A New York Mets coach and an immigrant are arrested after a raped a 13-year-old in broad daylight in New York Park.
An illegal immigrant Ecuadorian is in NYPD custody after a broad daylight sex attack in which police said a machete-wielding man approached two 13-year-olds, one a boy and one a girl, tied them together by the wrists and raped the girl at a popular park in Queens, according to sources.
An NYPD spokesperson confirmed a person of interest was in custody but declined to provide additional details. Authorities were expected to hold a news briefing at 12:30 p.m. ET with more information.
Law enforcement sources tell Fox News that police arrested a 25-year-old man Monday evening in connection with the crime. He entered the country illegally in 2021 near Eagle Pass, Texas.
He was carrying an Ecuadorian passport under the name Christian Geovanny Ingo Landi when captured, sources said.
The attack happened Thursday at Kissena Park, about 3 miles from where the New York Mets play at Citi Field and near the site of the 1964 World’s Fair and the U.S. Open. The victim also went to school in the neighborhood.
READ ON THE FOX NEWS APP
It’s even closer to the childhood neighborhood of former President Donald Trump.
“I grew up right near there,” he told Fox News Digital. “Something like this was unthinkable years ago — unthinkable.”
Trump recalled being able to walk down the street as a child.
You could go down and go to the candy store, walk back — your parents never even had a thought of anything happening,” Trump told Fox News Digital. “This is a different world. My parents never would have even had a thought that something could happen.”
But an unchecked influx of illegal immigration across the southern border is getting out of control, he said.
These are Biden migrants,” Trump told Fox News Digital. “They are flooding our country. They are flooding our cities and states.”
He added, “I’d like to pay my highest respects and love to the parents and family members — this tragedy should never have happened.”
Police had been offering a $10,000 reward in the case after obtaining surveillance video showing the suspect on a bicycle.
Police found him after neighbors recognized him from the wanted poster, held him down and called 911, sources said.
“It was good police work,” said Joseph Giacalone, a retired NYPD sergeant and a professor at John Jay College of Criminal Justice. “They got the drawings out of the suspect and his tattoo, and then were able to secure the surveillance photo and … some help from the public – but that’s how it’s supposed to work.