U.S. Attorney General Pam Bondi on Friday provided more details about a former New Mexico judge’s arrest the previous day for allegedly allowing an illegal immigrant and suspected Tren de Aragua gang member to live at his residence.
“This is the last person we want in our country, nor will we ever tolerate a judge or anyone else harboring them,” Bondi said of the suspected gang member and Cano.
In Friday’s interview, the attorney general said that Cano took the Tren de Aragua member’s cell phones and “beat it with a hammer, destroyed it, and then [took] the pieces to a city dumpster to dispose of it to protect him.”
Bondi added that Ortega-Lopez showed signs of being in a gang or affiliated with criminal activity, including a necklace that said “kill” and that said “something about death.” He also had pictures on his cellphone of “two decapitated victims” and was “sending them out” to other individuals, the attorney general added.
Cano’s wife, Nancy Cano, is also charged with destroying evidence, Bondi said, adding that the Canos “gave [Ortega-Lopez] assault rifles that belonged to their daughter.”
Ortega-Lopez and other known Tren de Aragua members then went to a shooting range with suppressors and were shooting, she said.
The Canos “were allegedly giving him assault rifles, AK-47s, AR-15s with a suppresser, a known [Tren de Aragua] member, letting him go to a shooting range to refine and perfect his shooting skills,” Bondi said elsewhere in the interview. “What has happened to our judiciary is beyond me.”
Court documents filed in April said that Ortega-Lopez was hired by Nancy Cano to “install a glass door for her” and that he “continued to do a few jobs” for her after being evicted from an apartment in April 2024, at which point she offered him a place to stay at the back of the residence she shared with her husband.
While speaking to a local media outlet on Thursday, Cano defended his decision to allow the illegal immigrant to stay in his home. He also said he would never put his family at risk if he thought there would be any danger.
Tren de Aragua, MS-13, and Mexican drug cartels were declared terrorist organizations by the government in February.
The Epoch Times has contacted an email account that appears to be associated with Cano for comment.