United States Attorney's Office for the Central District of California

10/25/2024 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 10/25/2024 11:47

Mexican Nationals – Brother and Sister – Found Guilty of Kidnapping Victim in Mexico Then Traveling to U.S. to Collect Ransom Payment

LOS ANGELES - A brother and sister from Rosarito, Mexico, were found guilty by a jury today for their roles in a kidnapping and ransom scheme in which the brother pretended to act as an intermediary between the victim's family and the kidnappers while his son and sister crossed the border into the United States to collect the ransom money.

Mario Alex Medina, 54, a.k.a. "Shyboy," and María Alejandra Medina, 51, were found guilty of one count of conspiracy to commit hostage taking and one count of conspiracy to demand a ransom payment. Mario Medina also was found guilty of one count of making a foreign communication with intent to extort.

"These defendants subjected their victim and his family to a terrifying ordeal in order to illegally profit," said United States Attorney Martin Estrada. "Such callous disregard for others and cavalier use of violence cannot and will not be tolerated. These defendants will now appropriately face justice for their crimes."

José Salud Medina, 31, a.k.a. "Gordo," who is Mario Medina's son and María Medina's nephew, is in Mexican custody on unrelated charges. He is expected to be tried separately in this case, in which he is charged with one count of conspiracy to commit hostage taking, one count of conspiracy to demand a ransom payment, and one count of making a foreign communication with intent to extort.

According to evidence presented at a four-day trial, on November 5, 2022, Mario Medina directed and helped accomplices break into the house of a neighbor, identified in court documents as "R.V.," kidnapping the victim at gunpoint, pistol whipping him and firing a gun near his head. The next day, one of the co-conspirators placed a ransom call to the victim's family in Los Angeles County and demanded $70,000 for his release. The kidnappers, through WhatsApp, also sent a video of the victim being beaten.

On November 10, 2022, an accomplice called R.V.'s family and threatened to kill R.V. if his family did not pay $30,000. Later that day, Mario Medina - pretending to be an intermediary between R.V.'s family and the hostage takers - told the victim's family to meet at a McDonald's restaurant in San Ysidro, located north of the U.S.-Mexico border, to make the ransom payment.

José and María Medina met the victim's family the next day at the McDonald's restaurant, collected the $30,000 ransom payment from the victim's family, and took the money back to Mexico.

The hostage takers on November 11, 2022, then left R.V. tied up and alone in a small, subterranean trench, where Mexican law enforcement rescued him later that day.

United States District Judge Stephen V. Wilson scheduled a February 3, 2025, sentencing hearing, at which point Mario and María Medina will face a statutory maximum sentence of life in federal prison.

Operation Safe Cities establishes strategic enforcement priorities with an emphasis on prosecuting the most significant drivers of violent crime. Across this region, the most damaging and horrific crimes are committed by a relatively small number of particularly violent individuals. This strategic enforcement approach is expected to increase the number of arrests, prosecutions and convictions of recidivists engaged in the most dangerous conduct. It is designed to improve public safety across the region by targeting crimes involving illicit guns, prohibited persons possessing firearms, or robbery crews that cause havoc and extensive losses to retail establishments.

The FBI investigated this matter.

Assistant United States Attorneys Jena A. MacCabe and Derek R. Flores of the Violent and Organized Crime Section, and Michael J. Morse of the Public Corruption and Civil Rights Section are prosecuting this case.