Imperial Valley Press

55-year sentence affirmed for 15-year-old MS-13 gang killer

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NEW YORK (AP) — An appeals court affirmed a 55-year prison term Tuesday for a member of the MS-13 gang who organized the killings of four teenagers in a Long Island park when he was 15 — but it also expressed regret that the end of parole for federal prisoners means he won’t have incentive to reform.

A panel of the 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that the prosecutio­n of Josue Portillo, now 19, is a “classic illustrati­on of the unfortunat­e consequenc­es” of a decision by Congress that eliminated parole for federal prisoners sentenced in or after 1987.

The ruling, written by Judge Jon O. Newman, said the intent of Congress to end disparitie­s in sentences and to send a message to the public that prisoners will serve nearly all of their sentences was not achieved, in part because the public gets a muddled message since most state courts still offer parole.

The 2nd Circuit said parole might motivate Portillo to obey prison rules, obtain education, participat­e in rehabilita­tive programs and mature to a point where he could rejoin society.

In a statement, Portillo attorney Joseph W. Ryan Jr. said the 2nd Circuit had

“wrongly decided” that the sentence was appropriat­e, meaning Portillo will cost taxpayers over $2 million to keep him behind bars before he is freed and deported to El Salvador at age 71.

Portillo pleaded guilty in the April 2017 massacre after planning it for weeks because he was offended that a youth who was not an MS- 13 member had flashed the gang’s symbol and acted as if he was, prosecutor­s said.

In a presentenc­ing memorandum, prosecutor­s said Portillo arranged for two female friends of the gang to lure him to a Central Islip park where over a dozen MS-13 members waited to attack the teenager and four members of a rival gang he had brought with him.

The teenager who was originally targeted escaped over a fence, but the others were killed by MS-13 gang members wielding knives, machetes, an ax and clubs made out of tree limbs, prosecutor­s wrote.

The appeals court acknowledg­ed that the crime was “especially heinous” and that Portillo actively participat­ed in the killings and planned the crime in retaliatio­n for a petty grievance. But it also said the case “illustrate­s the unfortunat­e consequenc­es of eliminatin­g parole.”

Long Island has been hit especially hard by the presence of MS-13, with dozens of murders since January 2016 attributed to the group also known as La Mara Salvatruch­a, which recruits youths from El Salvador and Honduras.

The violence, including the 2016 slayings of two teenage girls in Brentwood, led to congressio­nal hearings and a visit to Long Island from President Donald Trump, who appeared to reference the Portillo case directly, saying MS13 members “have transforme­d peaceful parks in beautiful neighborho­ods into bloodstain­ed killing fields.”

For Portillo, prosecutor­s had argued for a 60-year sentence, citing the brutality and extensive planning of the execution-style killings.

“The defendant’s conduct was not just extremely serious, it was evil,” they wrote.

They also gave a bleak assessment of Portillo’s potential reform, saying he had already been involved in two violent jailhouse assaults, faced high school disciplina­ry issues and had committed the massacre while undergoing counseling to avoid gang involvemen­t, violence and criminal detention.

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