logo
MS-13 members storm funeral of rival gang member in Guatemala, killing at least 7

MS-13 members storm funeral of rival gang member in Guatemala, killing at least 7

CBS News3 days ago
Armed gang members stormed into the funeral of a rival gang member in Guatemala, killing at least 7 people and wounding 13 others, government officials said.
Guatemala is plagued by the violent rivalry between the Barrio 18 and Mara Salvatrucha, or MS-13, gangs. Interior Minister Francisco Jimenez blamed the attack at the funeral home on Tuesday in the capital, Guatemala City, on their rivalry.
The funeral, Jimenez said in a statement, was that of a Barrio 18 member who was killed Monday. While the wake was taking place, "rival gang members from Mara Salvatrucha stormed the funeral home and fired at the family and friends" of the deceased, he added.
The attackers, who arrived at the funeral home on motorcycles, fled the scene.
Authorities cordoned off the area as forensic teams recovered the bodies.
Jimenez said the wake had been considered "high risk" due to "the profile of the deceased," and regretted that the police officers assigned to monitor the event had abandoned their posts before the attack.
He called the situation "unacceptable" and said the officers would be investigated by the internal affairs unit.
"If found responsible, they will immediately be brought before the courts," he said.
The MS-13 gang was formed in Los Angeles in the 1980s by Salvadoran immigrants who fled the civil war in their home country.
The brutal gang has since spread to Guatemala and Honduras, turning the region into one of the most violent in the world. It's violent grip in Central America is one of the forces driving thousands of migrants to flee to the United States.
Earlier this year, the U.S. designated MS-13 a terrorist organization, with President Trump calling it "probably the meanest, worst gang in the world" and "an evil group of people. They're sick and deranged."
The Barrio 18 and MS-13 gangs are battling for territorial control in Guatemala, extorting shopkeepers, transport workers and civilians. Those who refuse to pay are often killed.
Tuesday's attack "was not directed against ordinary citizens, but rather the result of the cancer that gangs represent for the country," Guatemala's security chief said.
Guatemala ended 2024 with a homicide rate of 16.1 per 100,000 inhabitants — twice the global average — according to the interior ministry. However, the figure has dropped from 29.6 in 2014.
Authorities attribute half of violent crimes to drug cartel activity and territorial disputes between gangs.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Maxwell Anderson Sentenced to Life in Prison for Dismembering College Student Sade Robinson, 19, on Their First Date
Maxwell Anderson Sentenced to Life in Prison for Dismembering College Student Sade Robinson, 19, on Their First Date

Yahoo

time6 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Maxwell Anderson Sentenced to Life in Prison for Dismembering College Student Sade Robinson, 19, on Their First Date

"When you touched my daughter, you f----- with the wrong family," Robinson's mother said during the sentencing hearingNEED TO KNOW Maxwell Anderson was sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole after being convicted of killing and dismembering 19-year-old college student Sade Carleena Robinson Robinson's family spoke during the sentencing hearing on Aug. 1, calling Anderson a "demon" and suggesting that "everything that he did should be done to him" "My ancestors roll deep," Robinson's mother said during the sentencingMaxwell Anderson, the Milwaukee man who was convicted of killing and dismembering a 19-year-old college student, has been sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole. Nearly two months after the 34-year-old man was found guilty on all counts for the killing and dismemberment of Sade Carleena Robinson, Circuit Judge Laura Crivello sentenced him to life in prison with no opportunity to seek parole during his sentencing hearing on Friday, Aug. 1, according to the Associated Press and the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel. In June, Anderson was convicted by a jury of first-degree intentional homicide, dismembering a corpse, arson and hiding a corpse in connection with the April 2024 death. Investigators claimed he killed Robinson on a first date and spread her remains around Milwaukee County. His conviction came with a mandatory sentence of life in prison, with the judge revealing the parole decision on Aug. 1. During the sentencing hearing, Robinson's mother Sheena Scarbrough referred to Anderson as a "demon" and said he 'messed the entire community up." The teen's father, Carlos Robinson, also spoke out. 'Everything that he did should be done to him,' Carlos said, per the AP. 'No man should be able to live after what he did. That's just how I feel. I can't get past this. I can't.' While Anderson's attorney, Anthony Cotton, encouraged the judge to make his client eligible for parole — citing his time in the U.S. Navy and apparent mental health issues — the judge refused. Anderson also said on Aug. 1 that he hoped "true justice will be delivered" after claiming he was innocent. Per the Sentinel, he claimed he "did not commit these crimes" and that he was planning on appealing the convictions. Cotton did not immediately respond to PEOPLE's request for comment. During the sentencing, Crivello called Anderson's crimes 'unconscionable' and said his view of reality 'differs from the rest of the world." She sentenced him to an additional seven and a half years on the dismemberment charge and a year and a half for arson, while apparently dismissing his count of hiding a corpse after Cotton argued he couldn't be convicted of that charge and the mutilating charge, according to the AP. Want to keep up with the latest crime coverage? Sign up for for breaking crime news, ongoing trial coverage and details of intriguing unsolved cases. In June, Assistant District Attorney Ian Vance-Curzan said during the trial's closing arguments that Anderson, who was 33 years old at the time, met with Robinson at a bar the week before she went missing, per the AP. Both surveillance video and cell phone records put the two together during the late afternoon and early evening of April 1, Vance-Curzan said, adding that they visited two bars before going back to Anderson's apartment. Authorities later discovered photos from Anderson's phone of him groping Robinson while she lay face down on his couch, as the prosecutor described her as incapacitated, according to the AP. Video footage also showed Robinson's vehicle leave Anderson's apartment on April 2 and arrive at a park near Lake Michigan, where prosectors said Anderson cut the victim's body up without being seen. An informant also alleged that Anderson provided a detailed plan of how he intended to carry out the killing. "My daughter had to cross your demonic path," Scarbrough said during the Aug. 1 hearing. "You plotted and planned to kill, dismember, then you disrespectfully spread my daughter across Milwaukee like a piece of trash. How dare you?" "My daughter was everything. She was everything to all of us. ... This has affected the world, the community in such extreme ways. There's no way in hell we should've went through this freaking trial that you [dragged] us through. You knew you were guilty." Scarbrough also told the convicted killer of her daughter that he could "no longer hurt" her child. "She's in heaven. She's protected. We roll deep. My ancestors roll deep. When you touched my daughter, you f----d with the wrong family," she said. Read the original article on People

Charges laid in kidnapping and killing of Abbotsford teen
Charges laid in kidnapping and killing of Abbotsford teen

Yahoo

time7 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Charges laid in kidnapping and killing of Abbotsford teen

Five people have been charged in connection with the kidnapping and homicide of an Abbotsford teenager in January. On Jan. 27, shortly before 2 a.m., police responded to a suspicious occurrence in the 2900-block of Victoria Street in Abbotsford. Witnesses reported seeing a man being assaulted before being taken away in a vehicle, according to the Integrated Homicide Investigation Team. About three hours later, the 19-year-old was located in the Crescent Beach area of Surrey with severe injuries. On Feb. 1, he died at the hospital and IHIT took over the case. The teen has not been identified by police. IHIT believes this was a targeted hit but not related to the ongoing gang conflict in the province. On Friday, five men were charged with criminal offences, four with first-degree murder and forcible confinement and one with forcible confinement. Charged with first-degree murder and forcible confinement are Ravdeep Gill, 21, a resident of Winnipeg, Harmandeep Gill, 26, a resident of Brampton, Ont., Jaskaran Singh, 20, of Surrey, and Bipanpreet Singh, 22, also living in Surrey. Inderpreet Khosa, 19, of Abbotsford has been charged with forcible confinement. ticrawford@ Related B.C. crime news: Police seek witnesses to woman's fatal fall from truck | Murder probe launched in Abbotsford kidnapping Man charged with second-degree murder in 2024 Langley homicide Maple Ridge victims of neighbourhood dispute were 'best couple ever,' devastated friends say

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