Digital Billboards Publicizing Double Murder

Source: Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) State Crime News

This image (below) on digital billboards is being shown in the St. Louis metro area and across the country. Twenty-five years ago this month on June 1, 1996, park rangers found the bodies of Julianne “Julie” Williams and Laura “Lollie” Winans in the Shenandoah National Park in Virginia.

The FBI is making a national appeal for information because people from across the country visit Virginia to hike the parks and trails. Also, people who had lived near the national park may have moved over time.

More on the case: https://www.fbi.gov/contact-us/field-offices/richmond/news/press-releases/shenandoah-national-park-murders-25-years-later.

FBI Denver Seeks Information About a Homicide in Fort Washakie, Wyoming

Source: Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) State Crime News

The Federal Bureau of Investigation’s Denver Division is offering a reward of up to $5,000 to help solve the death of a 43-year-old male on the Wind River Indian Reservation in Fort Washakie, Wyoming. The case is being investigated jointly with the Wind River Police Department as a homicide.

The body of Royce Perry, Sr. was found on July 26, 2017, in a home on South Fork Road in Fort Washakie following a telephonic report to 911. Investigators are asking the public for information to determine what happened to Mr. Perry and to arrest the person(s) responsible.

“The FBI is committed to combating violent crime on reservation lands and we, along with our tribal partners, will aggressively investigate these cases,” said FBI Denver Special Agent in Charge Michael Schneider. “There is a strong possibility that the person or people responsible for Mr. Perry’s death lives in the community. We need your assistance to identify the individual(s) responsible for this senseless act of violence.”

An FBI poster with more information about the case is available here: https://www.fbi.gov/wanted/royce-perry-sr.

If you have any information concerning this case, please contact the FBI Denver Field Office at (303) 629-7171, or submit a tip online at: tips.fbi.gov. You may also contact your local FBI office, or the nearest American Embassy or Consulate.

Operation Trojan Shield

Source: Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) State Crime News

While the charges shuttered a key device provider, FBI San Diego Assistant Special Agent in Charge Jamie Arnold said they watched the organizations quickly regroup: “When we took down Phantom Secure in 2018, we found the criminal organizations moved quickly to back-up options with other encrypted platforms.” After Phantom Secure, investigators came up with a solution that would do more than cause the organized crime groups to shift to different platforms, such as Sky Global and EncroChat.

“Encrypted devices have been and continue to be a safe haven for criminal organizations, in particular the leadership of these organizations—providing them a platform for their communications that we have not had access to,” said Arnold. “For the agents on the investigative team and our federal and international partners, this was a creative and innovative way for us to get behind that firewall and see what was happening among the leadership of these criminal organizations.”

These devices are typically purchased through word-of-mouth referral networks and offer robust data encryption tools. They can also be wiped clean remotely if they fall into the hands of law enforcement. Every feature of the devices, which sell for between $1,200 and $2,000, is designed for maximum secrecy and to avoid court-authorized access needed by law enforcement. The devices deployed in Trojan Shield, however, generated a carbon copy of each message for the FBI to assess and analyze.

When appropriate and authorized, the FBI sent information to partner agencies. As a result, law enforcement entities around the globe were able to seize thousands of kilograms of narcotics and millions of dollars in proceeds from criminal activity.

U.S. federal prosecutors may bring charges against additional providers of these platforms, and FBI San Diego said that the operation will have far reaching, long-term transnational effects on these organizations and their ability to communicate and coordinate their criminal activities.

Arnold said the erosion of trust in these networks was a primary goal, along with gathering invaluable investigative information. “Criminal groups using encrypted communications to thwart law enforcement should no longer feel safe in that space,” Arnold said. “We hope criminals worldwide will fear that the FBI or another law enforcement organization may, in fact, be running their platform.” He went on to stress that the FBI and its partners will continue to dismantle transnational organized criminal organizations, wherever they are and however they choose to communicate.

FBI Sacramento Returns Fugitive to Face Charges in Sacramento County

Source: Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) State Crime News

Today, June 17, 2021, the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) Sacramento Field Office announced the extradition of Victor Ponce to Sacramento County on Thursday, June 17, 2021. Ponce was arrested in Jalisco, Mexico, by the FBI Legal Attaché Mexico City Task Force on February 9, 2021.

The Sacramento County District Attorney’s Office charged Ponce, a Mexican national, with two counts of distribution or exhibition of lewd material to a minor and 16 counts of a lewd and lascivious act with a child under 14 years of age on October 10, 2014. The charges filed in the Superior Court of California, Sacramento, are the result of an investigation by the Sacramento County Sheriff’s Department.

A federal arrest warrant for unlawful flight to avoid prosecution was obtained on December 23, 2016, after law enforcement determined Ponce left the United States to avoid the charges against him in Sacramento County.

Local wanted fugitives and cases seeking information from the public are posted on the FBI Sacramento Field Office’s Most Wanted page and FBI Most Wanted app. Anyone with information that may aid these cases may contact their local FBI office, United States embassy, or submit information online at tips.fbi.gov.

Brian T. Gilhooly Named as Special Agent in Charge of the Mission Services Branch of the Los Angeles Field Office

Source: Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) State Crime News

Director Christopher Wray has named Brian T. Gilhooly as the special agent in charge of the Mission Services Branch of the Los Angeles Field Office. Mr. Gilhooly most recently served as a deputy assistant director in the Counterterrorism Division at FBI Headquarters in Washington, D.C. 
 
Mr. Gilhooly joined the FBI as a special agent in 2002 and worked in the San Francisco Field Office, where he served on the Safe Street Violent Gang Task Force and the SWAT Team. In 2009, Mr. Gilhooly was promoted to supervisory special agent in the Safe Streets Gang Unit in the Criminal Investigative Division at Headquarters, where he was a program manager for the western region. 
 
In 2011, Mr. Gilhooly reported to the San Diego Field Office, where he served as a field supervisor on the Joint Terrorism Task Force. In 2016, he was promoted to assistant special agent in charge of the San Diego Intelligence Branch. The branch included the intelligence programs, as well as foreign language, IT, security, and other programs.  
 
Mr. Gilhooly was promoted to section chief in the Counterterrorism Division in 2018. His section focused on the overseas terrorism threat, including prevention, investigation, and response to terrorism threats worldwide. It also included the Counterterrorism Fly Team and the Military Commissions Prosecution Unit. 
 
In 2019, Mr. Gilhooly was named deputy assistant director of the Counterterrorism Operations Branch in the Counterterrorism Division.   
  
Mr. Gilhooly earned a bachelor’s degree in oceanography from the United States Naval Academy. He served as a Navy SEAL officer in the Middle East and Pacific.