CENTRAL ISLIP, N.Y. — A man who helped lead an MS-13 clique in New York pleaded guilty Tuesday in a federal racketeering case involving seven murders, including the 2016 killings of two high school girls that focused the nation's attention on the violent Central American street gang.
Jairo Saenz, 28, entered the plea in federal court in Central Islip in a hearing attended by members of his family and some of the victims' families.
''I did these things and I knew they were wrong,'' he said in Spanish through a translator after his lawyer read his accounting of the killings in suburban Long Island, just east of New York City.
Saenz, who is originally from El Salvador, faces 40 to 60 years in prison as part of the plea deal approved by the judge.
Prosecutors said he was the second-in-command in a gang clique known as Sailors Locos Salvatruchas Westside that quietly terrorized the hamlets of Brentwood and Central Islip for months before a particularly brutal crime on Sept. 13, 2016, made headlines.
Nisa Mickens, 15, and Kayla Cuevas, 16, lifelong friends and classmates at Brentwood High School, were walking through a quiet neighborhood near their homes when they were killed with a machete and a baseball bat by a group of young men and teenage boys who had stalked them in a car.
More killings followed in the coming months. President Donald Trump blamed the violence and gang growth on lax immigration policies as he made several visits to Long Island, invited Cuevas' mother to his State of the Union address in 2018, and later called for the death penalty for Saenz and others arrested in the killings.
Saenz's brother, Alexi Saenz, the clique's leader, previously pleaded guilty to similar charges and will be sentenced later this month.