Seized

Inside the brutal world of America's kidnapping capital

Maria was drifting off to sleep on the bedroom floor. She could hear women getting raped in the next room. Only she didn't hear screams — she heard the laughter of male guards.

A kidnapping victim rescued by the Phoenix Police Department’s Home Invasion and Kidnapping Enforcement unit.
Phoenix Police Department/Home Invasion Kidnapping Enforcement (HIKE)
A kidnapping victim rescued by the Phoenix Police Department’s Home Invasion and Kidnapping Enforcement unit.
A Phoenix drop house where coyotes held more than two dozen illegal immigrants hostage. Kidnappers force their victims to strip to make it hard for them to escape.
Phoenix Police Department/Home Invasion Kidnapping Enforcement (HIKE)
A Phoenix drop house where coyotes held more than two dozen illegal immigrants hostage. Kidnappers force their victims to strip to make it hard for them to escape.

The women had been drugged by their rapists, who had done the same to Maria as soon as she walked into the house. They forced her to swallow a red liquid and handed her some chalky, white pills. She drank the liquid and tucked the pills on the side of her mouth, but they were slowly dissolving.

The drugs were beginning to deaden her senses.

Maria had arrived at the modest three-bedroom house in west Phoenix several days earlier in the back of a white van. She was one of about a dozen other immigrants who had hired coyotes to smuggle them into the United States in May. They each paid the human smugglers about $1,800 to guide them safely through the treacherous Arizona desert.

Their guides betrayed them. They delivered them to other coyotes, who were more vicious than their counterparts. The kidnappers demanded another $1,700 apiece for Maria and the 12 others, including two young boys, they were holding.

The armed captors had tried to lock up Maria in the same room with the other women. She was gripped by fear as she watched one of the guards stripping off the women's clothes.

Maria's husband argued with the kidnappers, telling them that she was sick, that he needed to keep an eye on her. Rather than hassle with a couple of the pollos (smugglers' slang for their cargo), the guards allowed them to stay together.

Along with the men, the smugglers stashed her in the master bedroom.

When it was safe, she pulled the pills out of her mouth and gave them to her husband. He slipped them into the pocket of his white-washed jeans.

She looked around the bare bedroom at the men sitting on the floor. They were tired and worn. There was a large piece of plywood nailed over the window; a deadbolt on the door that locked from the outside.

There was no escape.

The pollos had come from poverty-stricken towns in Mexico and Guatemala in search of a better existence. Maria later told New Times that she and her husband had hoped to find work; back home in Mexico, jobs were scarce, and the lucky few who found them earned a meager 100 pesos for a full day's work. Less than $7.80 a day.

The promise of making living wages is what drove Maria and the others to walk through the desert for eight days, crawl through tunnels, and move from camp to camp, car to car, and from one band of coyotes to another within the same smuggling operation. Money was also the motivation behind kidnappers' demands that Maria, her husband, and the other victims come up with large ransoms for their release.

The captives called their families back home, or relatives in Arizona, to plead for money they knew the families probably didn't have. Days went by as Maria's family worked to come up with more cash. The impatient guards threatened to beat their captives and dump their dead bodies in the desert if the money didn't show up.

Terrified and confused, Maria was allowed to leave the room only when it was her turn to help cook for the guards or clean the house. One of the other women told Maria that they had been in the house for more than a month. The women talked quietly while they prepared meals for the hostages — a bean burrito, a few Ramen noodles, or a boiled egg split among four people. The immigrants weren't given anything to drink; they slurped water from a bathroom sink.

While Maria and the other captives played a macabre version of house, they had no idea that a specialized team of police detectives, analysts, and U.S. immigration agents had begun a rescue mission to release them and arrest their kidnappers.

An anonymous caller had tipped off Phoenix police about the home where the illegal immigrants were held. The tip was passed on to members of a police task force called IIMPACT (Illegal Immigration Prevention Apprehension Co-op Team). The countywide effort to dismantle smuggling rings, arrest violent criminals, and rescue hostages includes detectives from the Arizona Department of Public Safety and the Phoenix Police Department and agents from ICE (U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement).

Investigators spent three days deciphering the tipster's information before finally pinpointing the location of the house.

Once the suburban prison was in their sights, they arranged for a SWAT team to raid the house, arrested four suspected kidnappers, and rescued the hostages, including Maria.

"The looks on their faces; they just lit up," Phoenix police Sergeant Harry Reiter, who supervises IIMPACT detectives, says of the rescued hostages. "They were so grateful. They didn't care that [they would have to] go back south of the border — they just wanted out of the kidnappers' hold."

Although removed from the coyotes' clutches, the pollos were hardly set free. They were taken into police custody, given food and beverages, and interviewed by detectives.

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  • Colby Gwingo 09/03/2010 3:18:00 AM

    TX Holdem: If it was that easy for them to come legally, they would. Anyhow, there is no *excuse* for stuff like that to happen. USA1: People try to "self gain" in order to improve their lives. It's not necessarily a bad goal to have.

  • Kim 08/30/2010 7:45:00 PM

    I think people should come across the border legally. However, NOTHING makes it the victims fault when they are beaten, raped, and tortured. That is the same misogynistic attitude towards all women regarding sexual assault and domestic violence. I don't understand how anyone can just say "tough s$&!" you got what you deserved. NO ONE deserves to be treated like they are nothing.

  • TX Holdem 08/25/2010 7:55:00 PM

    Look what a sob story but if you don't want to be brutalized then come here legally. Don't whine and moan about paying illegal money to get here illegally and then be treated illegally. I welcome any legal immigrant but despise illegal ones. If you ran a business and charged for food or admission would you let people eat or get in for free? No. If you said yes, your a liar. If you still say you will, post your real name and business here and lets see if we can make you go broke.

  • Hillary C 08/23/2010 1:08:00 AM

    So much for the argument that legalizing drugs will eliminate the drug cartels considering how much money they get from each pollo.

  • craig 08/20/2010 12:56:00 PM

    Jackson, you're just like all the other bleeding hearts. I'm sure if one of these people came and raped and beat you, your opinion would be different.Since you feel sorry for them,why dont you pay my share of the taxes that come out of my paycheck to enforce laws against illegal immigration,medical care, and all the other freebies they get?

  • USA1 08/19/2010 4:07:00 PM

    They have no right to come here for a better chance at life. They know they are breaking the law. They know good and well the risks they are taking yet do it anyway. Stay home and this won't happen. Personal responsibility.

  • Jackson 08/18/2010 8:41:00 PM

    Come on people, most of these people come here for a better chance at life whether for them or the families they leave behind. In some cases we find that there are dirt bags who come here with different motives, but that's why more should be done for example when a person who has a criminal record is stopped by police or what have you. I don't understand how anyone can sit here and say "they get what they deserve," its human beings we're talking about here. They don't deserve to be beaten and harmed, maybe to be deported but I mean geesh!

  • Flash 08/18/2010 6:53:00 PM

    That Americans would condone this sort of treatment of anyone on US soil is appauling. I've searched in vain to find support for the author's figures regarding the number of VISAs and the effeciency of the process. The only reference is the pro-illegal immigration Immigration Policy Center. Perhaps coraberation from a more nuetral source is in order. The state Deparment states on their site that applications are processed in 30-60 days, not that I believe them either.

  • USA1 08/16/2010 4:19:00 PM

    I would make the best of my situation, not sneak across the border of a neighboring country to go take advantage of them and their system for personal gain. Cry me a river.

  • angelique 08/15/2010 5:57:00 AM

    What would you do if you were in their position? We're very fortunate that we were born in the the US!

  • craig horton 08/14/2010 1:21:00 PM

    how can you have a "law abiding illegal alien"? The U.S. should not be the babysitter for these people. They are willing to take the chance to come here illegaly,they can live with the results of their actions.Would you have the U.S. do away with immigration laws and just open the border to everyone? I'm sick of all these sob stories! They get what they deserve!

  • Emily 08/14/2010 7:31:00 AM

    This is terrible come on people.

  • connorlarkin 08/13/2010 6:28:00 AM

    Two hardworking Central Americans who came here to pursue criminalistic income: "The second suspect in the fatal shooting of Shatavia Anderson on Saturday, Jonathan Lopez-Torres, 18, was from Honduras. According to Harris County records, Lopez-Torres was arrested and accused of auto theft in February 2009. That charge was later dismissed. Melvin Alvarado, 21, illegal from El Salvador killed 14 yo Shatavia for her cell phone and purse! Alvarado and Lopez-Torres were charged Wednesday with capital murder in the slaying of Anderson, who was known as "Tae" to her friends and family. They were being held without bail in Harris County Jail. More costs to Houston and 235 cities where these Hispanic thugs kill rape and STEAL. The two suspects allegedly saw Anderson as merely a "target of opportunity" for an armed robbery, Houston police homicide detectives said.

  • jeff 08/13/2010 12:26:00 AM

    Sandra,where in the heck did you go to school? Latin America DOES NOT mean a latin that was born in America. You need to get it straight before you start running your mouth! Idiot!!

  • SANDRA GARCIA 08/12/2010 11:21:00 PM

    WOW USA1,DO YOU KNOW WHAT LATIN AMERICA MEANS?? IT MEANS A LATIN THAT WAS BORN IN AMERICA, IDIOT! WHAT YOU ARE REFERRING TOO IS AN ILLEGAL IMMIGRANT! GET IT STRAIGHT BEFORE YOU START RUNNING THE MOUTH.

  • USA1 08/12/2010 8:00:00 PM

    As for the Editor's Note above. There is a fervor to drive ILLEGAL immigrants out. Get it right for once. You aren't fooling anyone. I suppose it would be perfectly OK for a family of illegal aliens to decide to take up residence in your backyard? You would DEMAND someone come take them away, right?

  • USA1 08/12/2010 7:32:00 PM

    HAHA! Good eye. When the kidnappers' demands are not met they take them clubbing?

  • John 08/12/2010 7:03:00 PM

    I don't think the pictures go with the article.... check out pages 2 and 3.

  • USA1 08/12/2010 6:10:00 PM

    None of this would happen if they wouldn't have decided to sneak across our border for self gain. Are we supposed to believe they didn't know they faced the chance of being held against their will by smugglers when they handed over the cash in the first place? All the author's excuses doesn't change the fact they aren't supposed to be here, period. They made the decision, knowing the risks, on their own. Also, we're not obligated to take in all of Latin America just because they want a better life like the writer seems to think.

 

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