RIVERSIDE, California
Officials stated that three men were arrested last week and charged in a federal criminal complaint alleging they kidnapped a 17-year-old boy in San Bernardino County and held him for ransom in Santa Maria.
Fidel Jesús Patino Jaimes, 22, Jair Tomás Ramos Domínguez, 26, of Santa Maria, and Ezequiel Felix López, 27, all of whom told law enforcement they were from Santa Maria, were arrested Friday.
They were charged this evening with kidnapping, a felony that carries a maximum sentence of life imprisonment.
“Few things can be as terrorizing to a parent as having your child kidnapped and held for ransom under threat of physical harm,” said United States Attorney Martin Estrada. “Together with the FBI and our local law enforcement partners, we have acted swiftly to rescue the victim and bring the abductors to justice. I commend the agents and officers for their heroic efforts to free the victim and prevent a devastating tragedy from occurring.”
According to an affidavit filed with the complaint, on the morning of September 18, the defendants allegedly caused a traffic accident in which the victim – a 17-year-old boy – crashed into their silver-colored Jeep Grand Cherokee.
After the collision, the victim exited his vehicle. At that point, the defendants allegedly grabbed the victim and forced him into their vehicle, according to the affidavit.
On the afternoon of September 18, the victim’s mother received a telephone call from a Mexican phone number. The caller demanded the delivery of $500,000 to an unspecified location in Nogales, Mexico for the victim.
The suspects said that the abduction was the fault of the victim’s father.
Shortly thereafter, a different Mexican telephone number was used to send a WhatsApp video to the victim’s mother’s cellphone.
The video showed the victim in the backseat of the Jeep Grand Cherokee and reading from a script, saying that the abduction was his father’s fault for an incident that occurred in New York about something he allegedly stole.
For several days afterward, the victim’s mother received multiple phone calls from different Mexican telephone numbers in which the speaker demanded payment and threatened to cut off the victim’s body parts if payment wasn’t made.
The ransom demand, which went unpaid, was reduced to $100,000.
Law enforcement ultimately tracked the defendants down to a motel in Santa Maria, in part by identifying the vehicle used during the kidnapping in a Facebook Marketplace posting and by reviewing Ring door camera footage of the abduction.
During the execution of a search warrant at one of the motel’s rooms, law enforcement found the three defendants – one of whom tossed a firearm onto the floor – and the victim, who was lying on the floor in the corner of the room, according to the affidavit.
The FBI and the San Bernardino County Sheriff’s Department are investigating this matter.
Assistant U.S. Attorney Sean D. Peterson of the Riverside Branch Office is prosecuting this case.