.
For decades, the Los Angeles Police Department sought to dismantle the power of the gangland matriarch, and her extended family but, ensconced in a heavily fortified house on Drew Street in northeastern L.A., in a notorious, gang-infested neighborhood filled with mostly single-family homes and gang-controlled apartments, the gang seemed almost impossible to dislodge. When officers finally raided the Drew Street compound, they discovered a shrine to the patron saint of narco trafficking, Jesus Malverde as well as surveillance cameras and an extensive weapons stash that included a Tech 9 machine gun, a Smith Corona Rifle, a bag of explosive devices, and a Muscle Man Taser gun. From these headquarters, Maria Leon and her family had turned the neighborhood into a hellhole...
For her part, Maria Leon is serving an eight-year sentence in a federal prison, having been arrested in 2008 by immigration agents, on her way visit a neighbor. Many others in the gang have pleaded guilty and are serving lesser sentences. Real, meanwhile, is cooperating with state and federal investigators, and has publicly testified against some of his former gangand familymembers...
Just doing the jobs........
Let us all celebrate diversity. They add so much to our American culture. /s
8 years?
¿¡8 YEARS!?
Shouldn’t it be the Death penalty for something like this?!?!?!
She might be out in 4 years for “good behavior.”
Yikes!
¡Que lastima!
I agree. Eight years for all she did is a pittance. It should have been something like 25. I am sure her government-funded lawyer arranged some sort of plea bargain. When she gets out, she should be tattooed and deported to Mexico: if she shows up again in LA, back to prison.
***a Smith Corona Rifle,***
1903-a3 Smith Corona? five shot bolt action.
Tec-9 machine gun or just a 30 round semi-auto?
Inquiring minds want PICTURES!
I have one. Are you really interested?
All gang banging scum had mothers.
But I'd wager that most gang bangers didn't have mothers who were gang banging scum themselves.
L.A. street gangs=al Qaida=terrorist organizations!
Any questions?
and our crime rate.
***1903-a3 Smith Corona? five shot bolt action.
I have one. Are you really interested? ***
I’ve already got one! But what would you want for yours?
Not really interested in selling but would entertain offers. So what are they worth?
Well, it was made in a typewriter factory - wikipedia blurt:
In late 1942, Smith-Corona Typewriter Company also began production of the M1903A3 at its plant in Rochester, NY. Smith/Corona parts are usually identified by the absence of markings (Smith/Corona bolts are sometimes marked with an "X" on top of the bolt handle root). To speed production output, two-groove rifled barrels were adopted, and steel alloy specifications were relaxed under 'War Emergency Steel' criteria for both rifle actions and barrels. M1903A3 rifles with two-groove 'war emergency' barrels were shipped with a printed notation stating that the reduction in rifling grooves did not affect accuracy. As the war progressed, various machining and finishing operations were eliminated on the M1903A3 in order to increase production levels.
I'm sure it was deadly enough, despite the lack of QWERTY.
I wouldn’t take that bet.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.