
PUBLISHED
BY MOSHOLU
PRESERVATION
CORPORATION
| Vol.
18, No. 23 |
Dec. 1 - 14, 2005 |



Man Linked to Merchant Killing
Behind Bars
By DAVID CROHN
The dangerous ringleader of a group of thugs that robbed and
killed local merchant Juan Madera in 2002 is off the streets.
Carlos “Chino” Mendoza pled guilty several weeks ago to robbery in the first
degree for his role in Madera’s death during a botched home invasion. He is
serving 14 years in prison.
Police said that around midnight, on Oct.16, 2002, Mendoza and three others
approached Madera, 38, in his apartment building at 3593 Bainbridge Ave.,
demanding access to his home. When Madera — accompanied by two friends —
refused, fearing for the safety of his wife and two sons inside, he was
stabbed in the abdomen by one of Mendoza’s partners, Estile Gonzalez.
According to the detective who led the investigation, Detective Ronald
Wilhelmy, Mendoza had heard that Madera had applied for a business loan and
believed he had cash in his home. The three men made off with $140 and some
jewelry.
“Chino planned the whole thing,” said Wilhelmy, who is now with the Internal
Affairs Bureau..
Madera owned and operated the Los Compadres convenience store on the corner
of East 213th Street and Bainbridge Avenue.
Mendoza was known to terrorize Norwood residents.
“He made his living doing home invasions,” said Wilhelmy, who added that
Mendoza was rumored to be second in command of the Bronx Latin Kings, a
notoriously violent gang. “It’s good for people to know he won’t be out
there anymore.”
Two of Mendoza’s cohorts — Jonathon “Gordo” DeLeon and Julio “Monster”
DeLeon — were arrested in July 2004 in connection with the incident and are
on trial for murder in the second degree. They face life imprisonment if
convicted.
Gonzalez, in prison for manslaughter, provided tips to police that Wilhelmy
said led to Mendoza’s conviction.
Mendoza was indicted in January while serving two years in Pennsylvania for
an unrelated charge.
As the Norwood News reported in October, 2002, Madera’s death shocked
and saddened many in the community, including another resident of 3593
Bainbridge, Ruben Romana.
“He was a good person. He didn’t hurt nobody,” Romana said. Within a week
after the stabbing Romana had decorated his lower right arm with a tattoo of
a cross and his friend’s name. “I considered him my best friend.”
A friend who was with Madera just before he was killed, Miguel Rojas, said
he was “just a working guy trying to make it from day to day.”
Madera’s Los Compadres bodega has since been sold by his family, but
visitors to the block are reminded of him at a colorful mural honoring him
around the corner from where he worked and across the street from where he
lived.
Back to News
Index Page

News | Opinion | Schools
| Features | Continuing Stories | Home
About Us | Past Issues
 |