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SAN DIEGO — With her thick, wavy gray hair and heavily lined face, Felicitas Gurrola defies the image of today’s typical Mexican smuggler.

At 84, she directed a female-dominated ring that prosecutors say led 80 people a month to the Los Angeles area — and she managed to hang on to the family-run smuggling business for more than 40 years when most mom-and-pop rings were driven out by increasingly violent men guiding illegal immigrants along perilous routes.

In an almost inaudible voice, the Spanish-speaking octogenarian pleaded guilty Friday to charges that she directed a smuggling organization that guided migrants across the heavily fortified U.S.-Mexico border by giving them imposter IDs to present to immigration authorities at the crossing in San Ysidro, Calif.

As an interpreter explained that she faces the maximum penalty of five years in prison, Gurrola stared ahead with a calm, almost expressionless face, glancing at the back of the tattooed Guatemalan man who stood in front of her on charges of sneaking into the United States, in a separate case.

Her 56-year-old daughter, Hilda Moreno, and another woman in the ring also pleaded guilty to the charges. They face up to 15 years in prison, a stiffer sentence in part because of their younger age, defense attorneys said.

“Imagine being 85 years old and incarcerated for the first time,” said Gurrola’s attorney, Tom Matthews. “To say this is difficult for her is a gross understatement.”

At his request, Judge Nita Stormes agreed to support keeping Gurrola jailed with Moreno so her daughter can help her. Matthews said he plans to ask at a Nov. 9 sentencing hearing for the judge to consider Gurrola’s age and health issues, which include arthritis in her hands, elbows and knees, and gout.

The route Gurrola’s ring used from Tijuana, Mexico, to San Diego is the busiest U.S. border crossing in the world.

Matthews said she ran her business for four decades without hurting any of her clients — unlike many of the traffickers who have left migrants stranded in the desert’s searing heat or drawn them into fast-moving Rio Grande waters, where they have perished.

“She was not shoving them in car trunks or building compartments,” he said. “This was a far cry from that. For what it counts, she passed them safely.”


How the ring worked

Smuggler Felicitas Gurrola met migrants at Tijuana’s Suites Royal Hotel, where she would give the migrants immigration documents belonging to others and told them to memorize the information, according to the Immigration and Customs Enforcement affidavit. Her ring — of almost all women — would then take the migrants to a beauty salon to look more like the photos on the documents.

Guides accompanied them to the San Ysidro border crossing and then on commercial buses to the Los Angeles area, where they got paid in cash by the migrants’ families, usually about $3,500 a person, according to an affidavit.

The organization handled between 60 and 80 migrants a month during peak times and between 40 and 60 a month during slower patches, the affidavit says. That amounts to monthly revenue of about $280,000 in peak times.

The Associated Press

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