Gun used in kidnapping of 4 Americans in Mexico came from the U.S.
BROWNSVILLE, Texas — A man who admitted to purchasing firearms that he knew would be going from the U.S. to a Mexican drug cartel has been arrested in Texas after the discovery that one of the weapons was linked to the deadly kidnapping of four Americans, according to federal court records.
Roberto Lugardo Moreno made an initial appearance Monday at a federal court in Brownsville and was appointed a public defender, who did not immediately respond to a voicemail seeking comment.
His detention hearing is scheduled for Thursday.
The kidnapping occurred in Matamoros, Mexico, which is just across the border from Brownsville.
According to a federal complaint filed Saturday, Moreno has been charged with conspiring to illegally export a firearm. The complaint said that he admitted to buying firearms for people he knew were going to provide them to a member of the Gulf cartel in Mexico.
Maria del Carmen Lopez, 63, was kidnapped from her home in Pueblo Nuevo in the Mexican state of Colima on Feb. 9, the FBI said. She has family in Southern California.
The serial number of a firearm he purchased in October 2019 matched that of a gun recovered by authorities that was linked to the March 3 kidnappings, according to the complaint.
Moreno said he didn’t apply for a license to export the firearm from the U.S. to Mexico and knew it would be illegally exported, the complaint said.
Moreno told authorities that he received $100 for the purchase of the guns.
Four friends who were traveling to Mexico so that one of them could have cosmetic surgery were caught up in a drug cartel shootout in Matamoros. After a vehicle crashed into their van, men in tactical vests with assault rifles arrived in another vehicle and surrounded them.
Shaeed Woodard and Zindell Brown appeared to have been killed immediately, and their bodies were loaded into a truck with the two survivors, Eric Williams and Latavia McGee. The bodies and the two surviving friends were found days later in a shack.
A weapon tied to the abduction of four Americans in Mexico was bought by a U.S. man who knew it was destined for a Mexican drug cartel, records show.
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