This expat gangbanger flipped his wig.
a male Tren de Aragua gang member In Aurora, Colorado, a man dressed in raggedy clothing, including a long, heavy wig and a woman’s knitted hat, tried to avoid suspicion last week as police searched for the perpetrators of a brutal kidnapping, according to local authorities. Was staying.
Aurora City Councilwoman Danielle Jurinski told The Post that the photos show 20-year-old Venezuelan gangbanger Nifred Serpa-Acosta pretending to be a girl with her hands up when police arrived.
Police were searching The Edge at the Lowry Apartments for suspects in the kidnapping and torture of two residents in the Denver suburb early on December 17.
However, Serpa-Acosta’s deep voice blew her cover, Zurinsky said.
“It gives a whole new meaning to international gangs in Aurora,” he quipped.
Serpa-Acosta First person ran away from police after viral video Aired in August it showed heavily armed gang members breaking into an apartment at The Edge at Lowry complex in Aurora.
A few minutes later, the group reportedly shot someone outside the building.
A few months earlier, in May, Serpa-Acosta was detained by ICE and admitted he was a member of a notorious Venezuelan gang and had tattoos to show his affiliation, sources previously told The Post. Told.
It is unclear why he was released from federal custody.
Serpa-Acosta then allegedly carried out the kidnapping and brutal torture of a migrant couple living in The Edge apartment complex earlier this month.
Police said a group of migrant gang members abducted the couple from their home and took them to another apartment in the complex – then tied them up, pistol-whipped and beat them.
Some gangbangers also returned to the couple’s apartment to commit burglaries.
The victims were released after lying to their captors and promising not to call the police. Police received a 911 call from the couple around 2:30 a.m. on December 17.
When police searched the apartment complex and began questioning residents, they found Serpa-Acosta in a wig.
Aurora Police Chief Todd Chamberlin said Acosta was indeed disguised, which he believes is probably a major reason he was not caught earlier. According to Daily Mail,
‘Whether he did it all the time or whether he did it just that day, I can’t decide,’ Chamberlin said.
Police are now looking at charges against 16 gangbangers who are believed to have carried out the kidnapping. According to Denver news station KDVR,
Serpa-Acosta is currently in ICE custody in Denver.
Acosta first entered the U.S. at the El Paso, Texas border, where he was deported to Mexico before re-entering the country at an undisclosed time, sources previously told The Post. Told.
(TagstoTranslate)US News(T)Colorado(T)Illegal Immigrants(T)Tren de Aragua