Three MS-13 Members Charged In Slaughter Of Teenage Girl Laugh And Joke
In Courtroom During Death Penalty Discussions
Three members of the notorious Salvadoran
gang MS-13 showed no remorse Tuesday as they laughed and joked in a New
York courtroom while the family of one of their alleged murder victims –
a teenage girl -- grimly looked on.
Enrique Portillo and brothers Alexi Saenz and Jairo Saenz laughed,
smiled and joked with each other as prosecutors said they were waiting
to hear from the U.S. Justice Department about whether they can pursue
the death penalty.
The family of 16-year-old Kayla Cuevas, the Brentwood, N.Y., girl they
are accused of slaughtering in cold blood alongside her friend Nisa
Mickens, 15, glared at them from the gallery, the New York Post
reported.
The two teenage girls
were slaughtered in a residential neighborhood near an elementary school
on Sept. 13, 2016 -- the day before Mickens’ 16th birthday. Her body was
found on a tree-lined street in Brentwood, while Cuevas’ beaten body
turned up in the wooded backyard of a nearby home a day later.
The two teens were lifelong friends who friends and family said had been
inseparable and shared an interest in basketball.
“We shouldn’t be tolerating this type of behavior, at all whatsoever.
These are kids [getting killed], kids. This should not be tolerated at
all,” Cuevas’ mother Evelyn Rodriguez told “Fox and Friends” last July.
U.S. Attorney Robert L. Capers said the Saenz brothers ordered the
killing of Cuevas in retaliation after she called out the gang at school
and on social media.
Officials said Mickens was in the wrong place at the wrong time.
Portillo and two other juveniles were also charged with killing the two
teenagers.
“For far too long, MS-13 has been meting out their own version of the
death penalty,” Capers said at the time of their arrests.
The three suspects were among 13 gang
members charged with a series of crimes, including seven murders, in
March 2017.
"Today marks the beginning of healing for the families and the
community," he said. "It's a great day for justice... but the job is not
done," Suffolk County Police Commissioner Tim Sini told Fox News at the
time of their arrest in March 2017.
U.S. Attorney General Jeff Sessions has emphasized the Trump
administration’s commitment to combating MS-13, and has allowed
prosecutors to pursue any legal avenue to target the gang – although he
has not yet stated whether capital punishment is on the table for
Portillo and the Saenzes, the Post reported.
Meanwhile, reputed MS-13 members Mario Aguilar-Lopez and Jose Suarez,
who also appeared in court Tuesday, are accused of killing a rival gang
member and injuring an onlooker.