A stolen handgun with a "30-round magazine" was among the three weapons discovered Tuesday during a series of police raids that focused on a recently opened Rochester restaurant, court documents reveal.

Authorities recovered three loaded handguns, two of which were found at MamaJuana restaurant, 2260 Clifford Ave., and 500 grams of a substance, which police believe to be synthetic fentanyl. One gram of cocaine and a digital scale with suspected cocaine residue were recovered at the restaurant, police said.

Marcos Lopez-Martinez, 24, one of the brothers behind the restaurant, and Jerry Figueroa, the operations manager, were arrested and charged, the Monroe County District Attorney's Office announced Wednesday.

Felony complaints reveal the three handguns seized after the execution of three search warrants earlier this week.

Lopez-Martinez was charged with three counts of second-degree criminal possession of a weapon, third-degree criminal possession of a weapon, two counts of fourth-degree criminal possession of stolen property, each felonies, seventh-degree criminal possession of a controlled substance, and two counts of second-degree criminal use of drug paraphernalia, each misdemeanors.

Figueroa was charged with third-degree criminal possession of a controlled substance and third-degree criminal sale of a controlled substance, each felonies.

Prosecutors said a loaded, stolen gun was seized from Lopez Martinez's home in Greece. Everything else was recovered at the restaurant, according to the District Attorney's Office.

Lopez-Martinez was allegedly in possession of all three handguns, one of which was found in his Greece home, according to the felony complaint. The other two handguns were at the restaurant, court documents said.

Police recovered a loaded, stolen Glock .40-caliber model 27 handgun from Lopez-Martinez's home at 6:10 a.m. Tuesday, court documents allege. The gun was confirmed to be stolen from Irondequoit on April 13, 2017.

Police found a loaded, defaced Glock .40-caliber handgun with a "30-round magazine" at the restaurant, the complaint said. Lopez-Martinez also allegedly possessed a stolen Ruger 9mm pistol. The firearm was reported stolen from Enterprise, Alabama, on April 17, 2018.

Lopez-Martinez and Figueroa were each arraigned in Rochester City Court on Wednesday. Lopez-Martinez was also arraigned Tuesday in Greece Town Court, since some of the charges stem from what was allegedly recovered in his home.

Lopez Martinez was being held on $50,000 cash bail in Greece and $25,000 cash bail in Rochester. Each of those amounts is consecutive, meaning he would have to pay the amount each court imposed in order to be released.

Figueroa was remanded to the Monroe County Jail on $7,000 cash bail or $21,000 bond. Prosecutors said he posted bail and was released.

Figueroa allegedly sold cocaine and fentanyl to a woman on Thomas Street, just off Clifford Avenue. The transaction was under surveillance by State Police and the woman was stopped right after the sale, court documents said.

Angel Lopez, Marcos' younger brother, told the Democrat and Chronicle Wednesday evening that the drugs that police discovered at the restaurant was the same small amount that security seized from a patron Sunday night.

"You can look back into our family history and you will never find anything that ties Marcos to any criminal activity. ... ...This is not Marcos," Angel Lopez said.

The younger brother said Marcos had a weapon in the restaurant and another at his home in Greece "because he felt unsafe."

Prosecutors said search warrants were executed at three locations — the restaurant, Martinez Lopez's Greece home and another location in Rocheste

Angel Lopez, the executive chef at MamaJuana, tried to protect the reputation of the new restaurant.

"Marcos is not the owner. His mistakes cannot fall back on something we did as a family," said Angel Lopez, adding that Marcos was responsible for entertainment and security.

Figueroa aided Marcos in the entertainment portion of the business, Lopez said.

The establishment's liquor license is under Mercedes Martinez, the brothers' mother. Mercedes owns two salons, according to Angel Lopez. She contributed much of the startup funds, along with Milton Pichardo, an elder brother.

Angel Lopez said MamaJuana was open Wednesday for diners. He added that the establishment won't hold any more events at night.

"We still have a whole staff that we need to take care of. ...You can't jeopardize a business based on one employee," Angel Lopez said.

The Democrat and Chronicle hosted a food and drink event at MamaJuana Restaurant and Lounge on March 20.

WCLEVELAND@Gannett.com

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