El Paso Times
EL PASO, Texas — A former Barrio Azteca gang member from El Paso suspected of being involved in the killing of three people tied to the U.S Consulate in Juarez claimed the target of the attack was a detention officer who mistreated gang members at the El Paso County Jail.
Mexican authorities on Tuesday accused Ricardo “Chino” Valles de la Rosa, 45, of being a lookout for gunmen who carried out the hit. Valles was arrested Friday by the Mexican army in Juarez and remains in custody in Mexico.
Valles alleged during his detention hearing that a gang leader ordered the hit on Arthur Redelfs, an El Paso County sheriff’s detention officer, because Redelfs mistreated fellow gang members at the jail. Valles had another hearing Tuesday before a judge, also in Juarez.
The Barrio Azteca is a brother gang of the Juarez Aztecas gang, and both are aligned with the Carrillo-Fuentes cartel.
On March 13, gunmen shot and killed Redelfs, his wife, Lesley Enriquez Redelfs, who worked for the U.S. Consulate, and Jorge Salcido Ceniceros, a maquiladora supervisor and husband of consulate employee Hilda Antillon.
Valles said soon after his arrest that a gang leader ordered him to locate Redelfs the next time the detention officer entered Juarez. He said that on the day of the slayings he notified gunmen for the Aztecas that the white vehicle Redelfs was supposed to be driving had left a children’s party at the Barquito de Papel hall.
In his statement to officials, Valles said he followed Redelfs’ vehicle along Avenida Ribere?a until the gunmen asked him to leave the area because “they had him.” Redelfs and his wife were killed near the Stanton Street international bridge.
Because two white vehicles left the same party within minutes of each other, the gunmen decided to follow and attack both of them, officials said Valles told them. Redelfs and Salcido both drove white SUVs that day.
El Paso County sheriff’s Deputy Jesus Tovar said Valles has a cocaine delivery charge pending against him in El Paso.
Redelfs was a detention officer for the El Paso County Sheriff’s Office for more than 10 years. Sheriff spokeswoman Chris Acosta said the Sheriff’s Office had no comment on the allegations concerning Redelfs because the FBI was the lead agency responsible for any communications about the case.
“We will repeat what we said before -- that Arthur Redelfs was a professional who was well-respected,” Acosta said.
Chihuahua Gov. Jose Reyes Baeza said the FBI and DEA are assisting with the investigation, mostly by providing intelligence.
“We still maintain that we have no information to indicate that any of the three were specifically targeted,” FBI Special Agent Andrea Simmons said Tuesday. “U.S. law enforcement continues to work on this investigation and follow up on all leads.” Soon after the killings, Mexican officials said the Aztecas gang was responsible. The FBI has extensively investigated the U.S.-based Barrio Azteca gang.
On March 18, U.S. investigators in El Paso County launched an operation to shake down Barrio Azteca members and their associates for information about the murders. A few days later, the Border Patrol received intelligence that the gang was considering some kind of retaliation for the operation.
Mexican officials said that several Mexican law enforcement agencies collaborated in Valles’ detention, and that the federal attorney general’s office was the lead agency for the investigation of the murders. Officials provided background about Valles, who was born in Juarez in 1964.
At the age of 6, Valles and his family moved to El Paso where he lived for 30 years. Valles, nicknamed “Chino,” was a member of the notorious Los Fatherless street gang in South-Central El Paso.
On Oct. 15, 1995, he was sentenced to 14 years in prison on drug charges, and he met members of the gangs in La Tuna federal prison, including a leader that Mexican authorities identified as David Almaraz.
On July 25, 2007, Valles was released after serving 12 years in eight U.S. prisons. That year he moved to Juarez, where he joined up with the gang members there.
Valles’ body is heavily tattooed with ancient Aztec imagery. “El Paso” is inked on the back of his neck, and “Chino” on his abdomen.
The Mexican army arrested Valles on Friday in the slayings of four rival gang members in Juarez and on a weapons charge for being in possession of a 9 mm handgun.
Last Oct. 21, Valles allegedly gunned down 32-year-old Marco Zapata Reyes at a chicken restaurant named El Pollo Sinaloense, authorities said.
He is also accused of killing David Angel Contreras Regalado a week later.
Both victims were members of the rival Mexicles gang.
Officials said that in January, Valles allegedly shot and killed two members of the Artistas Asesinos (Artist Assassins, or Double A) gang who were in a blue-green Cadillac. Their names were not released.
Copyright 2010 El Paso Times