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Case

U.S. v. Carlos Favian Martinez, et al.

Overview

According to the indictment, filed in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Texas, Carlos Favian Martinez, 36, of Mission, Texas; Marco Antonio Medina, 32, of Brownsville, Texas; Rigoberto Brown, 38, of Brownsville, Texas; Pedro Antonio Calvillo Hernandez, 47, of Tamaulipas, Mexico; Roberto Garcia Villareal, 56, of San Benito, Texas; Miguel Hipolito Caballero Aupart, 70, of Brownsville, Texas; Sandra Guerra Medina, 68, of Rancho Viejo, Texas; and Mireya Miranda, 56, of La Feria, Texas, conspired to fix prices and allocate the market for transmigrante services in violation of Section 1 of the Sherman Act. They also allegedly conspired to monopolize the same market in violation of Section 2 of the Sherman Act. The indictment alleges they implemented price-fixing agreements and created a centralized entity known as “The Pool” to collect and divide revenues among the conspirators. Transmigrantes are individuals who transport used vehicles and other goods from the United States through Mexico for resale in Central America. Transmigrante forwarding agencies are businesses that provide services to transmigrante clients, including helping those clients complete the customs paperwork required to export vehicles into Mexico.


Case Open Date
Case Name
United States v. Carlos Favian Martinez; Carlos Yzaguirre; Diego Ceballos Soto; Juan Hector Ramirez-Avila; Marco Antonio Medina; Miguel Hipolito Caballero Aupart; Mireya Miranda; Pedro Calvillo-Hernandez; Rigoberto Brown Cantu Jr.; Roberto Garcia Villarreal and Sandra Guerra Medina
Case Type
Criminal
Case Violation(s)
  • Money Laundering
  • Customer, Territorial or Market Allocation - Horizontal
  • Conspiracy to Commit Money Laundering
  • Conspiracy to Monopolize
  • Price Fixing - Horizontal
Industry Code(s)
  • Process, Physical Distribution, and Logistics Consulting Services
Updated March 11, 2024