Finally-Convicted Murderer of Teenager Cheryl Green Is Sentenced to 238 Years

By Brenda Walker

06/24/2012

It was 2006 when 14-year-old Cheryl Green (pictured) was shot and killed while hanging out with her friends in the Harbor Gateway neighborhood of Los Angeles.

Now, six years later, the final sentencing of the last gangster has come down. So much for the right to a “speedy trial” as guaranteed in the Sixth Amendment. How cruel for the family that the legal process has taken six years following the death of a loved one at the hands of criminal gangsters.

The murder of Cheryl Green was apparently part of a general effort by Hispanic gangs (which include numerous illegal aliens, naturally) to chase out black Americans from neighborhoods the criminal gangs wished to dominate. If a black gangster wasn’t available to be killed, then random blacks were fallback targets for Hispanic shooters. As LA County Sheriff Lee Baca remarked in 2007, reflecting the attitude of Hispanic gangs, “Well, just shoot any black you see.”

Man gets 238 years in L.A. hate-crime slaying of teenage girl, By Sam Quinones, Los Angeles Times, June 22, 2012

Prosecutors say Ernesto Alcarez, the last defendant in the killing of Cheryl Green, was the lookout for the gunman. The murder cast light on violence by Latino street gangs against blacks in the city.

The last defendant in the hate-crime killing of 14-year-old Cheryl Green was sentenced Wednesday to 238 years to life in prison.

Ernesto Alcarez was found guilty of murder, attempted murder and a hate crime last month in the killing of Green, a black girl who was gunned down while standing with friends on a street in the Harbor Gateway neighborhood of Los Angeles.

Alcarez’s sentence was imposed by Los Angeles County Superior Court Judge Stephen Marcus.

Prosecutors said Alcarez acted as a lookout for the shooter, 204th Street gang member Jonathan Fajardo.

On Dec. 15, 2006, Fajardo faced off with a black motorist in the neighborhood. He went to a stash house for a gun and then walked back to the neighborhood with Alcarez looking for the motorist, according to testimony in previous court hearings.

The pair came upon Green and several other African Americans. In broad daylight, Fajardo opened fire without a word, hitting the girl in the stomach, and wounding several of her friends. Green’s friends rushed her to a hospital, where she died.

The crime cast light on long-standing violence by Latino street gangs against blacks in many neighborhoods of the city. The Los Angeles County Commission on Human Relations said Latino street gangs were the most violent perpetrators of hate crimes in the region, mostly against blacks.

The tiny Harbor Gateway neighborhood where Green lived became a symbol of those tensions. Black residents told The Times that they were often harassed and beaten by members of the Latino 204th Street gang, and could not patronize the area’s only market, which the gang used as its hangout. The neighborhood had averaged about one Latino-on-black homicide a year since 1997, according to LAPD figures. Most of the victims were not affiliated with a gang, police said.

Within weeks of Green’s slaying, FBI Director Robert Mueller, along with Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa, then-Police Chief William J. Bratton, Sheriff Lee Baca and then-City Councilwoman Janice Hahn held a news conference in front of the market, vowing to eradicate the gang and invest in services long lacking in the dense, isolated neighborhood.

A 2008 gang injunction put many 204th Streeters in jail. The Cheryl Green Youth Center opened in 2009, offering after-school activities for the neighborhood’s kids.

Green’s murder gave rise to another killing — of 204th Street associate Christopher Ash, 25, who gang members believed had told police that Fajardo was responsible for Green’s slaying.

Two weeks after Green was killed, Ash was lured to the garage of a house in Carson and stabbed repeatedly by Fajardo and other 204th Street gang members. His body was then dumped on a Carson street.

Police officials said Ash had not cooperated with them.

In 2010, Fajardo was found guilty of two counts of murder and committing a hate crime for shooting Green and stabbing Ash, and given the death penalty.

In addition to Fajardo, Robert Gonzales, Daniel Aguilar and Raul Silva have all been convicted of Ash’s murder. Another defendant in that case, Jose Covarrubias, testified against his former 204th Street associates. In exchange, he was given a sentence of 22 years in state prison.

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