Northeast
Lame duck Biden's DOJ gives brutal gang leader sweetheart plea deal in murder spree that killed 7
A notorious MS-13 gang leader who has admitted to planning, approving or taking part in at least seven murders in a federal racketeering case has avoided the death penalty and life in prison under the terms of a plea deal, authorities said this week.
Jairo Saenz, 28, is expected to receive a sentence of 40 to 60 years in federal prison after admitting to seven murders, multiple attempted murders, arson and other charges. Saenz’s brother Alexi, another gang leader, previously pleaded guilty to similar charges in exchange for an expected sentence of 70 years behind bars.
The Saenz brothers were the leaders of a Suffolk County, New York, branch of MS-13 known as the Sailors, according to federal authorities. Their group was known for extreme brutality and violence, including the murder of two Brentwood High School girls with a machete and a baseball bat.
MS-13 GANG LEADER PLEADS GUILTY TO EIGHT BRUTAL MURDERS, INCLUDING TWO TEENS HONORED BY TRUMP IN SOTU SPEECH
Kayla Cuevas, 16, and her friend Nisa Mickens, 15, were killed by MS-13 members in Brentwood, New York, in September 2016. (AP)
They attacked Kayla Cuevas, 16, and Nisa Mickens, 15, after members saw them walking in a neighborhood on Sept. 13, 2016. One of the girls had criticized the Sailors on Facebook. The gang killed them both and left their bodies to be found later.
Suffolk County police offered a $15,000 reward for information on the case. Federal prosecutors and Immigration and Customs Enforcement later became involved during a countrywide crackdown on MS-13 during President Trump’s first term.
When you look at how barbaric these crimes were, murdering young kids with machetes, baseball bats, this is a clear case for the death penalty.
“It’s disgraceful. It’s an insult to the families,” Suffolk County PBA President Lou Civello said of the plea deal Wednesday. “When you look at how barbaric these crimes were, murdering young kids with machetes, baseball bats, this is a clear case for the death penalty.”
If Saenz serves the lower end of his sentencing range, that amounts to less than six years per murder, Civello told Fox News Digital.
“We’re always grateful for the federal partnership and the resources they bring to the table, but at the same time, we need justice, that’s the important part,” he said. “If it were true justice, this person should never see the light of day again. There should never be the opportunity to be out and back on our streets.”
CHARGES IN DEATH OF ANTI-GANG CRUSADER WHO LOST HER DAUGHTER
Alexi Saenz, left, and Jairo Saenz, in booking photos taken after their arrests. The brothers have both admitted to being MS-13 leaders and murderers in a federal racketeering case. (US Attorney’s Office for the Eastern District of New York)
“The Saenz brothers were no longer facing the possibility of the death penalty,” a spokesperson for the U.S. Attorney’s Office told Fox News Digital. “Our Office had been directed by the U.S. Attorney General in 2023 not to seek the penalty if they were convicted of the capital counts.”
During a prior hearing, Saenz, his brother and another gang member joked and laughed in court as the girls’ families were forced to watch from the gallery, Fox News Digital reported in 2018.
WATCH: MS-13 members show no remorse for murders
“For far too long, MS-13 has been meting out their own version of the death penalty,” then-U.S. Attorney Robert Capers, of the Eastern District of New York, said at the time of their arrests.
Now his predecessors have taken death off the table for the ringleader – and outgoing President Biden has also commuted the death sentences of 37 out of 40 federal death row inmates.
The gang would often drive around town looking for rivals to kill, according to federal prosecutors, sometimes in broad daylight and often by luring or ambushing their victims. But it was unclear how many of the people they attacked were actually gang affiliated.
A memorial to best friends Nisa Mickens and Kayla Cuevas in Brentwood, New York, Sept. 27, 2016, near the spot where their bodies were found. (AP Photo/Claudia Torrens, File)
In one incident, Saenz helped organize the murder of a man whose football jersey they took as a symbol for another gang. A masked gunman snuck up behind Esteban Alvarado-Bonilla, 29, as he stood in line at a deli on Jan. 30, 2017. They shot him in the back of the head, and the bullet exited and wounded a woman at the counter.
MS-13 violence got so bad on Long Island that during President Trump’s first term, he visited in person to meet with the families of Cuevas, Mickens and other victims and enlisted then-Attorney General Jeff Sessions in an effort to take the gang off the streets, which he said was using immigration “loopholes” to bring members into the U.S.
MOM HONORED BY TRUMP AFTER MS-13 KILLED HER DAUGHTER IS STRUCK, KILLED BY SUV NEAR MEMORIAL SITE
MS-13 gang member Alexi Saenz is escorted by FBI agents in Central Islip, New York, after being taken into custody. (James Carbone/Newsday via AP, File)
During the meeting, he described MS-13 as “a ruthless gang that has violated our borders and transformed once peaceful neighborhoods into bloodstained killing fields.”
The federal crackdown at the time led to thousands of deportations of its members. Saenz and his group were held to face justice, and former Attorney General Bill Barr’s office would later announce it was seeking the death penalty.
Cuevas’ mother, Evelyn Rodriguez, became a fierce anti-gang activist but died before she ever saw justice. She was run over near her daughter’s memorial in 2018. The driver was convicted of criminally negligent homicide.
President Trump speaks alongside Evelyn Rodriguez, whose daughter was killed by MS-13 gang members, during a discussion on immigration at Morrelly Homeland Security Center in Bethpage, New York, May 23, 2018. (Saul Loeb/AFP via Getty Images)
In 2023, then-U.S. Attorney for the Eastern District of New York Breon Peace told the judge that Biden’s Attorney General Merrick Garland had directed him to stop pursuing the death penalty. Peace stepped down Friday and has been succeeded by acting U.S. Attorney Carolyn Pokorny, who is expected to hold the post until Trump-nominated Joseph Nocella Jr. is confirmed.
Trump has vowed to not only end Biden’s moratorium on capital punishment, but also to expand the list of crimes that can be punishable with execution to include child rape, human trafficking and the murder of U.S. citizens by illegal immigrants. Thirteen federal inmates were executed during Trump’s first term, the most under any president in decades, but Biden halted executions after taking office in 2021.
Experts tell Fox News Digital the deal is light, but it could have taken shape for a number of reasons, such as if Saenz agreed to cooperate against his co-conspirators. Avoiding trial also uses fewer government resources and spares the victims’ families from having to re-live the horror in court – or seeing the murderers continue to smirk and joke around.
Attorney General Merrick Garland speaks during a news conference at the Department of Justice, Sept. 24, 2024, in Washington. (AP Photo/Mark Schiefelbein)
Still, prosecutors could have sought a stiffer punishment without seeking execution.
“This is a very light sentence, considering the circumstances in the fact of this case,” said David Gelman, a New Jersey-based defense attorney and former prosecutor.
“The only plea deal that I would’ve offered is life in prison without the possibility of parole. Here these gang members are going to get an opportunity to not only get out while they are still living, but they probably will get out earlier than their expected sentence.”
Civello also noted the new threat of the Venezuelan prison gang, Tren de Aragua, but he said he is hopeful that new leadership will boost public safety across the country after Trump is inaugurated Monday.
Read the full article from Here
New York
Four Epstein Victims Ask N.Y. Lawmakers to Open His Estate to Lawsuits
Seated before an array of New York State senators on Monday, Lara Blume McGee was asked by one lawmaker why it had taken her so long to go public with the details of how Jeffrey Epstein had abused her.
She paused for a moment, another victim of Mr. Epstein’s by her side, and leaned forward to speak into the microphone in the State Capitol.
“Fear,” said Ms. Blume McGee, who had been 17 and an aspiring model when Mr. Epstein abused her. It took her about 20 years to come forward.
“Jeffrey Epstein was a great manipulator,” she added, explaining that she feared being sued and having her life ruined by his capacity for retribution.
Ms. Blume McGee was among four women who testified in the State Capitol about the trauma Mr. Epstein inflicted upon them and the lasting damage he did to their lives. The appearance of two of the women — Ms. Blume McGee and Carine Silva De Deus — had been expected, but two other women — Glendys Espinal and Alexandra Golematis — also came forward. Both said they were speaking publicly for the first time about their experiences with Mr. Epstein.
Their testimony comes as State Senator Zellnor Myrie, a Democrat from Brooklyn, seeks support for legislation intended to update state sex-trafficking laws. The goal, Mr. Myrie said, was to better equip the state to handle the kinds of crimes that Mr. Epstein was accused of committing by criminalizing the actions of people who helped perpetuate his behavior.
If passed, the laws would also allow Mr. Epstein’s victims to sue his associates and his estate in state court for punitive damages. State law prevents people from seeking punitive damages from the estate of someone who has died.
“Trafficking is not sustained by one single actor. It is not just Jeffrey Epstein,” said Kathryn Robb, a lawyer who has been pushing for these sorts of legislative changes across the country.
“It is a network that includes financial backers, businesses and other intermediaries, who often escape accountability,” she added. “This bill will disrupt that.”
Ms. Espinal, a Bronx native, said she first met Mr. Epstein during her sophomore year of high school, when she was brought in to give him massages. The demands from the financier quickly escalated, and she said she still has post-traumatic stress disorder from these interactions, which occurred between 2005 and 2008.
“What was going through my head at the time was just pure shame and intimidation,” she said.
Mr. Myrie’s bill, which has no companion legislation in the Assembly as of yet, is not state lawmakers’ only effort to reckon with Mr. Epstein’s legacy and the pain he caused hundreds of women.
Assemblywoman Pamela Hunter, a Democrat from the Syracuse area, and Senator Liz Krueger, a Democrat representing parts of Manhattan, have introduced a bill that would close what they call the “Epstein loophole.” In the state’s laws relating to prostitution, the buyers of a sex worker’s services, or those facilitating them, are excluded from punishment under the statute relating to people being punished for “advancing prostitution.”
“New York should act quickly and close the Epstein loophole, which would have prevented men like Jeffrey Epstein and Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs from being charged with trafficking at the state level,” Ms. Hunter said in a statement last month.
“This bill is necessary to ensure that traffickers and sex buyers are held accountable, while survivors of sexual exploitation are given the care and support they need,” she added, explaining that the law would also reduce punishments for those who perform sex work.
Mr. Epstein and his estate have settled several lawsuits with victims in recent years. The New York Times reported in February that a recent court filing showed that his estate was valued at $120 million, though the estimate might be an undercount.
Nathan Werksman, a lawyer for the women who testified on Monday, said that time was of the essence to change the law and give Ms. Blume McGee and others the chance to seek financial damages from Mr. Epstein’s estate.
Mr. Myrie’s bill, which the Senate Codes Committee passed on Monday, creates a one-year look-back period so that people can sue for actions that fall outside the statute of limitations. In this manner, it resembles the Adult Survivors Act, which in 2022 opened a one-time window in New York permitting people to file sex-abuse lawsuits after the statute of limitations had expired.
“The Epstein Estate is a finite amount of money that is dwindling every day, every week, and every month,” Mr. Werksman said.
“Jeffrey Epstein was able to escape criminal accountability, and his estate can escape civil liability if the estate dwindles down to nothing,” he added.
Lawyers for Mr. Epstein’s estate did not respond to emails seeking comment.
Boston, MA
Photos: See Nicole Kidman, Anne Hathaway, and more stars on the 2026 Met Gala red carpet – The Boston Globe
Held on the first Monday in May each year, the 2026 Met Gala features a “Fashion is Art” dress code, inspired by the institute’s spring exhibition, “Costume Art.” Opening to the public on May 10, the exhibition is the first to be housed in the new Condé M. Nast Galleries, located adjacent to the museum’s Great Hall.
Bringing out fashionable A-list stars from Hollywood and beyond, this year’s soirée once again features Anna Wintour back as a co-chair, marking her first Met Gala since her announcement last year that she was stepping down as editor-in-chief of Vogue. A trio of icons from across entertainment and sports join Wintour for the 2026 festivities, with Beyoncé, Nicole Kidman, and Venus Williams also serving as co-chairs.
Meanwhile, the gala’s host committee is pretty start-studded as well. Co-chaired by fashion designer Anthony Vaccarello and actress Zoë Kravitz, this year’s committee is comprised of Adut Akech, Angela Bassett, Sinéad Burke, Sabrina Carpenter, Doja Cat, Gwendoline Christie, Alex Consani, Misty Copeland, Elizabeth Debicki, Lena Dunham, Paloma Elsesser, Rebecca Hall, LISA, Chloe Malle, Aimee Mullins, Sam Smith, Tschabalala Self, Amy Sherald, Teyana Taylor, Lauren Wasser, Anna Weyant, A’ja Wilson, Chase Sui Wonders, and Yseult.
Amazon founder Jeff Bezos and his wife Lauren Sánchez Bezos are the lead sponsors for both the gala and spring exhibition, and will serve as honorary chairs for Monday’s party.
Check out below to see all the top fashion moments and looks from the 2026 Met Gala red carpet.














































































Matt Juul can be reached at matthew.juul@globe.com.
Pittsburg, PA
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