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Laken Riley’s suspected killer linked to bloodthirsty Venezuelan gang behind terror in NYC: court docs

The brother of the illegal migrant charged with brutally murdering Georgia nursing student Laken Riley has ties to a dangerous Venezuelan gang responsible for a terrifying wave of violence in the Big Apple, according to new court documents.

Diego Ibarra, 29, was arrested for carrying a fake green card that he used to get a job at the University of Georgia — the same campus where his 22-year-old brother, Jose, is accused of murdering Riley while she was out for a run.

Prosecutors say Diego appears to be affiliated with the Tren de Aragua gang, known as TdA, based on his tattoos, attire and use of gang signs in social media pictures.

Diego Ibarra, 29. the brother of Laken Riley’s alleged killer, is accused of being affiliated with the violent Tren de Aragua gang. Clarke County Sheriffs Office

The gang was described in court docs as being responsible for “recent violent confrontations with law enforcement and civilian victims in New York and elsewhere throughout the United States.”

That allegedly includes a string of violent phone robberies in New York City, where moped-driving members are accused of being those seen dragging victims to the ground to snatch their devices.

Ibarra has tattoos linked to the gang, including a “five-point crown on the left side of his neck and a five-pointed stars on the right side of his neck,” according to documents filed Wednesday at the US Middle District of Georgia.

Social media posts show Ibarra posing with handguns, in violation of US law regarding undocumented migrants.

He also regularly wore Chicago Bulls attire, a common practice by the gang, and was pictured flashing the TdA gang sign, in which he extends his pinky, index finger and thumb while folding his ring and middle fingers back, federal prosecutors said.

Other pictures show him posing with handguns, prosecutors said, a clear violation of the law as he is an undocumented immigrant and is therefore not legally allowed to possess firearms in the US.

It remains unclear if Ibarra’s brother, Jose Antonio Ibarra, is accused of being affiliated with the same gang.

Ibarra’s tattoo shows a five-pointed crown with stars. U.S. District Court
Other tattoos with three five-pointed stars, a sign of Tren de Aragua. U.S. District Court
Ibarra was arrested when he presented a fake green card to police. U.S. District Court

The 26-year-old murder suspect is also an undocumented immigrant from Venezuela, having illegally crossed the southern border into El Paso, Texas, in September 2022, earlier reports said.

He has been charged in the murder of Riley, 22, whose heartbroken parents turned down an invite to attend President Biden’s State of the Union address Thursday.

His brother, Diego, is not linked to Riley’s death. His assumed ties to TdA were cited by prosecutors while seeking to keep him in custody “due to the risk that he will flee the jurisdiction of the Court and the danger that he poses to the safety of persons and the community.”

Jose Ibarra, 26, is being charged with Riley’s brutal killing. AP

Tren de Aragua was formed in the mid- to late 2000s in the Tocoron prison in Aragua, Venezuela, where it gets its name, according to the court documents.

Along with the gang’s activity in New York, officials have cited TdA’s heavy presence in Texas, Illinois, Florida and Georgia.

Before his arrest last month, Diego Ibarra had previously been taken into custody by the US Border Patrol in El Paso, Texas, on April 30, 2023, where he was processed for immediate removal.

However, he was released to New York City pending asylum after he claimed reasonable fear of returning to his home country, according to court documents.

Riley, 22, was murdered while running on a trail on the University of Georgia campus. Facebook / Allyson Phillips

In late September 2023, he was nabbed by the Athens-Clarke County Police Department for driving under the influence and driving without a license.

He was subsequently arrested in the popular college area two more times: once in October for shoplifting, and once in December for failing to appear for a fingerprintable offense, according to court documents.