Art Romo continued doing the Mexican Mafia's business with his front organization, called the United Gang Council. However, Santa Ana's Community Policing Team, Sgt. Dan Beaumarchais and Det. John Hibbison were not fooled by the good-guy media version of Art Romo. The DEA and Mexican Army Maj. Felipe Perez-Cruz in Tijuana's Office of the General Prosecutor (Procuraduria General de la Republica, PGR) were also looking for Art Romo because of his connections to drug cartels in Tijuana and Columbia.[PAGEBREAK]
In March of 1998, the DEA and Orange County task force requested the assistance of the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department to take down an F-Troop drug operation. LASD's Major Narco and, later, Prison Gang Unit assisted in the take down of this operation, seizing over 260 kilos of cocaine. F-Troop members Fernando Melendrez, David Ramirez and Art Romo were arrested and charged with drug-trafficking conspiracy.
This wholesale $5 million cocaine seizure brought out the Mexican Mafia's legal "dream team." From the high-powered Osajima Law Office, Glenn K. Osajima himself took the lead. His second was defense attorney Shirley MacDonald, whose ex-con husband Albert "Babo" Juarez was a validated Mexican Mafia associate and a suspected made member. In the past Shirley MacDonald Juarez represented
Mexican Mafia Godfather Joe "Pegleg" Morgan
in lawsuits against actor Edward James Olmos involving the movie, "American Me" (1992).
Attorney Shirley MacDonald and her husband were listed as assistant director and director of "The Cause: Cultural Awareness Uniting in Special Efforts." This was, in my opinion, another front organization of La Eme. Other members of the board of directors included La Eme attorney Daniel Guerrero, and Paul A. Sharp — the program director of the American Recovery Center (American Hospital) in Pomona, Calif. Sharp's son, a La Eme associate, was convicted for the "taxation" and home invasion robbery of a drug house in Whittier in 1994.
Like Art Romo's United Gang Council, the Mexican Mafia infiltrated community organizations such as "No Guns," "The Cause" and various drug rehab programs all are used to establish an appearance of legitimacy. They generated letters of support, "counseling," and drug program certification for individuals favored by the Mexican Mafia prison gang. Romo's "125 letters of community support" were meant to flood the courts, probation and parole with false positive reports that could influence the justice system, as well as genuine community and civic organizations.