logo
Son gets call showing duct-taped dad before he's killed in Baltimore, feds say

Son gets call showing duct-taped dad before he's killed in Baltimore, feds say

Miami Herald04-06-2025
A Baltimore man lured a father from California to Maryland to discuss their marijuana business, then called the father's son, showing him bound to a chair with duct tape covering his mouth before he was shot to death, federal prosecutors said.
Over the FaceTime call, Ziyon Thompson filmed Miguel Soto-Diaz from inside a Baltimore row home and demanded '200 pounds of marijuana and $50,000' from his son in exchange for his father's 'safe return' on May 8, 2022, according to prosecutors.
Soto-Diaz was tortured, and when his 'kidnappers' demands were not met, (he) was shot five times,' court documents say.
His body was found by Baltimore firefighters, who were called to the home as it burned in a fire, according to prosecutors. Investigators with the city's fire department believe the blaze was 'intentionally set,' court filings say.
Now, Thompson, 21, has been sentenced to 22 years and one month in prison over aiding and abetting the killing of Soto-Diaz, the U.S. Attorney's Office for the District of Maryland said in a June 3 news release.
'Murder is widely accepted as the most egregious crime,' prosecutors wrote in a sentencing memo ahead of Thompson's June 3 hearing. 'Here, we have a family that lost a father, husband, and caregiver.'
Thompson previously pleaded guilty to use of a firearm resulting in death during and in relation to a drug trafficking crime, court records show.
Federal public defenders appointed to represent him, Katherine Tang Newberger and Sasha Garcon, didn't immediately return McClatchy News' request for comment June 4.
In court documents, his legal counsel argued Thompson wasn't there when Soto-Diaz was killed and that he did not want him to die.
'Nonetheless, he knows he is morally and legally responsible for a death that deprived a loving wife of her husband and a child of his father, and he tears up when discussing Mr. Soto-Diaz, his wife and child,' his public defenders wrote in a sentencing memo.
The filing mentions Soto-Diaz's wife was pregnant when he was held for ransom in Baltimore.
Others involved in his killing weren't identified by prosecutors.
The month before Thompson was accused of luring Soto-Diaz to his death, he visited Soto-Diaz and his family at their California home in late April 2022, according to prosecutors.
Thompson stayed with Soto-Diaz to see 'the family's marijuana 'farm,'' then 'agreed to sell Soto-Diaz's marijuana in Maryland,' court filings say.
In charging documents, a special agent with the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives described Soto-Diaz as a 'marijuana trafficker.'
Soto-Diaz's son regularly communicated with Thompson for his father because Soto-Diaz didn't speak English, according to prosecutors, who said his son would translate their texts and calls.
After Thompson's California visit, he had an issue with 'the quality' of Soto-Diaz's marijuana and came up with a 'ruse' to have the father visit Maryland, according to court documents.
Soto-Diaz went to Maryland while believing he and Thompson were going to discuss marijuana sales on May 8, 2022, when he was picked up by Thompson at a Baltimore hotel, prosecutors said.
Thompson took him to the Baltimore row home, where Soto-Diaz was tied to a chair, with duct tape covering his mouth and zip-ties binding his hands and ankles, according to prosecutors.
After Thompson demanded a ransom payment, he texted Soto-Diaz's son, according to prosecutors, writing:
'Pap said send the bags and money so he can be ok and he said don't call the police or he want (sic) be coming home.'
An autopsy revealed Soto-Diaz died from being shot in the Baltimore row home, not the fire that burned the residence afterward, according to prosecutors.
In seeking a 25-year sentence for Thompson, before he was handed a 22-year and one-month sentence, prosecutors wrote in the sentencing memo that Thompson agreed it was 'reasonably foreseeable that Soto-Diaz would be killed during the extortion.'
Thompson's sentence is to be followed by five years of supervised release, according to the U.S. Attorney's Office.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

13 charged with operating $5M scheme that targeted older adults across US
13 charged with operating $5M scheme that targeted older adults across US

USA Today

time2 hours ago

  • USA Today

13 charged with operating $5M scheme that targeted older adults across US

The charges are the result of a two-year investigation between U.S. and Dominican authorities. The stolen money funded lavish lifestyles abroad. Thirteen individuals have been charged in connection with operating scam call centers that raked in over $5 million by defrauding 400 older adults across the nation, federal prosecutors said. The call centers based in the Dominican Republic targeted older adults in the United States, the U.S. Attorney's Office, District of Massachusetts, announced in news released on Aug. 12. Scammers obtained the money by tricking victims into believing that their grandchildren or close family members were in trouble and desperately needed money, a scheme the FBI calls a grandparent scam. The average age of their hundreds of victims was 84, prosecutors said. "Their goal," according to Leah B. Foley, the U.S. Attorney for Massachusetts, "was to trick our parents, grandparents, neighbors, and friends into handing over their life savings on false pretenses. And they succeeded." Of the 13 people charged in federal court in Massachusetts, nine are in custody, according to the Department of Justice. Two of the suspected scammers are at large in the United States and two in the Dominican Republic, Christina Sterling, a spokesperson for the U.S. Attorney's Office, said at a news conference on Aug. 12. Charges against the 13 include conspiracy to commit mail fraud and wire fraud, and money laundering conspiracy, prosecutors said. The suspected scammers face potentially decades in prison if found guilty. At least one has already pleaded guilty. 'Ringleader' in custody In addition to the FBI, the Justice Department's Office of International Affairs participated in the investigation, as well as Dominican agencies, including the Dominican National Police. Dominican authorities said the arrests were the result of a two-year investigation. Among the nine in custody is Oscar Manuel Castanos Garcia, the chief operator of the call centers. Sterling, the U.S. Attorney's Office spokesperson, described him as a "ringleader" and said he was arrested on Aug. 12 in the Dominican Republic. Castanos Garcia, 33, is suspected of directing scammers to follow a script in their calls that would lead the victim to believe that their loved one was making a call from jail after a car accident and needed money to post bail, the U.S. Attorney's Office said. He operated call centers out of residential homes in Santiago de los Caballeros and Puerto Plata. "I was granted a 5-minute phone call, and I called you because I know you can help me," a script shared by the Department of Justice reads. "Please, promise that you will keep this between us until I get out, I am ashamed about this." The script directed callers to hang up by telling the victim, "I love you." Callers obtained information about their victims through the dark web, according to a federal affidavit. Castanos Garcia and a few others were arrested in the Dominican Republic and are expected to be extradited. Money went towards 'luxury purchases' The grandparent fraud schemes depend on several operators playing key roles, from "openers" who make the initial call to older adults to "runners" who collect the cash from victims and launder it back to the Dominican Republic, according to Justice Department officials. Operators kept a "scoreboard" at call centers showing how much money each "opener" and "closer" pairing made, prosecutors said. The closer is responsible for making the second call to victims. In the Massachusetts case, operators posed as public defenders who told victims how much "bail money" they had to pay. Sometimes, call center operators would call back multiple times to demand greater sums of money, making claims including that a baby had been lost in the car accident, Justice Department officials said. The money furnished lavish lifestyles for call center operators. Castanos Garcia spent the money on "upgrades to his home and luxury purchases," including a boat, court documents said. Photographs included in a federal affidavit show Castanos Garcia sitting in a hot tub aboard a yacht. Growing scheme The grandparent scam case in Massachusetts, which included at least 50 victims, is the latest in the growing field of elder fraud. FBI officials announced in June that older adults across the United States reported nearly $4.89 billion in losses due to fraud schemes, including grandparent scams. The sum represents a 43% increase in losses from 2023, according to the FBI. According to data from the FBI's Internet Crime Complaint Center, there were 147,127 complaints of elder fraud in 2024, a 46% increase from 2024, the FBI said. Among recent schemes, a federal grand jury indicted a man from the Dominican Republic in March in connection with a scheme to defraud five people of $50,000, USA TODAY previously reported. Luis Alfonso Bisono Rodriguez, a citizen of the Caribbean nation living in Cleveland, played all the parts of the scam from opener to runner. He pleaded not guilty in July. "Elder fraud is a growing problem and a shameful crime," Kimberly Milka, acting special agent in charge of the FBI's Boston Division, said in a release about elder fraud. "Not only does it rob an already vulnerable population of their sense of security, but it leaves them with devastating financial losses." Older adults are targeted because they are often seen as more trusting and also less likely to report being scammed, federal officials said. People can report elder fraud scams by emailing calling 1-800-CALL-FBI (1-800-225-5324), or online at the FBI's IC3 Elder Fraud Complaint Center.

Illinois students could see new testing standards with proposed state board revisions
Illinois students could see new testing standards with proposed state board revisions

Chicago Tribune

time5 hours ago

  • Chicago Tribune

Illinois students could see new testing standards with proposed state board revisions

Illinois students could be held to new standards for school testing, a shift the state school board says will better prepare them for college and postsecondary education careers while accurately measuring performance levels. The Illinois State Board of Education announced proposed changes to state standardized testing Tuesday — including the ACT, the Illinois Assessment of Readiness and the Illinois Science Assessment — that would create consistent measures of student performance on all state exams and make it easier to understand and track students' progress. It would also adjust the proficiency threshold for each exam section based on grade level, determining the minimum score a student must achieve to be considered on track for their grade level in learning. There are three major exams that Illinois students take while in school: The Illinois Assessment of Readiness is administered to students in grades three through eight each year to test their skills in English language arts and math, while the Illinois Science Assessment is only administered to students in fifth and eighth grades. Students take the PreACT in ninth and 10th grade and the ACT in 11th grade. Currently, the three exams do not use the same levels or benchmarks to assess student learning based on their exam scores. The current testing measurements have multiple performance levels for students to be sorted into, which are categories of score ranges on the state assessment. The varied scores from test to test can create confusion for parents and students due to the lack of consistency, Illinois State Superintendent of Education Tony Sanders said at a Tuesday media briefing. The change will allow the board to alleviate this confusion with a proposed new uniform scoring system on each test: 'below proficient,' 'approaching proficient,' 'proficient' and 'above proficient.' While the Illinois Science Assessment evaluates students in four levels — emerging, developing, proficient and exemplary — the Illinois Assessment of Readiness places students into five categories based on their scores: 'does not meet' (expectations), 'partially meets,' 'approaching meets,' 'meets expectations' and 'exceeds expectations.' A student is considered proficient when they are on track for their grade level in learning, and a proficiency benchmark is the score a student needs to be on track in their grade. The state determines these benchmarks. According to the board, there is currently a mismatch between proficiency thresholds in the different sections of exams — English language arts, science and math. The threshold for proficiency in science according to a student's exam score is too low, while the proficiency threshold for a student in English language arts and math is too high. This resulted in students excelling in class but not reaching the proficiency mark on exams, which can lead to discouragement in students when they think about their future options postgraduation, Sanders said. He gave the example of multiple former students, now in college, who excelled in advanced placement classes and had high GPAs but did not receive proficient scores on state standardized tests. 'If they had listened to us, they might not have enrolled in college. Maybe they wouldn't even have enrolled in dual credit (classes) while they were still in high school,' Sanders said. '… Thankfully, they didn't listen to what these cut scores told them and instead pursued these higher opportunities. But think about the kids that did not.' That all three required standardized tests — the ACT, Illinois Assessment of Readiness and Illinois Science Assessment — have different benchmarks for proficiency creates a sense of inconsistency and does not accurately reflect a student's level of college or career readiness, Sanders said. 'They're misaligned with what it actually means to succeed in college and career,' Sanders said. 'This misalignment has serious, real-world consequences. Students are being denied opportunities for acceleration, misidentified as needing interventions or believing, as I said earlier, that they're not ready to go into college.' This discrepancy in results can be confusing for families and students trying to determine readiness levels for classes, college or careers, especially when they do well in school but do not meet the state's level of proficiency. The new measurements aim to change that, Sanders said. For English language arts in the Illinois Assessment of Readiness, the proficiency threshold would be lowered from 750 to 735, increasing by two points each grade until they take the exam for the last time in grade eight. The proficiency threshold for math on the Illinois Assessment of Readiness would also be lowered from 750 to 732. The proficiency levels for the math section would rise to 740 for grades four and five, 742 for grade six, and 745 for grades seven and eight. As for the Illinois Science Assessment, which is administered only to fifth and eighth graders, students will have to increase their scores to 812 to be considered proficient. The current proficiency score is 799. The changes to the performance measures were initially put into motion last year when the ACT became a state-mandated exam to measure high school performance. This shift required the establishment of new performance standards for high schools. For students in grade nine taking the PreACT, an English language arts section score of 14 is proficient, while a math section score of 17 and a science section score of 14 meet proficiency standards. There are no prior proficiency levels to measure the proposed scores against because the state switched to the ACT this spring, the board said. For grade 10 students, a PreACT English language arts section score of 15, a math section score of 18 and a science section score of 16 would be proficient. Additionally, the proposed changes aim to align students taking the ACT in their junior year of high school with the scores necessary to get into college, pass college coursework and succeed in the workforce, the board said. The ACT is scored out of 36 and has an English language arts, math and science section. The new proficiency scores would be an English language arts score of 18, a math score of 19 and a science score of 19. The board spoke with educators, community members, student leaders and policy makers over an 18-month period to create new rubrics describing the range of performance expected in each performance level. Educators also took the exams to evaluate their difficulty and help determine what are known as 'cut scores' — the scores that differentiate one performance level from another, such as 'proficient' from 'above proficient.' While two-thirds of Illinois high school graduates go on to enroll in a two- or four-year college within a year of graduating, the current state assessment levels indicate that less than half that number of students are proficient in English language arts, and an even smaller number are proficient in math. The updated proficiency standards and performance levels help capture 'the full spectrum of skills students are developing,' CPS sixth grade teacher Comfort Agboola said at the meeting. '(The standards) acknowledge growth in ways that can motivate rather than discourage,' Agboola said. 'When students believe they are proficient or see themselves as getting closer, they are more willing to take risks, engage deeply with challenging text and push themselves further than they thought was possible.' Scott Rowe, superintendent of High School District 214 in the Arlington Heights area, added at the meeting that these changes would help accurately reflect a student's readiness and allow school districts to know where more support might be needed. 'Past benchmarks often miss the mark, but this step moves us closer to measuring real performance and readiness,' Rowe said. 'It also tells a more accurate story of the high quality instruction and postsecondary readiness our teachers are delivering for our communities across the state.'

NBA Champion & Web3 Expert Tristan Thompson Appointed as Chief Digital Equity Officer for Telecoms Trailblazer World Mobile - Focused on Their Shared Mission of Bringing Affordable, Community-Owned In
NBA Champion & Web3 Expert Tristan Thompson Appointed as Chief Digital Equity Officer for Telecoms Trailblazer World Mobile - Focused on Their Shared Mission of Bringing Affordable, Community-Owned In

Business Wire

time8 hours ago

  • Business Wire

NBA Champion & Web3 Expert Tristan Thompson Appointed as Chief Digital Equity Officer for Telecoms Trailblazer World Mobile - Focused on Their Shared Mission of Bringing Affordable, Community-Owned In

LOS ANGELES--(BUSINESS WIRE)--NBA champion, tech and Web3 expert Tristan Thompson is stepping off the court and into the skies—literally, as he announces his new role as telecoms trailblazer World Mobile's first Chief Digital Equity Officer with its game-changing aerospace subsidiary World Mobile Stratospheric and mission to connect the 3 billion people who still live without internet access. Thompson is teaming up with the global decentralized wireless network to spotlight overlooked digital divides and champion a future where communities own their connectivity. In a world where connectivity means access to education, opportunity, and economic freedom, Thompson is leading a bold new approach: telecoms from the stratosphere. The announcement kicks off a multi-tier campaign aimed at raising awareness around hidden infrastructure gaps — not only in rural regions but also in places people least expect, like Hidden Hills in Los Angeles or pockets of inner-city Cleveland. In his new role, Thompson will work closely with World Mobile to drive visibility and real-world solutions in these areas. As part of this initiative, Thompson is introducing the Community Connectivity Fund, a multi-million-dollar effort designed to help low-income neighborhoods gain access to affordable, high-speed internet through World Mobile's decentralized model. The fund will support pilot programs, local infrastructure installations, and education around community ownership of mobile networks. As an additional strategic move, World Mobile has announced an unprecedented partnership with Protelindo, Indonesia's largest digital infrastructure company, to develop and deploy a pioneering stratospheric connectivity network. Powered by hydrogen-fueled, fixed-wing aircraft, the solution will support internet access for hundreds of millions of global web users, particularly in underserved regions, through sustainable and cost-effective technology. The pioneering network leverages hydrogen-powered, fixed-wing aircraft operating as High-Altitude Platform Systems (HAPS), capable of maintaining a stationary position at altitudes of approximately 20,000 meters. Utilizing World Mobile's blockchain-based infrastructure, these aircraft will provide direct-to-handset internet access, supporting hundreds of thousands of concurrent users with cellular connectivity. Central to this innovation is World Mobile's native WMTx token, which serves as the economic backbone for the entire network. The blockchain-secured token manages on-chain settlements, permissioned network access, and economic incentives, creating a self-sustaining value loop. Users, infrastructure providers, and node operators are economically aligned, ensuring continuous expansion and sustainability of the network. Micky Watkins, CEO of World Mobile, said in a statement, 'This partnership embodies the potential of blockchain and decentralized economics to reshape global connectivity. By integrating token-driven incentives with advanced aerospace technology, we're creating a resilient and economically viable model for bringing reliable internet to underserved regions at unprecedented scale.' Indra Gunawan, senior representative at Protelindo added, 'World Mobile's blockchain-based approach to connectivity infrastructure addresses key challenges faced by geographically diverse countries like Indonesia. We see tremendous potential in leveraging this technology to bring consistent, scalable internet access to communities currently beyond traditional reach.' The hydrogen-powered aircraft at the heart of the initiative have already undergone successful testing with major telecom companies in the UK and Middle East. Capable of delivering connectivity across vast regions, the aircraft can efficiently cover remote and rural areas typically underserved by fiber and traditional cellular networks. Hydrogen fuel also drastically reduces environmental impact, achieving a projected 99% reduction in carbon emissions compared to satellite-based solutions. Deployment of the blockchain-enabled aircraft will initially target strategic geographic markets such as Indonesia and the United States, where challenging terrains and underserved communities stand to benefit significantly. Despite advanced telecom infrastructure in the U.S., approximately 11% of citizens lack reliable connectivity, demonstrating the pressing need for innovative solutions. World Mobile's DePIN initiative represents a significant leap forward for blockchain-based infrastructure, merging decentralized economic incentives with real-world utility. The network not only promises expanded internet access but also introduces a sustainable, token-driven economic model that can be replicated globally. Thompson's role with World Mobile merges influence, personal journey, and impact. Growing up with limited access to opportunity, and now facing connectivity issues in even the most developed areas, he is focused on the mission to connect the unconnected — starting in the neighborhoods that often fall through the cracks. His appointment marks a major step in World Mobile's efforts to educate and empower people to not only access the internet but also benefit from the infrastructure behind it. Together, World Mobile and Tristan Thompson are not only rethinking who gets connected, but who gets to own the network — creating a world where everyone has the power to build and benefit from their own digital future. With Tristan Thompson on board, World Mobile isn't just changing telecoms—it's changing lives. The mission is clear: everyone, everywhere deserves to be connected. About World Mobile World Mobile is revolutionizing global connectivity through its blockchain-based Decentralized Physical Infrastructure Network (DePIN), empowering individuals and communities to build, maintain, and monetize telecom infrastructure through blockchain-driven economic incentives. Learn more at

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store