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Friday 25 November 2011

Va. MS-13 Leader Indicted for Sex Trafficking of Minors

For the fifth time in recent months, federal prosecutors in Alexandria have accused an MS-13 gang member of trafficking teenage girls for prostitution.


Rances Ulices Amaya, 23, who is also known as “Blue” or “Murder,” 23, of Springfield, Va., was indicted Wednesday in U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia as part of a larger investigation by a Northern Virginia task force.


In October, a federal judge sentenced another gang member to life in prison for prostituting a 12-year-old girl who was a runaway and had turned to him for help. The move into prostitution is an expansion of the gang’s criminal enterprises, authorities have said.


Amaya, of Springfield, is accused of conspiracy and three counts of sex trafficking of a minor, according to a statement from Neil H. MacBride, U.S. Attorney for the Eastern District of Virginia. If convicted, he faces a mandatory sentence of at least 10 years and up to life in prison for each sex trafficking count, and as much as five years in prison for conspiracy.


According to court documents, Amaya is a leader of the Guanacos Lokotes Salvatrucha (GLS) clique of MS-13.


Sex trafficking is an unconscionable crime that results in a lifetime of trauma for the young victims,” said United States Attorney MacBride. “Mr Amaya is the fifth gang member charged in this ongoing investigation by the FBI and the Northern Virginia Human Trafficking Task Force, and we are committed to eradicating juvenile sex trafficking from our communities.”


Amaya was indicted today on charges of conspiracy and three counts of sex trafficking of a minor. If convicted, he faces a mandatory minimum of 10 years and a maximum of life in prison for each sex trafficking count and a maximum penalty of five years in prison for conspiracy.


According to court documents, Amaya is a leader of the Guanacos Lokotes Salvatrucha (GLS) clique of MS-13. In June 2009 and throughout the fall of that year, Amaya is accused of conspiring with others to recruit multiple juvenile females to work as a prostitutes and transporting them throughout Northern Virginia for appointments that Amaya had arranged with clients.


He is accused of providing the juveniles with alcohol and narcotics to facilitate the prostitution scheme, along with remaining with the juveniles during prostitution appointments to ensure the clients did not violate the rules he had set for the sexual encounter.


The investigation was conducted by the FBI’s Washington Field Office, with the assistance of Fairfax County Police Department and the Northern Virginia Human Trafficking Task Force. Assistant United States Attorney Zachary Terwilliger is prosecuting the case on behalf of the United States.


Founded in 2004, the Northern Virginia Human Trafficking Task Force is a collaboration of federal, state, and local law enforcement agencies – along with nongovernmental organizations – dedicated to combating human trafficking and related crimes.


Criminal complaints are only charges and not evidence of guilt. A defendant is presumed to be innocent until and unless proven guilty.

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