Concerns are increasing about a violent gang from Venezuela spreading throughout the United States. Experts believe that by February of next year, the gang may have a presence in more than half of the country.
Recent reports revealed that the Tren de Aragua gang, known as the ‘epitome of evil’ and ‘MS-13 on steroids’, is currently active in 18 states.
These states include not only major cities like New York and Chicago but also more distant locations such as Colorado, North Dakota, Montana, Nevada, and Wyoming. The ruthless gang members have strongholds in various parts of Texas as well.
Speaking exclusively to DailyMail.com, former immigration and customs enforcement director for Colorado and Wyoming, John Fabbricatore, said: ‘We’re going to start hearing stories about them getting arrested everywhere.
‘They’re in 17 states now. I wouldn’t be surprised if by February, that’s higher than 25.’
Known as TdA to law enforcement, the gang originated in a Venezuelan prison.Â
Members of the South American mafia have since crept into the US via the southern border, hidden among the one million Venezuelan migrants who have entered the country under the Biden administration. Â
They can often be identified by telltale tattoos, including a train (‘tren’ is Spanish for train), a crown, a clock and an AK-47.
Earlier this year, Daily Mail revealed how the gang set up its new headquarters in the Mexican city of Juarez on the US border, just across from El Paso, Texas.Â
And startling police investigations have showed how the mob is behind a spiraling crime wave across America, with gangsters accused of murders, violent attacks on cops and sex trafficking.Â
John Fabbricatore, former immigration and customs enforcement director for Colorado and Wyoming, is an expert in migrants gangs such as TdA
North Dakota Â
Three suspected TdA members were taken into custody in North Dakota last month.
Authorities in West Fargo, which is home to fewer than 40,000 people, arrested alleged gang member Henry Theis, 25, according to Valley News Live.
Theis was charged with felony theft last month after being found with $24,800 in cash in a car.
Police pulled him over because the car he was driving matched the description of a vehicle that had been involved in an ATM theft that same day.
During the traffic stop, Theis admitted to working with three other hackers to ‘jackpot’ ATMs, using a virus to steal money.
He also volunteered that other Venezuelan criminals were doing the same thing in North Dakota and going by the nickname, ‘the magicians.’
The car Theis was driving had temporary paper tags from Texas, and he told the cops he was a Venezuelan living in Dallas.Â
A few days later, two other Venezuelans believed to be working with Thesis were also taken into custody.Â
Suspected TdA member Henry Theis, 25, was arrested in North Dakota in November
Jefferson Rodriguez-Quintero and Ryber Sanchez have also been charged in the ATM scam in North Dakota
Tren de Aragua gang tattoos (pictured above) were part of a Department of Homeland Security bulletin that was recently shared with federal agents
Jefferson Rodriguez-Quintero and Ryber Sanchez were similarly charged over the ATM scam and booked into the Codington County Jail, reported local station KXLG.
‘They look at the United States as just one big money pit for them,’Â Fabbricatore explained.
‘It doesn’t matter how far out, like you think, North Dakota – that’s going pretty far. But to them, there’s ATM machines there. There’s jewelry stores there. There are things to rob. There’s rich people there that they can hit their homes. Everything in the US to them is just dollar signs.’
Between the three men arrested in North Dakota, almost $100,000 in cash was recovered.Â
East to West
American law enforcement officials confirmed that the South American syndicate has been active in California, Montana, Nevada and Wyoming, Fox News reported.
A memo from the Department of Homeland Security confirmed the mob’s presence there but not not cite specific cases or arrests.
The leaked document also places the gang in Virginia and Washington D.C.Â
Earlier this year, it emerged that the gang had taken over apartment complexes in Aurora, Colorado, with one allegedly used as a torture hub.Â
One couple was held against their will, tortured and terrorized by 13 to 15 armed individuals, Aurora’s police chief Todd Chamberlin said.
‘They were pistol whipped, they were beaten, they were terrorized. The fact that one human could treat another human like this is appalling,’ he added.Â
The pair even had their fingernails yanked from their hands, DailyMail.com uncovered this week.Â
Meanwhile, in New York, Tren de Aragua has recruited a so-called army of child gang members as young as 11 from migrant shelters.Â
Dubbed the ‘Little Devils of 42nd Street’, police warned they were robbing shops and threatening members of the public with guns and knives.
Texas Â
The Lone Star State has said it will seek the death penalty for two alleged TdA members accused of raping and killing a 12-year-old girl in Houston.Â
Harris County District Attorney Kim Ogg, confirmed Franklin Pena, 26, and Johan Martinez-Rangel, 22, could be put to death by lethal injection if a jury finds them guilty in the death of 12-year-old Jocelyn Nungaray in June.
Pena and Rangel are accused of luring the girl from a Houston convenience store late at night and were allegedly seen walking under a bridge with her where they spent two hours before emerging alone, police said.Â
Nungaray’s body was found hours later floating in a bayou. The pre-teen had been raped and strangled.
Authorities believe both suspects have ties to TdA.
DailyMail.com has also previously reported how the gangsters infiltrated San Antonio and took over at least four apartment complexes.Â
The Dallas Police Department also confirmed earlier this year that Tren De Aragua was in the city committing crimes.
Jocelyn Nungaray, 12, was found raped and murdered near her home in Houston, Texas, in June
Franklin Jose Pena Ramos, 26, was one of two illegal immigrants charged with Nungaray’s death, with investigators probing a potential link to the Tren de Aragua gangÂ
Authorities also charged Johan Jose Martinez Rangel, 22, over the murder, and claim the two suspects held Nungaray for hours under a bridge before strangling herÂ
FloridaÂ
Another alleged Venezuelan gang member was arrested in Miami, the US Border Patrol announced in December.
‘On 12/6, USBP agents in Miami, FL, arrested a Tren de Aragua gang member, a Venezuelan national with an arrest in 2022 for illegal entry,’ agency chief Jason Owens announced on X.
The agency told DailyMail.com the gangster, 19, was detained in West Palm Beach Florida, not far from the home of President-elect Donald Trump.
‘Custody of the individual was transferred to Immigration and Customs Enforcement. When individuals are encountered with derogatory information, we deny admission, detain them, or refer them to other federal agencies for removal or further vetting, investigation and/or prosecution as appropriate,’ a Border Patrol spokesman said.
Utah
A Venezuelan dissident running for office in Salt Lake City, Utah, has warned that the gangsters have been linked to at least two separate crimes in the state – including an alleged prostitution ring and shooting.Â
Carlos Moreno told the New York Post: ‘Our law enforcement people are not ready. They are not ready yet to face these kinds of gangs in Utah because the way that they do things are totally different than criminals here in the United States.’Â
‘That’s why people right now are very afraid,’ he added.Â