<http://www.denverpost.com/lacrosse/ci_8196977>
http://www.denverpost.com/lacrosse/ci_8196977 
 
Deported gang member arrested in Greeley
By
<mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]:%20Deported%20g
ang%20member%20arrested%20in%20Greeley> Howard Pankratz 
The Denver Post 

Article Last Updated: 02/07/2008 07:22:16 PM MST

A member of the violent Sureno 13 street gang was arrested in Greeley by a
gang task force as he smoked marijuana while babysitting his 3-year-old
child, law-enforcement officials say. 

The man was identified as Renato Rodarte-Bueno, 33, of Mexico. 

The arrest occurred at about 9 p.m. Saturday in a Greeley apartment. 

Carl Rusnok, spokesman for U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, said
that ICE agents originally targeted Rodarte-Bueno for arrest after they
discovered he had returned to the Greeley area after his deportation in
1997. 

Rusnok, who identified Rodarte-Bueno as an active member of the Sureno gang,
said Rodarte-Bueno had felony convictions for robbery and theft in Santa
Barbara County, Calif., in 1993 and 1994 and was sentenced to seven years in
prison. 

Before his convictions and deportation, Rodarte-Bueno was a permanent U.S.
resident. 

At the beginning of the month, agents of the Greeley Gang Task Force learned
that Rodarte-Bueno was planning to return to the Greeley area on the El
Paso-Los Angeles Limousine Bus Line after an extended trip to Los Angeles. 

The arrest was part of Operation Community Shield, a nationwide ICE
anti-gang initiative whose goal is to disrupt, dismantle and assist in the
criminal prosecution of what ICE describes as "violent transnational street
gangs." 

Initially, ICE's anti-gang efforts were directed at the Mara Salvatrucha
organization, commonly referred to as MS-13. 

MS-13 is described by federal officials as one of the most violent and
rapidly growing transnational gangs. 

In May 2005, the anti-gang mandate was expanded to include all transnational
street and prison gangs, said Rusnok. 

"Since inception, ICE agents across 100 field offices, working in
conjunction with hundreds of federal, state and local law-enforcement
agencies nationwide, have arrested a total of 7,174 street-gang members and
associates, representing over 736 different gangs," Rusnok said in a
release. 

The arrest of Rodarte-Bueno, who is accused of child abuse-neglect and
possessing marijuana, was hailed by both state and federal agents. 

"Gang members represent a significant threat to public safety throughout the
United States," said Jeffrey Copp, special agent in charge of the ICE Office
of Investigations in Denver. "ICE closely partners with local
law-enforcement agencies to especially target transnational gang members and
ultimately deport them to their countries of origin." 

Jerry Garner, chief of the Greeley Police Department, said that cooperation
between law-enforcement agencies leads to "good arrests. 

"I think that happened in this case, and we much appreciate the help from
ICE," said Garner. 

Rusnok said that it is a felony, punishable by a prison term up to 20 years,
to re-enter the United States after being formally deported. He said the
U.S. Attorney's Office in Denver has agreed to prosecute Rodarte-Bueno for
his re-entry into the United States. 

Officials said that of the 7,174 street-gang arrests, 116 involved the
apprehension of gang leaders. More than 2,663 of the arrested suspects had
violent criminal histories, and ICE also seized 310 firearms. 

 


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