A group of MS-13 members lured a Long Island teenager into a car with the promise of marijuana and sex and took him to a secluded nature preserve where they hacked him up with knives and machetes to boost their stature within the ruthless gang, police said Wednesday.
Two reputed members of the street gang, which has been blamed for 21 deaths in the suburbs east of New York City in the past 20 months, are facing murder charges in the killing of 19-year-old Julio Cesar Gonzales-Espantzay, Nassau County police and prosecutors said. More arrests are possible.
Kevin Granados-Coreas, 19, was held without bail at his arraignment Wednesday on a charge of second-degree murder. He and his attorney had no comment.
Carlos Portillo, 22, was arraigned July 30. The name of his attorney was not immediately available.
A group of MS-13 members lured a Long Island teenager into a car with the promise of marijuana and sex and took him to a secluded nature preserve where they hacked him up. Kevin Granados-Coreas (left), 19, was held without bail at his arraignment Wednesday on a charge of second-degree murder. Carlos Portillo (right), 22, was arraigned July 30
The killings, many of which have involved teenagers, have caught the attention of both President Donald Trump and U.S. Attorney General Jeff Sessions, both of whom have visited Long Island in recent months to promise federal action to stem the violence.
Authorities said Wednesday that the two people arrested in the January death of Julio Cesar Gonzales-Espantzay were part of a larger group involved in the homicide.
‘This investigation is very much ongoing,’ Nassau County District Attorney Madeline Singas said.
She said while state charges have been initially filed in the killings, her office was cooperating with federal prosecutors, who could eventually bring upgraded charges.
‘I mean, 19-year-olds hacked up and dropped in our preserves is just something that really should be shocking to residents of this county,’ she said.
Authorities said Wednesday that the two people arrested in the January death of Julio Cesar Gonzales-Espantzay (pictured in a police sketch) were part of a larger group involved in the homicide
They said Gonzales-Espantzay was not a gang member but was lured into a car on January 28 and taken to the Massapequa Preserve (pictured), where he was killed
‘It’s shocking to us in law enforcement and we see a lot.’
Lt. Stephen Fitzpatrick, commanding officer of the Nassau homicide squad, said Granados-Coreas befriended the victim in his Valley Stream neighborhood in late 2016.
They said Gonzales-Espantzay was not a gang member but was lured into a car on January 28 and taken to the Massapequa Preserve, where he was killed.
His body was found nearly two months later by a man walking his dog.
‘Commonly they pick victims to move up in stature in MS-13,’ Fitzpatrick said. ‘You have to show your loyalty.’