Alleged MS-13 trio went ‘hunting’ in brutal American cross-state killing spree, prosecutors say

This week, the trial of three alleged MS-13 gang members commenced, revealing a disturbing narrative of a deadly “hunting” spree across California and Nevada. Federal prosecutors contend that these brutal killings were orchestrated to elevate the defendants’ standing within the infamous gang.

The individuals on trial, Jose Luis Reynaldo Reyes-Castillo, David Arturo Perez-Manchame, and Joel Vargas-Escobar, face a comprehensive 34-count federal indictment. The charges include murder, attempted murder, and kidnapping in aid of racketeering, alongside various weapons charges connected to at least 11 killings.

The U.S. Attorney’s Office for the District of Nevada identifies the men as MS-13 members or associates. They’re also charged with using firearms during violent crimes, causing death with a firearm, and aiding and abetting. Prosecutors describe this as a racketeering case linked to a series of murders across California and Nevada.

The trial is currently underway in a Las Vegas federal court, presided over by U.S. District Judge Gloria M. Navarro, and is anticipated to extend over a three-month period.

An MS-13 member showing off his tattoo

In a related image, an MS-13 gang member is seen in Durham, North Carolina, displaying gang tattoos and hand signs. (Getty Images)

During opening statements, prosecutors described what they said was a years-long pattern of extreme violence, with victims allegedly targeted based on little more than suspected ties to rival gang members.

According to reporting from the Las Vegas Review-Journal, Assistant U.S. Attorney Melanee Smith told jurors the attacks were often random and carried out to build reputations within MS-13.

“They went out hunting, looking for people they could kill,” Smith said.

MS-13 Gang Members Arrested In Los Angeles

Roughly two dozen accused members of the violent MS-13 gang were arrested as federal and local investigators forced their way into homes across Los Angeles County in a sweep that came as a result of a two-year racketeering investigation. (Irfan Khan/Los Angeles Times via Getty Images)

Prosecutors detailed multiple killings, including the death of 19-year-old Abel Rodriguez, who was stabbed so many times he was left unrecognizable, and Izaak Towery, who was abducted and stabbed 235 times after being mistakenly identified as a rival gang member.

“Towery had no idea what was going on,” Smith told jurors.

Authorities allege the violence was intended to elevate the defendants’ standing within MS-13, also known as La Mara Salvatrucha, a transnational gang that originated in Los Angeles and now operates across the United States and Central America.

Court filings describe MS-13 as a structured criminal enterprise where violence was the path to power, and members were expected to carry out killings to rise through the gang’s ranks.

One of the cases tied to the defendants dates back to 2018, when 21-year-old Arquimidez Sandoval-Martinez was abducted from a Las Vegas nightclub. According to court records, he was bound with shoelaces, driven into the desert and killed. His body was found nearly two weeks later on federal land outside the city.

WATCH: Former FBI agent warns of MS-13 gang’s ‘cult of crime and violence’

The FBI led the investigation, which began with arrests in 2018 after agents reported finding multiple weapons, including handguns and a large knife, in a vehicle linked to the suspects.

Defense attorneys pushed back sharply, focusing on the credibility of cooperating witnesses expected to testify for the government.

Richard Wright, who represents Reyes-Castillo, warned jurors those witnesses have strong incentives to lie in exchange for reduced sentences.

“The more you squeal, the better the deal,” Wright said.

MS-13 gang members in prison

Inmates remain in a cell at the Counter-Terrorism Confinement Centre (CECOT), where hundreds of members of the MS-13 and 18 Street gangs are being held, in Tecoluca, El Salvador, on Jan. 27, 2025. (Marvin Recinos/AFP via Getty Images)

Attorneys for the other defendants echoed that argument, portraying the case as heavily reliant on testimony from insiders seeking leniency rather than independent evidence.

Prosecutors, however, have argued those accounts will be backed up by physical evidence, including DNA and ballistics.

The case comes as federal authorities continue a broader crackdown on MS-13.

On March 10, the FBI arrested a suspected gang member in Connecticut who was wanted in El Salvador for the killing of a pastor. Investigators said he was the subject of an international homicide alert before being taken into custody and turned over to immigration authorities.

Federal officials say cases like this trial are part of a broader effort to dismantle MS-13 networks operating across the United States.

Stepheny Price covers crime, including missing persons, homicides and migrant crime. Send story tips to stepheny.price@fox.com.

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