El Dorado News-Times

MS-13 gang suspects indicted in slayings of 3 New York teenagers

-

CENTRAL ISLIP, N.Y. (AP) — Federal prosecutor­s said Thursday they had captured the members of a violent street gang who killed three high school students, including two girls who were inseparabl­e best friends and were attacked with a machete and baseball bats as they walked through their suburban neighborho­od.

Thirteen members of local cliques of the MS-13 street gang were charged with a slew of violent crimes and seven killings over a five-year period, prosecutor­s and police said.

Among the dead: Brentwood High School students Nisa Mickens, 15, and Kayla Cuevas, 16, who were ambushed by a carload of other teens on Sept. 13, and their former schoolmate Jose Pena-Hernandez, 18, whose corpse was found on the grounds of an abandoned state psychiatri­c hospital following his disappeara­nce in June.

The killings came amid a national conversati­on about illegal immigratio­n, and prosecutor­s revealed 10 of the 13 indicted people were citizens of El Salvador or Honduras who were in the U.S. illegally, including most of the people directly implicated in the killings.

Last December, Donald Trump referenced the slayings in Brentwood during a profile for his Time magazine Person of the Year award after being elected president.

Two other killings of Brentwood youths, ages 15 and 19, whose bodies were discovered last year in secluded spots in the hamlet, remain unsolved.

Gang violence has been a problem in Brentwood and some surroundin­g Long Island communitie­s for more than a decade, but Suffolk County police and the FBI began pouring resources into a crackdown after the killings of the high school girls sparked outrage.

"While violence and brutality are trademarks of the MS-13 gang, the murders of these three teens are particular­ly disturbing," U.S. Attorney Robert Capers said in announcing the indictment Thursday.

Kayla was targeted last summer by a group of four gang members, including two juveniles, because she had been feuding with MS-13 members at school and on social media. The posse, which had been roving in a car looking for gang enemies, attacked it they came across her walking with Nisa in the street.

Nisa "was simply at the wrong place at the wrong time, hanging out with her childhood friend," Capers said.

Nisa's father, Robert Mickens, said he felt blessed that police had made arrests.

"I've got some type of closure even though my daughter is not back," he said. "It's closure to my family."

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States