Reputed Mexican Mafia member slain in Long Beach homeless encampment (2024)

Samuel Villalba, a longtime member of the Mexican Mafia who had fallen out of favor with the prison gang, was shot to death over the weekend in Long Beach, according to the police and law enforcement sources.

Officers responded about 8 p.m. Sunday to a homeless encampment near the 91 Freeway, where they found Villalba, 64, shot multiple times in the chest, the Long Beach Police Department said in a statement. At least two men were spotted running from the scene.

The police said the motive for the attack remained undetermined, but detectives were investigating it as gang-related.

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Villalba, originally from the Artesia street gang, was classified as a Mexican Mafia member by state prison authorities in 1984, according to law enforcement records.

The Mexican Mafia is an organization of about 140 men, all but a handful of whom are incarcerated, that controls most Latino street gangs in Southern California. Mexican Mafia members levy “taxes,” or cuts of the proceeds of drug sales and other criminal rackets, from territories under their control; in exchange, they protect Latino gang members in the prison and jail systems.

Villalba was among 22 Mexican Mafia members and associates charged in a landmark racketeering case in 1994. An indictment implicated Villalba in the murder of Charles “Charlie Brown” Manriquez, a reputed Mexican Mafia member who briefly advised the director of the 1992 film “American Me.” Senior members of the Mexican Mafia were rumored to have been angered by the film, which depicted the organization’s rise — particularly by a scene that depicted a founding member being sodomized in juvenile hall.

Manriquez was shot to death March 25, 1992 at the Ramona Gardens public housing development in Boyle Heights. Ana Lizarraga, a paid consultant on the film, was gunned down by masked men two months after Manriquez’s slaying.

After being indicted, Villalba remained a fugitive for five months before he was arrested at a motel in Buena Park in 1995. He pleaded guilty to conspiring to commit racketeering and was sentenced to 14 years and eight months in prison, court records show.

Behind bars, Villalba got into a dispute with a senior Mexican Mafia member, and that effectively cast him out of the organization’s graces, according to law enforcement officials who weren’t authorized to discuss the matter publicly and requested anonymity.

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Villalba assaulted James “Rube” Soto, a respected and aging member of the Mexican Mafia who is now in his late 80s, an official said. In doing so, he violated a cardinal rule of the organization that forbids members from raising hands against one another. Inmates associated with the Mexican Mafia beat Villalba in retribution, and he left prison with a perennial target on his head, the officials said.

Villalba was sent back to prison in 2014 and 2016 for violating the terms of his supervised release, according to court records. He was last released from the federal prison system in January 2017, the records show. Long Beach police said Villalba had been living at the encampment where he was found dead.

Ramon “Mundo” Mendoza, a former member of the Mexican Mafia, suspected Villalba made a fatal mistake in returning to a neighborhood within the organization’s reach. “Sooner or later, someone’s going to report back: ‘Hey, guess who I saw?’” Mendoza said in an interview. “The guy is an open target. It’s what you’d call an open contract, a lifetime contract.”

For a Mexican Mafia member, ordering a dropout’s death is “like buying a soda pop,” he said. “It’s nothing to tell a Sureño” — the term for Latino street gang members loyal to the Mexican Mafia — “you’ve got the green light, the go-ahead. Take him out.”

Still, Mendoza said it was “extremely rare” for a dropout, as former members of the Mexican Mafia are called, to be killed. He could think of only one other: Anthony “Dido” Moreno in 1995. In a small El Monte apartment, gunmen shot to death not just Moreno, who had dropped out of the Mexican Mafia in 1983; they also killed, execution-style, his friend, Gus Aguirre; his sister, Maria Moreno; and Maria Moreno’s 5-year-old daughter and 6-month-old son.

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Reputed Mexican Mafia member slain in Long Beach homeless encampment (2024)

FAQs

Reputed Mexican Mafia member slain in Long Beach homeless encampment? ›

Reputed Mexican Mafia member slain in Long Beach homeless encampment. Samuel Villalba, a longtime member of the Mexican Mafia who had fallen out of favor with the prison gang

prison gang
A prison gang is an inmate organization that operates within a prison system, that has a corporate entity, exists into perpetuity, and whose membership is restrictive, mutually exclusive, and often requires a lifetime commitment.
https://en.wikipedia.org › Prison_gangs_in_the_United_States
, was shot to death over the weekend in Long Beach, according to the police and law enforcement sources.

What happened to Ramon Mundo Mendoza on Wikipedia? ›

Death. Mendoza died at the age of 73 on 4 April 2001 while on holidays in Nassau, the Bahamas.

Where is Ramón Mundo Mendoza from? ›

Ramon “Mundo” Mendoza was born in 1949 at the LA County General Hospital, his family moving from Boyle Heights to East LA in 1952. After a journey through various Juvenile facilities, Mundo was jumped into the Tiny's clique of the Varrio Nuevo Estrada street gang.

Who runs the Mexican Mafia? ›

Law enforcement believes that La eMe presently is not presided over by a single leader. Many Mexican Mafia members have the authority to order murders and oversee various other criminal activities.

Do Mexican Mafia members run profitable illegal Los Angeles casinos from behind bars? ›

The roughly 140-person Mexican Mafia is a prison mob syndicate that oversees street gangs in Southern California. Many of the members are incarcerated, yet benefit from the profits of the illegal casinos. They are given part of the profits for allowing the gambling houses to operate in their territories of LA.

Is Joe Peg Leg Morgan still alive? ›

Joseph Morgan (born Joseph Međugorac; April 10, 1929 – November 8, 1993) was an American gangster who became the first non-Mexican American member of the Mexican Mafia. He received the nickname "Pegleg" by authorities because of his prosthetic leg.

Is the movie Mundo based on a true story? ›

Based on the story of ex-Mexican Mafia member Ramon "Machine Gun Mundo" Mendoza.

Is American Me based on a true story? ›

American Me (1992) was the directing debut of long time character actor Edward James Olmos. This film is a historical fiction depiction of the rise of La Emme, The Mexican Mafia. The movie follows the lives of three street gang members who by a sad twist of fate end up in Juvenille Hall.

What is the meaning of La eMe? ›

The Texas Mexican Mafia or Spanish term “La Eme” (which translates literally to “The M”). The Texas Mexican Mafia was self-dedicated to the pursuit of organized criminal conduct principally through drug trafficking, extortion and assault.

Who is Ramón where is he from? ›

Ramón Rodríguez is a Puerto Rican actor known for his current role as the title character in the ABC series Will Trent.

Does the Mexican Mafia work with cartels? ›

Moreover, members of the Tijuana Cartel work with high-ranking associates of the California-based Mexican Mafia prison gang in controlling the drug trafficking activities of Hispanic street gang members (Sureños 13) in the Pacific and Southwest Regions.

Who is the most famous Mexican Mafia boss? ›

A Mexico-based cartel famous largely because their long-term leader, El Chapo, was recently captured and imprisoned, the dangerous Sinaloa Cartel is also notorious for its extensive ties to the Mexican federal police and military.

What is the most powerful cartel in the world? ›

The Sinaloa cartel, named after the Mexican state where it was formed, is one of the oldest and most established drug trafficking groups in Mexico. It has long supplied much of the marijuana, cocaine, heroin, methamphetamine and fentanyl peddled on US streets, according to a Congressional Research Service report.

Do mobsters own casinos in Vegas? ›

Although ethnic organized crime figures had been involved in some of the operations at the hotels, the Mafia bosses never owned or controlled the hotels and clubs that remained monopolized by hard-bitten local Las Vegas families unwilling to cede ground to the crime bosses and proved strong enough to push back.

What are the underground casinos in Los Angeles? ›

These casinos are known as “casitas,” which is Spanish for “l*ttle houses.” According to authorities, the Mexican Mafia, a prison-based group in Southern California, is behind the illegal businesses and they're cashing in on the profits.

Do casinos attract crime? ›

Most factors that reduce crime occur before or shortly after a casino opens, whereas those that increase crime, including problem and pathological gambling, occur over time. The results suggest that the effect on crime is low shortly after a casino opens, and grows over time.

Who got killed for making the movie American Me? ›

The victims were: Charles Manriquez (known as Charlie Brown), a Mexican Mafia member and unofficial consultant to the film, killed on early 1992; actress Ana Lizarraga, a community youth counselor and official consultant to the director who was shot in her driveway in front of her son and her boyfriend; and Manuel Luna ...

What happened to Ramon Ramos? ›

Ramos, who was not wearing a seatbelt and was thrown from the vehicle, suffered brain damage and remained in a coma for three months. Though alcohol was not a factor, Ramos had been speeding prior to the crash.

What happened to Ramon Stagnaro? ›

He died on 16 February 2022 in Los Angeles, California, USA.

Why did Ramon leave Mexico? ›

In pursuit of a better life, Ramon Martinez migrated to the U.S. from Cañadas de Obregon, Jalisco when he was only 15 years old. He went from living on a small ranch, where everyone knew each other and he worked on a farm with his father, to abandoning that life in pursuit of the American Dream.

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