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Release
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
January 27, 2004
New
York Man Sentenced to Nine Years in Prison For Obstructing Murder Investigation
JAN 27-- New
Haven, CT….Mark R. Trouville, Special Agent in Charge of the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration in New England
and Kevin J. O’Connor, United States Attorney for the District of Connecticut,
announced today that RAYMOND PIÑA, age 28, formerly of New York, New York, was
sentenced yesterday, January 26, 2004, by United States District Judge Janet
Bond Arterton in New Haven to nine years in prison for obstructing a federal
grand jury investigation into the 1996 murder of Theodore “Teddy” Casiano.
In April 2003, PI�A was convicted
by a jury on one count of obstruction of justice.� In finding PI�A
guilty, the jury determined that he had tampered with a witness who
had been called to testify before the grand jury by instructing her
not to appear before the grand jury and by instructing her to lie about
his whereabouts.
A
federal grand jury in Connecticut had been investigating the murder
of Casiano and the possible involvement
of
RAYMOND PI�A in that murder.� Casiano had
been a member of the Savage Nomad street gang and had been involved in a feud
with another group led by Wilfredo Perez and Jose Antonio Perez.� The Perez brothers were distributing large
quantities of cocaine on the retail level in Hartford in 1996.� Casiano threatened the Perez's drug distribution
network and, as a result, killers from New York were hired to
murder Casiano.� The killers were paid
$6,000 for the murder, which was committed a few blocks away from Perez Auto,
on Newfield Avenue in Hartford.� PI�A had
traveled to Hartford with the killers on the day before the murder, but did not
participate in the actual shooting.
During
the course of its investigation, PI�A was approached by the Government
and questioned about his involvement with
the killers.� Shortly after this meeting,
PI�A fled.� In an effort to develop additional
evidence, as well as to locate PI�A, various witnesses were called before the
grand jury.� PI�A tampered with one such
witness by corruptly persuading her not to appear before the grand jury or, if
she did appear, not to disclose his whereabouts.� PI�A was eventually located and apprehended
at a high-priced, resort hotel in the South Beach District of Miami, Florida.
To date, three other persons have been convicted
in this case.� Jose Antonio
Perez, who was responsible for luring Casiano to the scene of the
murder and
also assisted the killers' escape, was convicted by the same jury in April 2003
on various charges of conspiring to commit murder-for-hire, killing Casiano as
part of a murder-for-hire, killing Casiano as a violent act in furtherance of
a
racketeering enterprise, and using a firearm to kill Casiano.� Jose Antonio Perez was sentenced to multiple
terms of life imprisonment.� Mario Lopez,
who rode the motorcycle used in the "hit," has pleaded guilty to several charges
relating to the murder-for-hire.� And Santiago
Feliciano, who took the motorcycle back to New York for the killers after the
murder, has pleaded guilty to conspiring to commit
murder-for-hire.� Lopez and Feliciano are
still awaiting sentencing.
This case was investigated by
the Drug Enforcement Administration and the Hartford Police Department. |