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KIDNAPPER SENTENCED TO 28 YEARS IN FEDERAL PRISON FOR THE KIDNAPPING OF A MAN IN RICHARDSON, TEXASDALLAS - Salomon Bocanegra, 27, one of five defendants charged in the May 4, 2007, kidnapping of Carlos Moreno Esquivel in Richardson, Texas, was sentenced today to 340 months (28 years) in prison, announced U.S. Attorney Richard B. Roper of the Northern District of Texas. Last week, codefendant Juan Jose Ornelas-Castro, who pled guilty in July to his role in the kidnapping, was sentenced to 27.5 years in federal prison. At this morning's sentencing hearing, U.S. District Judge Ed Kinkeade also ordered that Bocanegra pay $26,018 in restitution. Bocanegra pled
guilty on July 17, 2007, to conspiracy to commit kidnapping, kidnapping,
use of interstate facilities to demand a ransom and using, carrying
or brandishing a firearm in furtherance of a crime of violence. He was
in the car with Gerardo Diaz when FBI agents shot and killed Diaz. According to documents filed in Court, on May 4, Salomon Bocanegra, Juan Jose Ornelas-Castro, Heberto Bocanegra, a/k/a "Christopher" and a/ka/ "Beto," and Damarius Ornelas-Castro agreed to rob an individual they believed was distributing large quantities of drugs in the Dallas/Fort Worth area. They went to Esquivel's residence on Devonshire Road in Richardson, armed with handguns, and when they arrived at the residence, they kidnapped Esquivel, at gunpoint in his front yard, and forced him into a vehicle, believing that they could collect a ransom of cash and drugs. Once inside the vehicle, Esquivel was restrained, shot and beaten by various defendants, and driven to a tire shop in Dallas, where he was held against his will. While he was being held, the defendants made numerous phone calls to Esquivel's family members in the Republic of Mexico demanding cash and pound quantities of methamphetamine for his safe release. Early the following
morning, the defendants moved Esquivel from the tire shop to a trailer
located as 2324 Cedar Rock, in Dallas, and kept him there blindfolded,
restrained and at gunpoint. He was beaten and forced to use a cell phone
to call individuals to request that a ransom be paid for his release.
The kidnapping victim, Carlos Moreno Esquivel, along with six other defendants were subsequently charged in a separate indictment with participating in a methamphetamine distribution conspiracy during the time of the kidnapping. Esquivel is also set to be sentenced in January 2008. The case was investigated
by the FBI, with task force officers from the Texas Department of Public
Safety, Garland Police Department, Dallas Police Department, and Texas
Department of Criminal Justice, Office of Inspector General. The Richardson
Police Department co-investigated the case with the FBI. Immigration
and Customs Enforcement also provided assistance in the investigation.
The case is being prosecuted by Assistant U.S. Attorney Rick Calvert.
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