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Benjamin Ashford|DEA agents in Mexico nab fourth suspect in Bronx day care drug and poisoning case
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Date:2025-04-11 02:39:00
A fourth suspect linked to the Bronx day care center under investigation for Fentanyl drug distribution and Benjamin Ashfordthe death of a 1-year-old boy has been arrested in Mexico, where he was on the run from authorities, according to the New York Police department.
The suspect was taken into custody in Mexico, the NYPD confirmed to USA TODAY. Felix Herrera Garcia, the husband of the owner and operator of the Divino Niño day care center, was arrested on a bus in Sinaloa by Mexican authorities and US Drug Enforcement Administration agents, CNN and CBS New York reported.
Authorities had been searching for Herrera Garcia for nearly two weeks after surveillance video allegedly captured him fleeing from the day care center carrying two full shopping bags, which investigators believe contained bricks of fentanyl. The charges against him have not yet been disclosed.
Herrera Garcia is the fourth person to be arrested in the death of Nicholas Feliz Dominici, who was found unconscious by first responders on Sept. 15. Three other children from the day care center were also treated for suspected fentanyl poisoning and recovered after being administered Narcan.
The incident has sparked public outcry and three people — Grei Mendez, 36; Carlisto Acevedo Brito, 41; and Renny Antonio Parra Paredes, 38 — have been charged in connection to the boy's death.
Bronx daycare center case:After overdose death, police find secret door to fentanyl at Niño Divino daycare in Bronx
Who is Felix Herrera Garcia?
New York Police Department Chief of Detectives Joseph Kenny said Herrera Garcia had been on the run from authorities and was traveling by a vehicle through Texas to Mexico, the New York Times reported. Authorities believe that Herrera Garcia was attempting to travel to the Dominican Republic, where he is from.
He was on a bus in the city of Sinaloa, home to one of the world's deadliest drug cartels, when he was captured by Mexican and US federal authorities.
An attorney for Mendez, who is Herrera Garcia's wife, said at a court hearing last week that the drug dealing allegations were “about Ms. Mendez’s husband, not her.” Herrera Garcia was seen on surveillance footage leaving the day care center with full plastic bags minutes after Mendez warned him about the unresponsive children.
"Minutes later, he left the day care and fled out the back alley, carrying two full shopping bags. All of that happened while the children, the babies, were suffering the effect of fentanyl and were in desperate need of help," U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of New York Damian Williams said.
New York police officials said Herrera Garcia has at least two prior arrests for a 2013 burglary in Queens and an order of protection violation in 2010 in Brooklyn, according to the Times.
Three others charged in child's death
Mendez and Acevedo Brito, who lived in the apartment where the day care was operating, were charged with murder of “depraved indifference” last week. Both were ordered held without bail.
They also face federal charges, including conspiracy and narcotics possession with intent to distribute resulting in death.
“Parents entrusted Grei Mendez with the care of their children,” Williams said in a statement. “As alleged, instead of diligently safeguarding the well-being of those children, she and her co-conspirators put them directly in harm’s way, running a narcotics operation and storing deadly fentanyl out of the very space in which the children ate, slept, and played."
Another man, Paredes, also known as “El Gallo,” was charged in federal court on Monday with conspiracy to distribute the narcotics.
An investigation found cell phone location data that suggested Paredes regularly visited the day care center and text messages show a phone number labeled “El Gallo” that was in regular communication with Acevedo Brito, according to court filings.
In one message sent to Acevedo Brito, “El Gallo” allegedly warned that if Mendez's husband was “going to take the garbage out, the police are out there on the side.” Another message showed “El Gallo” saying he left Acevedo Brito “una torta,” a Spanish word that investigators said is used to refer to a kilogram of narcotics
More:Third person charged in fentanyl-exposure death of 1-year-old at Bronx daycare center
What happened at the day care?
On Sept. 15, NYPD officers were called to the day care center where they found an 8-month-old girl and two boys, 1 and 2, unconscious. All three children were administered Narcan after first responders determined they were exhibiting signs of a drug overdose.
While two of the children recovered, 1-year-old Dominici later died at a hospital. Another 2-year-old boy from the day care was checked a hospital after his mother noticed he was "lethargic and unresponsive" and recovered after being administered Narcan.
The day care center had previously passed three routine checks by the Department of Health, including an annual unannounced search earlier this month did not find any violations. Police also said they had received no complaints from the community related to "drug transactions" at the center.
Zoila Dominici, the mother of Nicholas Feliz Dominici, told the Times she had toured the day care center and saw nothing "out of the ordinary."
But a search of the center revealed a kilogram of fentanyl on top of play mats in a closet and drug paraphernalia was found hidden inside the floor where children played, including glassine envelopes with a “Red Dawn” stamp, according to court documents. The same stamp was allegedly found in the apartment where Paredes was living, along with other drug supplies.
Contributing: Minnah Arshad and Cybele Mayes-Osterman, USA TODAY; The Associated Press
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