NYC mayor and Trump border czar tout charges against 27 people in Tren
de Aragua case
[April 23, 2025]
By PHILIP MARCELO
NEW YORK (AP) — President Donald Trump’s border czar joined New York
City’s mayor on Tuesday to tout new federal charges against 27 people
accused of being Tren de Aragua gang members and associates.
The joint announcement is the latest example of the close ties between
Mayor Eric Adams and the Trump administration, which recently dropped
federal corruption charges against the Democrat so he could better focus
on the Republican president’s immigration priorities. Adams is now
running for reelection as an independent.
Trump, in his nationwide immigration crackdown, has labeled Tren de
Aragua an invading force as he invoked the Alien Enemies Act, a
little-used statute from 1798 lets the president deport noncitizens 14
years or older who are from a country the U.S. is at war with.
“Every member of TDA should be on the run,” declared Thomas Homan,
Trump's border czar, referring to the initials of the gang, which
originated in Venezuela more than a decade ago and has been linked to a
series of kidnappings, extortion and other crimes throughout the Western
Hemisphere.
Adams' administration recently announced that it would let federal
immigration officials operate at the city’s Rikers Island jail complex —
and Homan used the news briefing to take a swipe at a City Council
lawsuit seeking to stop the plan.
“This is what collaboration looks like,” he said. “I never asked the
city or the NYPD to be immigration officers. I asked them to work with
us on significant public safety threats and national security threats,
and that’s what we’re committed to doing.”

A New York judge ordered city officials on Monday to temporarily halt
the plan, which would let Immigration and Customs Enforcement and other
federal agencies establish offices at the massive lockup, until an April
25 hearing on the suit.
Adams said Tuesday’s announcement showed he remains “unapologetic” in
his desire to rid the city’s streets of violent immigrant gangs.
“The question that we must answer: whose side are you on?” the Democrat
said. “Are you on the side of those who are carrying these illegal guns,
wreaking havoc, sex trafficking, harming innocent people regardless of
their documentation, or are you on the side of hardworking New Yorkers
and Americans? I’m clear on which side I’m on.”
Manhattan prosecutors say the case is the first to bring federal
racketeering charges, which were famously used to bring down the Mafia,
against the Venezuelan street gang. The more than two dozen accused also
face charges including sex trafficking, drug trafficking, robbery, and
firearms possession.
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White House border czar Tom Homan talks with reporters at the White
House, Tuesday, April 15, 2025, in Washington. (AP Photo/Alex
Brandon)

Prosecutors said those arrested smuggled young women from Venezuela
into Peru and the U.S. The women, who they referred to as “multadas,”
paid off their debts through prostitution and were threatened with
violence and death.
The gang members also committed armed robberies and smuggled illegal
drugs, including a substance called “tusi” that contains ketamine,
prosecutors said.
Of the 27 charged, 21 are in custody, including five arrested Monday
and Tuesday in operations in New York and elsewhere, they said. Six
others remain at large.
The charges are broken out into two separate indictments, one for
six alleged members of Tren de Aragua and the other charging 19
alleged members of “Anti-Tren,” a splinter faction made up of former
Tren members.
Among those named in Tuesday’s indictment was Anderson Zambrano-Pacheco,
who was among those arrested back in January in the Bronx during
some of the Trump administration’s first efforts to ramp up
immigration enforcement in the city.
Authorities say the 26-year-old was part of a group of heavily armed
men seen in a now-viral video forcing their way into an apartment in
Aurora, Colorado, raising fears that Tren de Aragua was in control
of the rundown complex in the Denver suburbs.
Zambrano-Pacheco’s lawyer didn’t immediately comment Tuesday.
Adams rejected the notion that many of those apprehended by
immigration and law enforcement officials in recent months are
otherwise law-abiding people.
“The American dream is not doing armed robberies. The American dream
is not discharging guns. The American dream is not shooting at
police officers. The American dream is not going into homeless
shelters and taking the documentation from innocent people and
forcing them into sex trafficking,” he said. “That’s not the
American dream, and we’re not going to be a safe harbor for
criminals.”
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