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Press Release
Preet Bharara, the United States Attorney for the Southern District of New York, announced that BONIFACIO FLORES-MENDEZ, 34, of Queens, New York, was sentenced today in Manhattan federal court to life in prison in connection with his co-leadership, along with his brother Isaias Flores-Mendez, of a long-running sex trafficking conspiracy that employed force, fraud, and coercion to make young women work as prostitutes against their will. FLORES-MENDEZ was also ordered to forfeit approximately $1.7 million, and to pay $84,000 in restitution to a victim of his crime. He was sentenced by U.S. District Judge Katherine B. Forrest.
Manhattan U.S. Attorney Preet Bharara said: “Bonifacio Flores-Mendez waged a decade-long campaign of terrorizing women, coercing them into prostitution, assaulting them, even attempting to run a victim over in his car and threatening the health of her infant child. He has no doubt caused his victims grave physical and psychological harm. The long prison sentence he has received today cannot undo that harm, but it will ensure that Bonifacio Flores-Mendez does not prey on more women or children.”
In sentencing BONIFACIO FLORES-MENDEZ, Judge Forrest said: “We have to refuse to be a people who will allow such conduct to go unpunished, and the punishment must be severe. On those mornings when the victims woke up – perhaps under a table, perhaps in a windowless room, perhaps in a basement – they may have wondered whether one day the nightmare would end and that somehow justice would be done. Today, in holding you responsible for your crimes, some justice is done.”
According to the Indictment, other documents filed in Manhattan federal court, and statements made at various proceedings in this case, including today’s sentencing:
Since at least 2001, when he was first arrested for promoting prostitution, BONIFACIO FLORES-MENDEZ, a Mexican national, has been engaged in the business of sexually exploiting vulnerable women for his own financial gain.
BONIFACIO FLORES-MENDEZ played an active role in the trafficking of at least one young woman (“Victim-1”), who was forced to engage in prostitution against her will by Isaias Flores-Mendez. At the age of 17, Victim-1 was romanced by Isaias Flores-Mendez and lured to the U.S. with the promise of a better life for her and her baby. BONIFACIO FLORES-MENDEZ and Isaias Flores-Mendez arranged for Victim-1 to travel to New York, where she was met by BONIFACIO FLORES-MENDEZ. Once in New York, BONIFACIO FLORES-MENDEZ made Victim-1 sleep on a floor with her child without any blankets. BONIFACIO FLORES-MENDEZ later locked Victim-1 in a windowless basement and deprived her and her child of sufficient food. Victim-1 was then forced to work as a prostitute against her will. When Victim-1 attempted to resist, Isaias Flores-Mendez repeatedly beat and verbally abused her. After she escaped, BONIFACIO FLORES-MENDEZ and his brother continued to torment Victim-1, on one occasion trying to run her over with their car.
BONIFACIO FLORES-MENDEZ also caused at least one other woman (“Victim-A”) to work for him as a prostitute, and on at least one occasion, BONIFACIO FLORES-MENDEZ beat Victim-A.
In addition to his role in the direct sex trafficking of women by force, fraud, and coercion, BONIFACIO FLORES-MENDEZ, together with his brother Isaias Flores-Mendez, also owned and operated a sprawling network of brothels in and around New York City that sexually exploited at least five women per day, each of whom saw up to 20 customers per day. Many of the victims of this sex trafficking-prostitution enterprise were forced to engage in prostitution against their will under abhorrent conditions.
The Indictment filed on May 23, 2013 charged 17 defendants. Sixteen of those defendants, including BONIFACIO FLORES-MENDEZ, have pled guilty, and one has entered into a deferred prosecution agreement. The defendants who have pled to date have agreed to forfeit, in total, more than $1.7 million. The following defendants have pled guilty, and have been sentenced as described below:
Mr. Bharara praised the outstanding investigative work of the Department of Homeland Security, Homeland Security Investigations.
This prosecution of this case is being overseen by the Office’s Violent and Organized Crime Unit. Assistant United States Attorneys Amanda Kramer and Rebecca Mermelstein are in charge of the prosecution.