09/22/2025 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 09/22/2025 17:50
SAN DIEGO - Benjamin Madrigal-Birrueta, an undocumented Mexican national living in Yakima, Washington, admitted in federal court today that he murdered a man and his six-months-pregnant wife while they were engaged in a drug trafficking conspiracy.
According to his plea agreement, Madrigal-Birrueta and coconspirators fatally shot 44-year-old Cesar Murillo multiple times in the back of the head and the torso on August 28, 2022, during an argument. The shooting took place at a remote ranch outside of Yakima. Madrigal-Birrueta's co-conspirators then buried the victim's body near the ranch at Madrigal's direction.
On September 2, 2022, Madrigal-Birrueta persuaded Murillo's wife, Maira Hernandez, 33, who was unaware of her husband's death, to come to the ranch by claiming her husband was waiting for her there. She agreed, and the defendant picked up Hernandez in Yakima and drove her to the ranch.
According to admissions in his plea agreement, when the visibly-pregnant Hernandez arrived at the ranch, the defendant's coconspirators shot her multiple times in the head. Madrigal-Birrueta and his coconspirators then buried Hernandez near the ranch. The child died in utero when Hernandez was shot, killed and buried.
Madrigal-Birrueta admitted the murders were committed while he was engaged in a drug trafficking conspiracy. The plea agreement said Madrigal-Birrueta's coconspirators owed money to the couple for an unpaid drug debt.
Madrigal-Birrueta is scheduled to be sentenced on March 27, 2026.
The superseding indictment also charges Ricardo Orizaba-Zendejas with being an accessory after the fact to murder and a co-conspirator in Madrigal's drug trafficking organization. Orizaba-Zendejas is set for trial beginning October 27, 2025
According to court filings, the investigation originated with the seizure of drugs from vehicles entering the United States through San Diego area ports of entry between August and October of 2021. By August of 2022, the investigation led agents to a group of individuals operating out of Yakima. Special Agents with Homeland Security Investigations (HSI) interviewed Murillo and Hernandez. Within days of those interviews, Murillo and Hernandez were murdered and their bodies buried at the Yakima ranch in the high desert. Court filings describe how these charges followed an exhaustive, years' long investigation that employed geophysicists, ground penetrating radar, aircraft, laser imaging, chemical testing of the soil, numerous cadaver dogs, and other law enforcement techniques to search for the victims' remains. HSI Special Agents successfully recovered the remains on September 13, 2023, aided by a Washington State Police Crime Scene Investigations team.
During the investigation agents seized methamphetamine, cocaine, fentanyl, multiple firearms - including a machine gun - and body armor from Madrigal-Birrueta's drug trafficking organization, to include the Yakima ranch.
This case is being prosecuted by Assistant U.S. Attorneys Stephen Wong, Alexandra Foster, Mario Peia and Brandon Kimura.
DEFENDANTS Case Number 23cr1684-RBM
Benjamin Madrigal-Birrueta Age: 22 Yakima, WA
SUMMARY OF CHARGES
Count 4: Murder of Cesar Murillo in Furtherance of a Drug Trafficking Conspiracy - Title 21, United States Code, Section 848(e)
Maximum penalty: Mandatory minimum sentence of twenty years and up to life, or death
Count 5: Murder of Maira Hernandez in Furtherance of a Drug Trafficking Conspiracy - Title 21, United States Code, Section 848(e)
Maximum penalty: Mandatory minimum twenty years and up to life, or death
Count 9: Causing the Death of a Child in Utero - Title 18, United States Code, Sections 1841 and 1111.
Maximum penalty: Mandatory minimum life in prison or death
INVESTIGATING AGENCIES
Homeland Security Investigations
Drug Enforcement Administration
Federal Bureau of Investigation
Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives
Washington State Police
California Highway Patrol
Yakima Police Department
Tulare County Sheriff's Office
Visalia Police Department
Fresno Sheriff's Office
Fresno Police Department
*The charges and allegations contained in an indictment or complaint are merely accusations, and the defendants are considered innocent unless and until proven guilty.
Kelly Thornton, Director of Media Relations