Wednesday, September 27, 2023

EXTRADITE HIM AND SEND HIM TO PRISON FOR THE REST OF HIS LIFE

Bronx day care owner’s husband seen in mugshot after Mexico arrest — as sordid details about his past come to light 

 

Sep. 27, 2023
 
 
 Fugitive Felix Herrera.
Felix Herrera, 38, in his first mugshot since his arrest in Mexico on Tuesday. Herrera allegedly ran a drug-selling operation at his wife’s Bronx day care center. He was tracked down by US Marshals and Mexican authorities.
 

The husband of the Bronx day care owner charged in a tot’s fentanyl-poisoning death was seen for the first time since his bust in a Mexican mugshot Wednesday — as sources revealed new details about his past.

Felix Herrera, 38, is seen wearing a solemn expression and a black Puma T-shirt in the picture taken after he was nabbed by Mexican authorities Tuesday while trying to get away on a bus near Sinaloa, law enforcement sources told The Post.

Herrera had been on the lam since the death of 1-year-old Nicholas Feliz Dominici at the Divino Niño Daycare in Kingsbridge on Sept. 15.

Last year, Herrera was in the middle of another drug-related death when someone he allegedly identified as his own brother overdosed and died, according to law enforcement sources.

The sources said he placed a frantic 911 call to cops in the Bronx on Oct. 20, 2022, to report that he found his brother, later identified as 42-year-old Javier Maldonado, unconscious on the floor — with police finding a stash of pills in the bedroom. 

“You would think that someone who lost the relative to drugs would’ve been more careful,” said a law enforcement source. 

Herrera also has a prior arrest on his rap sheet for trespassing and violating an order of protection in Queens in 2013, police sources said.

Law enforcement sources said Herrera was spotted in Texas on Sunday and crossed the southern border into Rosalia on Monday, with federal agents and Mexican cops on his tail.

The manhunt ended Tuesday when he was taken into custody in Sinaloa by Mexican authorities, sources said.

He is expected to be turned over to US officials and extradited to New York.

 Fentanyl poisoning victim Nicholas Feliz Dominici, 1.One-year-old Nicholas Feliz Dominici died after being exposed to fentanyl at Divino Niño Daycare in the Bronx on Sept. 15.

 

Police said the child care facility, run by Herrera’s wife, 36-year-old Grei Mendez De Ventura, was a front for a drug-peddling business run by the couple and two cohorts.

Nicholas and three children at the day care were sickened at the center, allegedly from exposure to fentanyl stored under two trap doors and in closets on top of play mats.

Mendez and Carlisto Acevedo Brito, 41, Herrera’s cousin, were arrested the day after Nicholas’ death and charged with murder, assault and child endangerment. 

 Drug operation at Divino Nino DaycareThe Divino Niño Daycare in the Bronx was allegedly a front for a drug-selling operation, police said. On Sept. 15, 1-year-old Nicholas Feliz Dominici was exposed to fentanyl there and died. Four people are in custody in the case. 

 

This week, a third alleged accomplice, Renny Antonio Parra Parades, 38, was hit with federal drug charges for his role in the alleged drug operation — with Herrera still on the run.

Police described him as “the main player” in the alleged drug business.

He had last been seen on surveillance footage released by federal prosecutors, which captured him sneaking out the back door of the day care center lugging bags allegedly containing drugs — just minutes before cops showed up to tend to the sickened children.

 Drug trapdoor at Divino Nino Daycare.Police said drugs and drug supplies were stashed under two trap doors at Divino Niño Daycare in the Bronx. On Sept. 15, 1-year-old Nicholas Feliz Dominici died from fentanyl exposure and three other tots were sickened, police said. DCPIGrei Mendez arrested in the Bronx.Grei Mendez De Ventura, 36, ran the Divino Niño Daycare in the Bronx. She and three others — including her husband, Felix Herrera — are in custody after a tot died at the facility on Sept. 15 from exposure to fentanyl, police said. 

 

Authorities said Mendez called Herrera and a co-worker before dialing 911 after finding the kids. 

She also deleted more than 21,000 messages from her husband before turning her phone over to cops.

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

What an idiot. You can try to delete your old messages but the cops can still retrieve them from the cell provider. No good scum.