Alleged MS-13 members face federal trial over cross-state killing spree that left at least 11 dead

 April 3, 2026

Three alleged MS-13 gang members went on trial this week in federal court in Las Vegas, accused of carrying out a vicious killing spree across California and Nevada to climb the ranks of one of the world's most violent gangs.

The charges are staggering: a 34-count federal indictment that includes murder, attempted murder, and kidnapping in aid of racketeering, with weapons charges tied to at least 11 killings.

Jose Luis Reynaldo Reyes-Castillo, David Arturo Perez-Manchame, and Joel Vargas-Escobar face the full weight of federal prosecution before U.S. District Judge Gloria M. Navarro. According to Fox News, the trial is expected to last up to three months.

Assistant U.S. Attorney Melanee Smith told jurors exactly what this was about: "They went out hunting, looking for people they could kill."

Not rival gang members. Not enemies with debts. People. The attacks, Smith explained, were often random, carried out for no purpose other than building reputations within MS-13. Murder as a résumé line.

The victims

The details that have emerged from the prosecution's case are almost too brutal to process.

Nineteen-year-old Abel Rodriguez was stabbed so many times he was left unrecognizable. Izaak Towery was abducted and stabbed 235 times after being mistakenly identified as a rival gang member. Smith told jurors that Towery "had no idea what was going on." He was simply in the wrong place, seen by the wrong people.

In 2018, 21-year-old Arquimidez Sandoval-Martinez was abducted from a Las Vegas nightclub, bound with shoelaces, driven into the desert, and killed. His body was found nearly two weeks later on federal land outside the city.

These were not gang-on-gang turf wars. These were executions of people who had the misfortune of crossing paths with men allegedly seeking to prove their loyalty to a transnational criminal enterprise. The randomness is the point. It is what makes MS-13 different from ordinary street crime, and what makes the federal government's pursuit of these cases so critical.

The investigation

The FBI's investigation traces back to 2018, when agents reported finding multiple weapons, including handguns and a large knife, in a vehicle linked to the suspects. That discovery launched a trail that would eventually connect the defendants to a killing spree spanning two states and at least eleven victims.

The U.S. Attorney's Office for the District of Nevada brought the full suite of charges: using firearms during crimes of violence, causing death with a firearm, and aiding and abetting. Each count reflects a deliberate decision by prosecutors to treat this not as a collection of isolated violent incidents but as what it plainly was: organized racketeering violence directed by a gang that operates as a paramilitary force.

Defense attorney Richard Wright, representing Reyes-Castillo, previewed his strategy for jurors by attacking the credibility of cooperating witnesses: "The more you squeal, the better the deal."

It is a fair point about the incentives baked into plea agreements, and jurors will weigh it. But the physical evidence, the body count, and the sheer scale of the indictment suggest this case rests on more than cooperator testimony.

A broader reckoning

This trial does not exist in a vacuum. On March 10, the FBI arrested a suspected gang member in Connecticut who was wanted in El Salvador for the killing of a pastor. Investigators described him as the subject of an "international homicide alert." He was taken into custody and turned over to immigration authorities.

That arrest underscores a reality that American communities have lived with for years: MS-13's reach does not stop at any border, and its members do not confine their violence to one country. The gang recruits, kills, and hides across jurisdictions, exploiting every gap in enforcement.

For years, a certain strain of political commentary treated concerns about MS-13 as exaggerated, a rhetorical device rather than a real threat. Tell that to the family of Abel Rodriguez. Tell that to whoever loved Arquimidez Sandoval-Martinez before he was bound with shoelaces and left in the desert. The violence is not a talking point. It is a body count.

What the trial means

Federal racketeering prosecutions are the sharpest tool available against organizations like MS-13. They allow prosecutors to tie individual acts of violence to the gang's broader structure, transforming what might otherwise be a series of disconnected murder cases into a single, devastating narrative of organized criminality. That is exactly what is happening in Las Vegas right now.

The next three months will test whether the evidence matches the scale of the charges. Eleven killings. Thirty-four counts. Three defendants who allegedly treated American streets like hunting grounds.

The prosecution says they killed to earn status. The trial will determine whether they spend the rest of their lives paying for it.

Copyright 2024, Thin Line News LLC