Feds charge 13 members of Nipomo narcotics trafficking family

April 7, 2015

Agents with the FBI, California Highway Patrol officers and San Luis Obispo County Sheriff’s deputies conducted a pre-dawn operation that led to the arrest of 12 members of a Central Coast narcotics trafficking organization. Officers are still searching for one member of the group, Victor Speedy Gonzales.

The indictment targets the alleged drug trafficking activities of the Rocha family, which operated in and around Nipomo and Santa Maria. Eleven of the defendants named in the indictment are charged with conspiracy to distribute controlled substances, namely high purity methamphetamine; cocaine; and heroin.

The conspiracy count in the indictment details 74 “overt acts” that began in the winter of 2013 and continued into 2014. The overt acts include numerous narcotics transactions; drug negotiations using coded language, and “controlled buys” between the defendants and two confidential informants.

As alleged in the indictment, Jose Alfredo Rocha; his wife, Irene; and their sons, Tony Perfecto Rocha and Jose Alfredo Rocha Jr., allegedly acquired and stored drugs for sale and distribution to area drug dealers, who would then sell narcotics to street-level customers.

Six of the defendants are additionally charged with distribution or possession with intent to distribute methamphetamine and heroin. Defendants Jose Alfredo Rocha and Tony Perfecto Rocha are also charged with distribution of methamphetamine near a school, and defendant Maria Ynez Flores is charged with the use of a telephone to facilitate drug trafficking.

In addition to the sale of controlled substances, the indictment alleges that Anna Rosa Rocha, a member of the Rocha Family, provided false statements on loan applications for vehicles, one of which is alleged in the indictment to have been used in the family’s drug trafficking operation.

The 13 defendants facing federal criminal charges are listed below. All were taken into custody without incident this morning, unless noted :

Jose Alfredo Rocha, Sr., 52, of Nipomo

Irene Rocha, 49, or Nipomo

Jose Alfredo Rocha, Jr., 24, of Nipomo

Tony Perfecto Rocha, 23, of Nipomo

Anna Rosa Rocha, 28, of Nipomo

Maria Ynez Flores, 19, of Nipomo

Jim Elkins, 59, of Grover Beach

Emil Brieg IV, 19, of Oceano

Kyle Joseph Edelen, 31, of Nipomo

Victor Speedy Gonzales, 36, of Nipomo who is currently being sought by task force.

Frank Eugene Martinez, 26, Nipomo

Peter Bernard Salinas, 55, of Oceano

Chase Ross Twomey, 26, of Nipomo

rocha family

The 12 defendants taken into custody today are expected to make their initial appearances in United States District Court in Los Angeles on April 8.

The conspiracy count in the indictment carries a mandatory minimum sentence of 10 years and a statutory maximum penalty of life in federal prison. The distribution charges carry a statutory maximum sentence of 20 years in federal prison and a fine of $1 million. For the methamphetamine distribution charges that involve more than five grams, the mandatory minimum penalty is five years with a statutory maximum of 40 years and a $5 million fine.

For the methamphetamine distribution charges that involve more than 50 grams, the mandatory minimum is 10 years in prison with a statutory maximum of life and a $10 million fine. The use of a telephone to facilitate drug trafficking charge carries a statutory maximum of four years in prison and a fine of $250,000. The false statements charges each carry a statutory maximum of 30 years and a $1 million fine.

Rocha guns

This case is the product of an investigation by the FBI; the San Luis Obispo County Sheriff’s Department; and the California Highway Patrol, all partners on the Central Coast Safe Streets Violent Gang Task Force.

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Isn’t diversity great? … I recently located the DEA’s “Most Wanted” website list, which is broken down by geographic region… in Northern California it was virtually 100% Latino. In Seattle almost the same.


Sometimes they will list the offender as “white”, even though he has a Latino first name, last name, and was born in Mexico.


Alb for speedy Gonzalez. Last seen weating white shorts and top, red neckerchief and a large yellow sombrero. Arriba! Arriba!


APB


JESUS CHRIST. PROPAGANDA.