Mexican Cartel Enforcer Faces Nine Murder Charges
A self-identified debt collector and alleged contract killer for Mexican drug cartels who told investigators last year he killed dozens of people across the United States was charged Tuesday with nine counts of murder and one count of attempted murder in California, prosecutors said.
Jose
 Martinez, 51, faces charges for six Tulare County, Calif., murders and 
three other killings in that state, Tulare County Assistant District 
Attorney Anthony Fultz said. He is currently in custody in Alabama 
awaiting trial for a 2013 homicide in Lawrence County, according to 
Fultz.
Investigators confirmed last year 
that Martinez, a U.S. citizen, is also responsible for a 2006 
double-homicide in Marion County, Fla., for which he faces murder 
charges, according to the Huntsville Times newspaper.
He
 told investigators in June 2013 that he committed more than 30 killings
 as an enforcer for multiple Mexican drug kingpins, according to 
Lawrence County Sheriff's Captain Tim McWhorter.
"He
 basically told us, 'I'm the guy that pays you a visit when you don't 
pay the cartel,'" McWhorter told NBC News last year. "He had a 
reputation in the drug world as the guy who would get the job done. If 
he was assigned to get money, he'd get money. If he was assigned to 
kill, he'd kill."
Martinez was 
captured by U.S. Border Patrol agents last year near Yuma, Ariz., after 
trying to cross the border from Mexico without proper identification. 
Officials quickly learned of his trail of bloodshed and had him 
extradited to Alabama, where investigators from all relevant states 
converged last June to interview him.
He
 will be eligible for the death penalty because of the special 
circumstances of the charges, the Tulare County District Attorney's 
Office said in a statement Tuesday. The special circumstance allegations
 include lying in wait, kidnapping and murder for financial gain, the 
statement said.
 
 
No comments:
Post a Comment