MS-13 leader to be sentenced in racketeering case involving 8 murders
[July 02, 2025]
By PHILIP MARCELO
CENTRAL ISLIP, N.Y. (AP) — The leader of an MS-13 clique in the suburbs
of New York City faces sentencing Wednesday in a federal racketeering
case involving eight murders, including the 2016 killings of two high
school girls that focused the nation’s attention on the violent Central
American street gang.
Alexi Saenz pleaded guilty last year for his role in ordering and
approving the killings as well as other crimes during a rash of bloody
violence that prompted President Donald Trump to make several visits to
Long Island and call for the death penalty for Saenz and other gang
members during his first term in the White House.
Saenz’s lawyers are seeking a sentence of 45 years behind bars, but
prosecutors want the judge to impose the maximum sentence of 70 years.
Prosecutors, who previously withdrew their intent to seek the death
penalty, say Saenz deserves to live out his days in prison for his
“senseless” and “sadistic” crimes.
“The eight victims who lost their lives did nothing to deserve what the
MS-13 did to them,” they wrote in legal filings ahead of Wednesday’s
hearing. “The defendant and the others killed them in service of the
gang without remorse or any regard for them as human beings.”
But Saenz's lawyers have argued for leniency, saying in their own legal
filings that the now-30-year-old is remorseful and “on a journey of
redemption” while incarcerated.
"With the passage of time and much reflection, it is hard for Mr. Saenz
to reconcile the person he is today with the person he was when he
committed the crimes," their sentencing memo reads. “He is profoundly
sorry, and although he knows the families may not accept his apology, it
is sincere, and he accepts full responsibility for his participation in
these crimes.”

Saenz's lawyers also say he suffers from intellectual disabilities and
lasting trauma from an abusive father and difficult upbringing in El
Salvador. They say Saenz was recruited and unwittingly “groomed” into
MS-13 because he was an “easily influenced” and “gullible” high school
student on Long Island.
Prosecutors, however, counter that Saenz has remained “firmly
entrenched” in MS-13 while in a federal lockup in Brooklyn for the past
eight years.
They cited photos of him posing with other gang members behind bars and
displaying gang signs and gang paraphernalia. They also say Saenz has
been disciplined for assaulting other inmates, refusing staff orders and
possessing sharpened metal shanks, cellphones and other contraband.
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In this Thursday, March 2, 2017 photo, accused MS-13 gang member
Alexi Saenz, is escorted by FBI agents in Central Islip, N.Y., after
being taken into custody. (James Carbone/Newsday via AP, File)

“Indeed, the same pattern of violence and mayhem that has marked his
life on the street has not waned with the passage of time,” prosecutors
wrote.
Saenz, also known as “Blasty” and “Big Homie,” was the leader of an
MS-13 clique operating in Brentwood and Central Islip known as Sailors
Locos Salvatruchas Westside.
He admitted last July that he’d authorized the eight killings and three
other attempted killings of perceived rivals and others that had
disrespected or feuded with the clique.
Saenz also admitted to arson, firearms offenses and drug trafficking —
the proceeds of which went toward buying firearms, more drugs and
providing contributions to the wider MS-13 gang.
Among the killings Saenz oversaw were the deaths of Kayla Cuevas, 16,
and Nisa Mickens, 15, lifelong friends and classmates at Brentwood High
School who were slain with a machete and a baseball bat.
Other victims included Javier Castillo, 15, of Central Islip, who was
befriended by gang members only to be cut down with a machete in an
isolated marsh.
Another victim, Oscar Acosta, 19, was found dead in a wooded area near
railroad tracks nearly five months after he left his Brentwood home to
play soccer.
MS-13, or Mara Salvatrucha, is a transnational criminal organization
believed to have been founded as a neighborhood street gang in Los
Angeles in the mid-1980s by people fleeing civil war in El Salvador.
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