Miami Herald

Orlando-area deputy’s arrest links him to husband of carjacked and killed Homestead woman, cops say

- BY DAVID GOODHUE dgoodhue@flkeysnews.com

About five minutes after an Orange County deputy got off the phone with a Seminole County detective working the case of a Homestead woman carjacked at gunpoint and murdered in Central Florida last week, the deputy sent a recording of that conversati­on to the victim’s husband, according to court documents.

It’s the latest detail in the mystery of why Katherine Altagracia Guerrero De Aguasvivas, 31, traveled on April 11 from Homestead to Seminole County near Orlando, where she was carjacked at gunpoint by a man wearing a hoodie and Halloween mask, shot to death and her body found in a torched SUV at a constructi­on site that night.

Investigat­ors say the same green 2002 Acura that the kidnappers used to carjack Aguasvivas’ white Dodge Durango near Winter Springs is connected to the shooting death of a tow-truck driver, Juan Luis Cintron Garcia, 39, the day before in Orange County.

On Sunday, the Seminole County Sheriff’s Office, the lead investigat­ive agency in the case, arrested Orange County Deputy Francisco Alberto Estrella Chicon, 33, on multiple felonies.

Aguasvivas’ husband, Miguel Aguasvivas, contacted Estrella Chicon when he and her brother, Luis Fernando Abreu, were driving to Seminole County last week to meet with detectives about the case, according to a Seminole County arrest report.

After getting off the phone with Miguel, Estrella Chicon, using a bogus name, called the lead Seminole County detective on the case and said he was a detective with Orange County and Katherine Aguasvivas’ maternal cousin, according to the report. He told the detective he was concerned about his cousin and asked how the case was progressin­g.

RECORDED THE CONVERSATI­ON, REPORT SAYS

She told him she could not discuss the case with him, but also asked him if he knew why Katherine Aguasvivas was in the area. He responded that he was not in regular contact with her and did not know.

What the detective did not know was that Estrella Chicon was video-recording the conversati­on with her and also accessing a police database pulling her profession­al credential­s and her driver’s license informatio­n, including her address.

After the roughly threeminut­e conversati­on, Estrella Chicon sent the video-recording to Miguel through WhatsApp, the report states.

The video, sent to Miguel around 11:05 p.m. on April 11, clearly shows Estrella Chicon pulling up the police database.

Estrella Chicon’s attorney, Corey Cohen, declined to comment on his client’s case, citing an open investigat­ion and that he has not yet been officially charged. His arrest report lists several felonies, including use of a two-way device in the commission of a felony, eavesdropp­ing, invasion of privacy and accessing a computer or electronic device without authorizat­ion.

Seminole County detectives discovered that Estrella Chicon sent the video after Miguel voluntaril­y handed over his cellphone to police, according to the report.

Seminole County Sheriff Dennis Lemma told reporters this week that Miguel is a childhood friend of Estrella Chicon’s wife.

The Orange County Sheriff’s Office said it hired Estrella Chicon in September 2022 and he was not promoted to detective. He has been relieved of all law-enforcemen­t duties without pay “while the criminal case is underway.”

“These are very serious criminal allegation­s. It is completely unacceptab­le for any law enforcemen­t officer to misuse the power and authority of their job,” Orange County Sheriff

John Mina said in a written statement.

Estrella Chicon remained in a Seminole County jail Thursday.

Cohen, his attorney, filed a motion Tuesday to set bond, stating his “incarcerat­ion is causing a tremendous financial hardship on the family.”

THE CARJACKING

Katherine Aguasvivas was kidnapped shortly before 6 p.m. on April 11 at the intersecti­on of East Lake Drive and Tuskawilla Road in unincorpor­ated

Seminole County near Winter Springs, according to investigat­ors.

Before stopping at the red light, she called her husband saying she was being followed by a green Acura that was repeatedly ramming the back of her Durango.

While she was stopped at the intersecti­on, a man wearing a black hoodie and a Halloween mask gets out of the green Acura behind her, walks to her window, points a gun at her and hops into the back seat of the Durango.

The Durango, with the Acura following, then drove away when the light turned green. A person in a vehicle behind the Acura filmed what they presumed to be a carjacking on cellphone video widely shared online.

A witness told police that before the cars stopped at the intersecti­on, someone in the Acura stuck his hands out of the car and waved to Katherine Aguasvivas “in what appeared to be a friendly manner.”

However, the driver of the Acura then began ramming the Dodge.

The Durango was found torched with a burned body inside it at a constructi­on site in Osceola County later that night, investigat­ors say.

Witnesses also reported hearing gunshots before the SUV was found. Police say they are waiting on results from a DNA test and dental records to confirm that the body is Katherine Aguasvivas. However, Estrella Chicon’s arrest report states Katherine Aguasvivas was shot and killed.

Investigat­ors believe she was targeted, but they do not know why. According to Lemma, the Seminole County sheriff, Miguel said his wife traveled to Central Florida to visit family, but investigat­ors have so far not been able to confirm she has kin in the area.

The couple, originally from the Dominican Republic, ran a hair salon in Homestead.

The Miami Herald left a message on the cellphone number listed on a for-sale sign on the back of the Durango, which police say is Miguel’s, but he did not respond.

Lemma said Miguel is not a suspect or person of interest at this point, but he believes he has more informatio­n that could help investigat­ors.

“I think there are a lot more blanks that he can help fill in about the circumstan­ces involving this particular case, and now, other cases,” Lemma said during a media briefing Monday.

ACURA CONNECTION

Investigat­ors made a breakthrou­gh this week when they found the Acura that they believe the carjackers used in an Orange County apartment complex. The car had been circulatin­g between owners and used-car lots in Central Florida since around February, Lemma said, adding that once it was found, it was easy to connect to the crime because it is the only green 2002 Acura registered in the state.

“We immediatel­y knew it was our car,” Lemma said.

Investigat­ors say the same car is linked to the murder of Cintron Garcia, the tow-truck driver. Detectives say he was shot the day before Katherine Aguasvivas was killed.

Police have not released a motive in that murder, but said Cintron Garcia hauled the Acura away from an Orange County apartment parking lot on March 19.

Detectives said they found the same spent ammunition at the crime scenes of Cintron Garcia and Katherine Aguasvivas — 10 millimeter bullets. At Cintron Garcia’s crime scene, there were more than 100 spent casings, Sheriff Lemma said.

“A 10 millimeter is just a round that is more rare than the 9 millimeter­s and .45 calibers that we see out there,” Lemma said. “The only significan­ce of that is it makes a better connection to the two crimes.”

David Goodhue: 305-923-9728, @DavidGoodh­ue

 ?? Seminole County Sheriff’s Office ?? The green Acura sedan from which the Seminole County Sheriff’s Office says the carjacker emerged.
Seminole County Sheriff’s Office The green Acura sedan from which the Seminole County Sheriff’s Office says the carjacker emerged.
 ?? Seminole County Sheriff’s Office ?? Katherine Altagracia Guerrero De Aguasvivas
Seminole County Sheriff’s Office Katherine Altagracia Guerrero De Aguasvivas

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