In a stunning courtroom development, federal prosecutors are walking away from a slam-dunk terrorism case against one of MS-13’s top leaders, raising serious questions about whether justice is being sacrificed for political convenience.
Vladimir Antonio Arevalo-Chavez was supposed to be the government’s prize defendant – a member of MS-13’s “Ranfla Nacional” leadership council facing charges that could put him away for life. Federal investigators had built a solid case around racketeering, terrorism, and narco-terrorism conspiracy charges.
But in court filings that read more like diplomatic cables than legal documents, prosecutors now want to dismiss everything. Their reasoning? “Sensitive and important foreign policy considerations” and “geopolitical and national security concerns.”
Legal experts are calling it unprecedented. “You don’t just abandon terrorism prosecutions because it’s politically inconvenient,” said one former federal prosecutor who requested anonymity. “This sets a dangerous precedent about when politics can override the rule of law.”
The real reason for the dismissal appears to be what Arevalo-Chavez could reveal on the witness stand. As a participant in secret 2019 negotiations between MS-13 and El Salvador’s government, his testimony could expose how President Bukele’s administration paid the gang for political support and violence reduction.
Defense attorneys are fighting the dismissal, arguing in court filings that their client is being silenced to “support a ‘deal’ with El Salvador to assist Bukele in suppressing the truth about a secret negotiation he had with MS-13 leaders.”
The case has already set troubling precedents. In March, prosecutors quietly dismissed identical charges against another Ranfla Nacional leader, Cesar Humberto López-Larios, and shipped him to El Salvador before he could potentially cooperate with investigators.
What should have been landmark prosecutions demonstrating America’s commitment to fighting international terrorism are instead becoming examples of how political deals can corrupt the justice system.
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