Jose Pena-Hernandez, 18, was believed to be a member of the MS-13 gang with links to El Salvador and Los Angeles, the Suffolk County assistant police commissioner, Justin Meyers, told The Associated Press today.
The teen's remains were found earlier this week in Brentwood, a hamlet of 60,000 about 40 miles east of Manhattan where law enforcement officials have intensified their battle against gang violence.
This past month, four teenagers from Brentwood High School were found dead.
Two miles away in a wooded area, police made more grisly discoveries a week later: the remains of 19-year-old Oscar Acosta and 15-year-old Miguel Garcia-Moran. Both had disappeared earlier this year.
"When the girls were murdered, the (Suffolk County) police commissioner made a commitment to the community to eradicate gang violence," Meyers said. "We made strategic lists of gang members, with the goal to both quell the violence and to extract information about past crimes."
Meyers said that of the 35 suspects arrested in the past three weeks, five were violent gang leaders. They're in custody facing federal charges under the RICO organized crime act.
"This is just the beginning; we're not going to stop 'til we decimate the criminal element in Brentwood," said Meyers. MS-13 is short for Mara Salvatrucha a Salvadoran-based street posse involved with extortion, prostitution and drug dealing.
The gang emerged in the 1980s in Los Angeles, where immigrants from El Salvador settled to escape civil war in their country.
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