Teen Hit Man For Drug Cartel Pleads Guilty
17-Year-Old In Texas Gets 40 Years In Prison For Murder
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(AP)
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Rosalio "Bart" Reta, 17, was immediately sentenced to 40 years in prison. He still faces separate charges in another killing in Laredo that was allegedly carried out on the orders of the Mexican Gulf Cartel.
The Webb County Courthouse was heavily guarded. Attorneys and witnesses have reported being threatened by the cartel's enforcers, and Reta has been moved into solitary confinement.
Witnesses testified Wednesday that Reta and two other men working for the cartel were paid $15,000 to kill a Laredo man in January 2006. Phone records linked the hit men, the ring leader and suppliers of the guns and car used in the shooting, Detective Robert Garcia testified.
Prosecutors say the shooting victim, Noe Flores, was the half brother of the intended target. Flores was shot at least seven times.
Reta decided to plead guilty, but retain his right to appeal, after his statement to police was allowed as evidence over his attorney's objections, said the attorney, Eduardo Pena. In the statement, Reta admitted being the driver of the car they used to go kill Flores.
"Under the circumstances, it was the best we could do," Pena said of the plea.
Assistant District Attorney Jesse Guillen said the trial in the second case against Reta would likely start soon and would give authorities another chance to add time to the teen's prison sentence.
Despite Reta's youth, "he's a cold-blooded killer," Guillen said. "There's no doubt about it."
The accused ring leader in the Flores killing, Jesus "Jesse" Gonzales, fled to Mexico after making bail. The third member of the group, Gabriel Cardona, pleaded guilty and is serving an 80-year sentence.
Authorities say Reta worked on both sides of the border for Miguel Trevino Morales, the leader of the cartel's operation in Nuevo Laredo, Mexico. He was allegedly part of a "cell" of young enforcers that followed rivals and tracked members of the cartel's own ranks.
Reta, a U.S. citizen, was extradited last year from Mexico to face charges in Flores' death. Authorities said he requested extradition after being arrested in connection with an explosion that killed four people in a crowded bar in Monterrey, Mexico.
Emanuel Arriaga, a spokesman for the Nuevo Leon state Attorney General's office, said Wednesday that prosecutors in Monterrey couldn't link Reta to any killings.
© MMVII The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
- Way to screw up your life, sonny. Yeah, your mouth is gonna get a workout in the big house.
No such thing as easy money. Gonna get passed around & traded for a carton of Marlboros. Momma will be so proud. - Reply to this comment
- Such a shame, how many life's are wasted on the pursuit of easy money.
- Reply to this comment
- here in san narcos, ca everyone is a narc.
its like agoura, ca. an area of civil servants.
parapsychology, britney spears and sarah michelle
gellar who plays kendall on all my children.
kendall is the long lost daughter of susan
lucci. i call her susan luscious though.
such whipped cream. having been born just
off skid row, los angeles, ca on hope st.
i realize there is no hope with dope.
but its' around. for some its all they have
to cope. what was the motive for the shootings?
indian casinos grossed 25 billion dollars last
year? god help the person who becomes addicted
to gambling. that's even worse. - Reply to this comment



