Gangster Reveals Mexican Mafia Secrets
by Michael Montgomery
*This is part one of a two-part report.*
Courtesy of Rene Enriquez
Rene Enriquez's most prominent tattoo is a black hand on his chest, a symbol of the Mexican mafia.
Revealing Secrets
Rene Enriquez's meetings with officials were videotaped. He explains to
police the organizational structure of the Mexican mafia, how inmates
circumvent security measures in prison visiting rooms, and how money is
laundered. Watch the video. Enriquez, in leg irons, waiting for a 2007 meeting with law enforcement
agents.
All Things Considered September 6, 2008 · The life of a high-level mobster is a staple of books
and Hollywood films. But most real-life gang leaders don't tell their
stories. The code of silence runs deep; breaking that code can be fatal.
That's especially true if the mobster is behind bars.
But one former leader of the Mexican mafia — a violent group formed in
California's prisons — did just that.
Rene Enriquez, nicknamed Boxer, who once killed for the gang and also
ordered the deaths of men and women in prison and on the streets of Los
Angeles, ended up opening his life to the police and sharing many of the
organization' s secrets.
When he decided to defect in 2002, Enriquez became the highest-level Mexican
mafia leader to work with the cops.
*Black Hand Of Death*
In the unlikely event you encountered Enriquez on the street, you'd meet a
polite man with a tinge of cockiness — perhaps that of a high-powered
business executive or professional athlete.
But if you met up with Enriquez, say, on the beach, with his shirt off,
you'd have a very different impression. Carved on his body are menacing
tattoos that that tell a life story of mayhem and murder.
His most prominent tattoo is a black hand on his chest, a symbol of the
Mexican mafia. "We call it the black hand of death," he says.
Enriquez says he looks like a typical gang member, though he adds he does
not believe he *is* a typical gang member.
"I believe I'm a cut above the rest. As a mafioso, you have to be an
elitist. You have an elitist, arrogant mentality," he says. "That's how you
carry yourself in the Mexican mafia. That's how you project yourself."
Enriquez has been involved in organized crime for 20 years and was a Mexican
mafia member for over 17 years.
* 'Destined To Get There'*
Enriquez is currently behind bars, serving two life sentences for murder.
And California prisons are where Enriquez fought his way to the top of the
Mexican mafia, a group that rallies Latino gang members from the southern
part of the state.
But in 2002, he had a change of heart: Enriquez quit the Mexican mafia and
agreed to cooperate with authorities. He told his story to prison
investigators in videotaped interviews.
"For the first time, we had a Mexican mafia member defect that was really
able to lay out for us how the organization works, the organizational
structure," says Robert Marquez, a special agent with the California
Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation.
Enriquez's information was a bonanza. But what really intrigued
investigators was his unusual profile. Enriquez grew up in a middle-class
home in places like Thousand Oaks and Sunset Hills in California. He showed
early promise in school. But instead of following his father into business,
Enriquez channeled his ambitions into the local street gang.
"And once we got into the gangs, we understood that the homeboys that got
out of prison were well respected. You go there, and you learn prison,"
Enriquez says. "We wanted to get to prison somehow. And we were destined to
get there."
While serving time for armed robbery, Enriquez started carrying out assaults
for Mexican mafia leaders in San Quentin and Folsom prisons. The mafia had
deep roots in the California prison system, having been formed there in the
1950s.
Enriquez learned the art of making homemade knives and hiding them in his
rectum. He carried out assaults for the Mexican mafia on other inmates.
Then, after he was paroled, Enriquez used his connection with Mexican mafia
leaders in prison to extort drug dealers on the streets, where the cocaine
and crack trade was booming.
*Defiant In Prison*
Chris Blatchford, a Los Angeles television reporter who has written a book
about Enriquez, says the former Mexican mafia leader was more ruthless than
other crooks.
"He was greedier than they were and he was smarter than they were and he
really lived off the booty he took from crooks," Blatchford says.
When a drug dealer refused to pay up, Enriquez retaliated. He was sentenced
to two life terms for killing the man, and in 1993, the state sent him to
Pelican Bay State Prison on California's remote north coast.
Because he was a prison gang member, Enriquez was locked in a windowless
isolation cell in the Security Housing Unit, or SHU. There inmates spend 24
hours a day alone without seeing the outside world, except on television.
Many years later, Enriquez started capturing his life story on audiotapes he
recorded off the cuff for family and friends. He says he got the idea from a
movie.
In one tape, Enriquez describes his arrival to the SHU.
"What impacts me immediately as soon as I walk in, is the smell. I just
stepped outside from the bus and you smell the pines, the redwoods, the
forest … these earthy, loamy smells. But as soon as you step into the SHU,
it hits you like a wave. It's the smell of despair, depression, desperation.
This is a place where people come to die."
Pelican Bay was designed to break the gangs. But locked down in isolation,
Enriquez and his cohort remained defiant. They concocted simple but
effective communication networks. They passed messages through visitors and
legal mail — mail that guards aren't allowed to read. They taught themselves
exotic dialects and American Sign Language to fool prison staff. And they
thrived in a culture of impunity.
A secret to Enriquez's success was his transforming punishing isolation into
a sort of sanctuary. Rival gangs couldn't get to him, and most cops and
prosecutors thought their job was already done. After all, Enriquez was
serving two life sentences. The prison couldn't do much more to punish him.
But lifers have time to think and scheme.
Enriquez remembers participating in something called "the thousand concepts"
at Pelican Bay.
"We'd spin off a thousand ideas. And if only one of them was profitable, we
were succeeding. So we'd do this every day up in Pelican Bay, a thousand
miles from our base of power, spinning off ideas that paid money," he says.
Marquez, who was Pelican Bay's chief gang investigator, says Enriquez "had a
level of sophistication in conducting his business that it was almost
impossible to pinpoint and nail down exactly, everything that he was doing,"
Enriquez treated the street drug dealers like owners of a fast-food
franchise. They could use the Mexican mafia name in return for part of their
profits, and they were intimidated into paying.
"A street gang southern Hispanic, or a *sureno,* knows that if he's engaged
in a criminal activity on the streets, at some point he's going to go to
jail, or going to go to prison," Marquez says. "Because the Mexican mafia
has such influence within the prisons and the jails, that street gang member
knows, 'If I don't do what I'm told to do on the streets, that when I hit
the jail, or when I hit the prisons, there are those who are so loyal to the
Mexican mafia that they're going to assault me.' "
*'A True Powerhouse'*
Perhaps Enriquez's greatest achievement was in helping extend the Mexican
mafia's brand to dozens of L.A. street gangs. And he did this through an
elaborate subterfuge
In the mid-1990s, the group put out calls to stop drive-by shootings among
L.A. Latinos. But Enriquez says the aim wasn't peace.
"Our true motivation for stopping the drive-bys was to infiltrate the street
gangs and place representatives in each gang, representatives which then, in
turn, tax illicit activities in the areas," he says.
He says the Mexican mafia wanted to channel the random shootings into a form
of violence it could control, for profit.
"And we already had it planned out that California would be carved up … into
slices, with each member receiving an organizational turf," he says.
The Mexican mafia's campaign against drive-by shootings had another benefit:
good PR. "They saw that as a way into being more respectable, in the eyes of
sympathetic do-gooders, city leaders, church leaders," author Blatchford
says.
And for the most part, Enriquez says, it worked.
"Tens of thousands of gang members adhered to what we said. Us. High school
dropouts," he says. "But we had such authority behind who we were, they
listened."
It was then, he says, they realized the true potential of the Mexican mafia:
Astronomical amounts of money could be made without ever having to touch
drugs or do anything again themselves.
"We could do all this; we could become a true powerhouse, because of the
finances generated by taxation: taxation, extortion, protection," Enriquez
says.
Drug profits flowed to prison. Drug dealers on the street sent checks and
money orders to gang leaders behind bars, under the noses of California
prison staff. Enriquez and his associates socked away tens of thousands of
dollars. He invested in bank CDs and government bonds. The accounts were
only frozen after he defected.
* Mobster Midlife Crisis*
But success fueled greed and paranoia. Violent feuds erupted among Mexican
mafia members. Some started plotting to kill the families of rivals in the
gang.
"This arbitrary targeting of families — because I am your adversary — takes
it to a whole different realm of violence. This was not part of the bargain.
This is not the Mexican mafia that I joined," he says.
Enriquez grew disillusioned. And he was being ground down — by a heroin
addiction and prison isolation.
"I remember the first time I had an anxiety attack. I felt like I was going
to die, impending doom," he says. "That was the first sign I had that
something was going wrong with me, that it was time for me to get out of
this."
Enriquez was a mobster facing a midlife crisis.
"In Rene's case, he had accomplished everything that he wanted to accomplish
as far as being a Mexican mafia member. However, I think in his case, he
finally saw that, 'Hey, you know what? I've reached the pinnacle of
everything that I'm doing here, and yet at the same time, I'm still locked
up. And is this the rest of my life? Being in this concrete cell, this
concrete unit, and is this how I'm going to end my life?' " Marquez says.
Enriquez says it's called "mob fatigue."
"Everybody goes through it," he says.
* Taking The Plunge*
In 2002, Enriquez left the Mexican mafia. His defection put him on the
gang's hit list, but it also opened a new universe.
After leaving the prison isolation unit, Enriquez saw the night sky — the
moon and stars — for the first time in 10 years.
Today he says has many regrets. But as he looks back, he still marvels at
how a group of high school dropouts managed to turn the criminal justice
system upside down.
"I was rather proud of being a Mexican mafia member. I did things in the
organization that some people had never done," he says. "We pushed this
towards being a financial success. We started thinking about intellectual
progress, business progress, the infiltration of society."
Those days are in the past, says Enriquez. He has a new life now — one in
which his former enemies, the cops, are his protectors, and even his
friends.
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