
and Mexico have been indicted in connection with the gang’s activities. Many of their victims were cartel associates. Here, they started their own murderous gang, which largely sought retribution against the Arellano-Felix cartel. Victor had worked for the cartel, running a kidnapping and extortion ring.Īfter his death, some of his crew fled to San Diego, including his brother, Rojas. The Arellano-Felix drug cartel, which until recently controlled trafficking routes through the Tijuana area, killed Rojas’s brother, Victor Rojas Lopez, in 2002.
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The trial took more than a year and was one of the county’s longest ever.ĭuring the trial, former collaborators and law enforcement agents testified that the Los Palillos gang was borne out of revenge. Rojas was also found guilty of attempted murder of a Chula Vista police officer. "The jury was not convinced or sold on the prosecution's over-arcing conspiracy theory that this was an ongoing gang with one goal in mind that acted from day one to the final day with the same purpose."Īl Arena, one of the attorneys for Estrada Gonzalez, said the mistrial was the "end of a very long road." Rojas is thankful for the jury's careful deliberation process,'' said one of his attorneys, Ricardo Garcia. In both cases, jurors found true special circumstance allegations of kidnapping, torture and multiple murders, as well as an allegation that the killings were committed to benefit the defendants' gang. Jurors deadlocked on seven charges, including five murder counts against Rojas Lopez. Rojas Lopez, 34, was found guilty in January of four murders, while Estrada Gonzalez, also 34, was convicted of six counts of first-degree murder in a trial that began in January 2013. The gang also left messages to rival gangs on their victims’ corpses and so-called “calling cards,” including toothpicks stuck behind the ear or, with one victim, in the buttocks.

The bodies of at least two victims were dissolved in acid others were left to rot in abandoned vehicles. Victims were kidnapped, tortured and murdered.

A status conference is scheduled for March 12.ĭuring a four-year stretch, the gang, called “Los Palillos” (“toothpicks” in Spanish) brought some of the more brutal tactics of Mexico’s drug cartels to the U.S. Prosecutors from the District Attorney's Office must now decide whether they want to retry unresolved counts from the guilt phase and/or retry the penalty phase.

The defendants smiled and hugged their attorneys after the mistrial was declared.
