President Donald Trump and Attorney General William Barr announced on Wednesday significant developments in the administration’s efforts to eradicate the notorious MS-13 gang, including its plan to seek the death penalty of an alleged gang member in connection to the slayings of two New York teens.
Among the arrests include the indictment of Melgar Diaz, who became the first MS-13 member to be charged with terrorism-related offenses, officials say.
“He was responsible for activities in 13 states—20 cliques in the United States. He was also the person who would greenlight assassinations in the United States. The orders come from El Salvador—or they request to assassinate people who go down to El Salvador, and he would greenlight the hit,” Barr said during a press conference at the oval office on Wednesday.
Diaz, whose indictment was unsealed on July 14, was charged with offenses including conspiring to provide material support to terrorists, conspiring to kill or maim individuals overseas, and conspiring to commit acts of terrorism transcending national boundaries.
Mickens’ body was discovered with such significant trauma to the face and head that she was almost unrecognizable, according to the U.S. Attorney’s Office of the Eastern District of New York. She had been attacked with baseball bats and a machete. Meanwhile, Cuevas’s body was found the next day nearby.
“We believe the monsters who murder children should be put to death. We seem to have quite a good agreement on that. These people murder children and they do it as slowly and viciously as possible. We will not allow these animals to terrorize our communities,” Trump said.
Meanwhile, in New York and Nevada, 21 MS-13 members, including leaders of various chapters operating in the area, were arrested and charged with various offenses, including murder, kidnapping, and drug trafficking, the officials said.
The gang’s motto is “kill, rape, control” and routinely uses brutal assault methods on victims to instill fear and force compliance.
Barr described the gang as a “death cult,” saying that its members are driven by the honor of “being the most savage, bloodthirsty person you can be and building up a reputation by killing.”
“They use the terror that they cause by their savaging to extort and they’ve gotten increasingly into human trafficking and now narcotics trafficking, but that’s a sideline, to some extent, to their basic purpose which is violence and terrorizing people,” the attorney general said.
The attorney general told reporters that more actions against the leadership of MS-13 are expected, saying that the administration had been working very closely with counterparts in El Salvador.
MS-13 was initially formed by Salvadoran immigrants that came to the United States in order to escape the civil war in their home country, according to a study published in the Journal of Gang Research in 2009.