Guardsmen admit selling to undercover agent guns they thought were going to cartel - Los Angeles Times
Advertisement

Guardsmen admit selling to undercover agent guns they thought were going to cartel

Share via

Two California Army National Guardsmen admitted last week that they had sold guns to an undercover agent in the belief the weapons were headed for Mexico.

Staff Sgt. Andrew Reyes, 33, of La Mesa and Spc. Jaime Casillas, 23, of El Cajon each pleaded guilty to one count of dealing firearms without a license; Reyes also pleaded guilty to three charges of unlicensed transportation of firearms.

The guardsmen were arrested in April on charges of selling nonmilitary assault rifles and a pistol to the agent, who led them to believe the weaponry was going to be used by a drug cartel, according to prosecutors.

Advertisement

Authorities said they also were accused of selling military equipment from the California National Guard, including gun magazines, ammunition, ballistic vests and the ceramic shields that go inside the vests.

See more of our top stories on Facebook >>

The investigation began, authorities said, when Casillas boasted to the undercover agent that he could procure such items.

Advertisement

The transactions that the men admitted to in court Thursday included the sale of a $1,700 AK-47, a $2,150 AR-15, a .40-caliber pistol and four high-capacity .223 magazines, according to the plea agreement. Reyes admitted obtaining many of the guns in Texas and then driving them to California to sell.

During the sale of the pistol, authorities said, Casillas boasted that the gun had been used to “do a job†in Tijuana, according to the complaint.

The latest item under negotiation was a .50-caliber rifle for $15,000, the type of weapon that might come from the National Guard, prosecutors said. Agents with the U.S. Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives decided to end the operation and arrest the pair before the sale happened.

Advertisement

NEWSLETTER: Get the day’s top headlines from Times Editor Davan Maharaj >>

Reyes had served in the Marines before enlisting in the Guard in 2008. Casillas joined in 2011, according to a military spokesman.

They are set to be sentenced April 15.

[email protected]

Davis writes for the San Diego Union-Tribune

ALSO

Victim identified in Winnetka double homicide

Advertisement

High surf expected along Southern California coast

Police shoot, kill man suspected of wielding knife; 2 other people found dead in Valley

Advertisement