Gang leader falls off balcony to his de@th while trying to flee cops
Published on October 17, 2025 at 4:30 PM by Edgar Naitha
A high-ranking Tren de Aragua gang leader died after falling from an eighth-floor balcony while trying to escape a police raid in Colombia.
Ender Alexis Rojas Montan, 31, was the head of the gang’s Alayon Dynasty faction.
He plunged to his death on October 9 as Colombian National Police forced their way into his Antioquia apartment with a battering ram.
Body camera footage captured the moment Rojas Montan attempted to climb down from the balcony but lost his grip.
He fell eight stories and died instantly upon impact, as seen in disturbing video footage.
An officer looked over the railing and saw the gang leader’s body lying motionless on the sidewalk below. A shocked passerby stood nearby as police secured the scene from above.
Inside the apartment, police ordered suspects to the ground at gunpoint.
One shirtless man immediately surrendered, raising his hands and kneeling beside a small dog running around the room.
Another person tried hiding under a thick blanket in a nearby bedroom.
During the search, police found hidden contraband, including a fragmentation grenade and a pound of amphetamines worth about $9,550.
Three suspected gang members were arrested at the scene: Luis Alberto Cabeza Calderon, Yonathan Samuel Urbina Rodriguez, and Daviannys del Jesus Moya Avila.
All three are Venezuelan nationals and allegedly key figures in the gang’s Colombian operations. Cabeza Calderon, also known as “Toro,” is believed to be a close associate of the gang’s top leader, Hector Rusthenford Guerrero Flores.
Guerrero Flores has been wanted in Peru since 2023 for crimes including drug trafficking and extortion.
The raid, called “Operation Shadow 3,” was a joint effort between Colombian, Chilean, and Peruvian authorities, with support from the DEA and Ameripol.
Rojas Montan had fled Chile in June 2024 and moved to Colombia to help expand the gang’s influence in the Aburrá Valley region.
He was wanted internationally for aggravated kidnapping and his ties to the violent Venezuelan-founded Tren de Aragua gang.


