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Hundreds arrested in US crackdown on Latino gang

Trucks cross the San Andreas Fault at Tejon Pass between Los Angeles and northern California, Interstate 5, 30 June 2006 near Gorman, California. Scientists are warning that after more than 300 years, the southern end of the 800-mile-long San Andreas Fault north and east of Los Angeles has built up immense pressure that could trigger a massive earthquake at any time. Such a quake could produce a sudden lateral movement of 23 to 32 feet which would be would be among the largest ever recorded. By comparison, the 1906 earthquake at the northern end of the fault destroyed San Francisco with a movement of no more than about 21 feet. Experts believed that a quake of magnitude-7.6 or greater on the lower San Andreas could kill thousands of people in the Los Angeles area with damages running into the tens of billions of dollars. David McNew/Getty Images/AFP =FOR NEWSPAPER AND TV USE ONLY= MORE PHOTOS ON IMAGEFORUM

WASHINGTON—More than 600 gang members and associates in 179 US cities were arrested in a monthlong crackdown on a fast-growing Latino gang that also netted firearms and drugs, officials said Thursday.

Project Southbound targeted the Surenos, also known as Sur 13, a transnational gang with roots in southern California implicated in murder, extortion, drug trafficking, prostitution and other crimes.

Among those arrested was a 27-year-old in Texas wanted for murder in his native El Salvador and a San Francisco man accused of supplying large quantities of premium marijuana to Surenos members.

The Department of Justice has called the Surenos the fastest-growing gang in the United States on a national level.

Biggest operation

Thomas Winkowski, of Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), said it was the biggest operation ever undertaken by ICE against the gang, which is known for its decentralized hierarchy and affinity to the Mexican underworld.

“This gang now has more than 30,000 members in the United States and its numbers are growing,” he said, adding that ICE would “continue to disrupt and dismantle” its activities.

ICE special agents seized 57 firearms, 13 pounds (six kilos) of methamphetamine, 83 pounds of marijuana, four pounds of cocaine, 1.5 pounds of heroin, more than $166,000 in US currency and 10 vehicles.

Besides the 638 gang members and associates, Project Southbound—conducted with help from federal, state and local law enforcement agencies—netted 119 others wanted for various criminal and immigration offenses.

Those arrested came from 21 countries in South and Central America, Asia, Africa and the Caribbean. Seventy-nine were female.

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