A federal grand jury indicted Jose Vicente Badillo on one count of conspiracy to commit arson in connection with an alleged scheme to burn tow trucks throughout the San Francisco Bay Area in 2023.
According to the newest March 11, 2025 indictment against him unsealed earlier this month, Badillo, 29, of San Francisco, conspired with others to set fire to at least six tow trucks on four occasions between April 2023 and October 2023. Specifically, Badillo and his co-conspirators allegedly set fire to and damaged or destroyed (i) two tow trucks in San Francisco on April 4, 2023; (ii) one tow truck in San Francisco on April 29, 2023; (iii) one tow truck in East Palo Alto on July 25, 2023; and (iv) two tow trucks in San Francisco on Oct. 3, 2023.
The indictment describes that the purpose of the conspiracy was, among other things, to drive more business to two Bay Area-based towing companies with which Badillo was associated – Auto Towing and Specialty Towing – by impeding the business prospects of competitor towing companies, and to retaliate against those same competitors for perceived wrongs. Badillo allegedly orchestrated the conspiracy and then directed others to set fire to the targeted tow trucks.
This prosecution is part of an Organized Crime Drug Enforcement Task Forces (OCDETF) investigation.
The indictment is the latest of several criminal investigations centered around Badillo. Jose Vicente Badillo and Jessica Elizabeth Najarro were indicted last August 2024 on charges of mail fraud, wire fraud, and money laundering related to a scheme to defraud an auto insurance company. The allegations include submitting a fraudulent insurance claim for a wrecked car, which resulted in a reimbursement check of over $34,000 being deposited into an account controlled by Badillo.
The August indictment also alleges that, at the time of the offenses in 2019, Badillo owned and/or controlled at least two companies engaged in the business of towing vehicles: Jose’s Towing, LLC, and Auto Towing, LLC, both of which operated out of San Francisco.
In another fraud case, Badillo and Abigail Fuentes were charged with multiple felonies in October 2023 by the San Francisco District Attorney’s Office. The charges stem from an alleged welfare fraud scheme. Fuentes, who worked as a Senior Eligibility Worker at the Human Services Agency, is accused of improperly approving Badillo’s application for public welfare programs without disclosing their personal relationship. Both individuals allegedly misrepresented their income and assets to qualify for benefits they were not eligible for, including Medi-Cal, CalFresh, and CalWORKs. Authorities say Badillo and Fuentes are in a relationship and have children.
At the time the application was filed, investigators said the pair had been operating three towing companies – Auto Towing, Jose’s Towing and Specialty Towing – which generated more than $2 million in gross annual income. Both Fuentes and Badillo allegedly lied about their substantial income and assets in order to receive public benefits they were not eligible for. The case led to more scrutiny of the pair’s business practices by San Francisco authorities, specifically from San Francisco City Atty. David Chiu, whose office later alleged that one of the couple’s companies was profiting from illegal tows.
In August 2023, the City Attorney initiated debarment proceedings against Auto Towing after the company violated multiple state and local laws by illegally towing vehicles from private property. Between February and May 2023, Auto Towing employees illegally towed several cars from a bank parking lot in the Portola neighborhood without the permission of the property owner. It is unlawful for a tow company to tow a car from private property without the consent of the property owner. In February 2024, Chiu moved to suspend the company. Auto Towing, and its affiliates, which included Specialty Towing, from receiving contracts from the city.
The perpetrator also made it difficult for vehicle owners to retrieve their vehicles, restricted the hours when vehicles could be retrieved, and pressured vehicle owners to pay in cash. Under the California Vehicle Code, vehicle owners have the right to retrieve their vehicles 24 hours a day, any day of the year, and have the right to pay with cash or major credit card. The victims whose cars were towed were primarily Spanish- and Cantonese-speaking residents, who are especially vulnerable to predatory tows.
Specialty Towing came under public scrutiny two months later when a bystander recorded one of its trucks trying to tow a woman’s car as she was driving in San Francisco. “We were freaking out calling and basically rolling down our window and saying, ‘Hey what you are doing? You can’t be doing that,’ ” the driver, identified only as Joanne, told ABC 7 News in an interview. “He started backing up and his lever came down and basically he was just backing up trying to latch onto our car.”
The video of this incident is horrifying. the driver was waiting on a public street behind a tow truck stopped for a red light. The two truck driver then dropped his towing apparatus hoping to hook onto Joanne’s car while she was in it with the motor running. She backed up, and the tow truck driver backed up chasing her backward down the street. Had the tow truck driver been successful he would have towed her car away with the motor running, while kidnapping her inside.
Prior to this incident, the city received complaints from multiple victims who were allegedly scammed by Specialty Towing.