New photos show bags of drugs found under trap door at Bronx day care where tot died after fentanyl exposure
More drugs were found hidden under a trap door at the Bronx day-care center where a 1-year-old boy died last week after inhaling fentanyl, law-enforcement sources told The Post Thursday.
Investigators returned to the Morris Avenue apartment building in Kingsbridge about five days after little Nicholas Feliz Dominici was poisoned by the deadly synthetic opioid alongside three other toddlers at the day care – which was also a secret drug mill, authorities said.
Cops found a secret door in the kids’ play room Wednesday that led to a space with even more drugs, the sources said.
The stash – which the NYPD said included fentanyl, other narcotics and drug paraphernalia – was discovered in a four-inch-deep hiding spot below the apartment’s tile-on-wood flooring, according to photos shared by the department.
When cops pried up the wooden floor panel, they revealed a number of Target shopping bags, as well as Ziploc bags that held what looked like powder, according to the photos.
Sources said between eight to 10 kilos of powder were recovered, and that investigators were conducting tests on the substances.
It’s not clear why cops went back to the home.
NYPD released photos of a trap door hiding drugs inside the day care in the Bronx.
Authorities previously said they uncovered a kilo of fentanyl sitting on mats the children slept on, according to court papers. They also seized several “kilo presses,” which are usually used to combine the drug with cocaine or heroin.
“More drugs were found, more evidence is being recovered each and every day,” Bronx District Attorney Darcel Clark said at an unrelated press conference on Thursday, adding that the investigation was ongoing and that her office was working “side by side with the federal authorities that are chasing those drugs.”
“My office is dealing with the homicide aspect of it – because that was a murder of a young baby and attempted murder of three – as well as the drugs,” she said.
NYPD CSU remove evidence from the Divino Nino Day Care Center on Thursday.A Crime Scene Unit van is loaded with evidence bags outside the day care center.NYPD Crime Scene Unit returned to the day care at 2707 Morris Avenue in the Bronx, NY on Sept. 21, 2023 to expand their search.Law enforcement found more drugs hidden under a trap door at the Bronx day care center where a 1-year-old boy died last week after inhaling fentanyl.Grei Mendez De Ventura, the 36-year-old owner of Divino Niño Daycare, called several people before alerting authorities.De Ventura’s cousin-in-law Carlisto Acevedo Brito getting walked out of the 52nd Precinct in the Bronx on Sept. 17.
The basement entrance in back of the building was closed Thursday morning, with a crime scene unit van and a police cruiser parked nearby and police tape blocking the door.
Two people — Grei Mendez De Ventura, the 36-year-old proprietor of Divino Niño Daycare; and her cousin-in-law, Carlisto Acevedo Brito, 41 — have been charged with murder for Nicholas’ death.
A grand jury has indicted the pair, Clark said. Although the indictment is sealed at the moment, the DA said it will be unsealed sometime during the next two weeks.
Nicholas Feliz Dominici, the 1-year-old boy who died from possible fentanyl exposure at Divino Niño Daycare.A package of fentanyl was found in the daycare building during a raid this past week.A kilo press was taken from the center by police last week..
De Ventura’s husband – who cops have not publicly identified – is still on the lam.
“He needs to turn himself in, because we are going to find him,” Clark said.
Authorities are “working diligently” to track down the fugitive hubby – who is suspected of being the “main player” in the covert drug dealing operation, police sources have previously told The Post.
“He will be found,” Clark vowed.
The group allegedly used the business to cloak their true operation, a fentanyl drug mill.
The two people in custody also face federal drug charges for their alleged crimes, Manhattan federal prosecutors announced Tuesday.
Investigators returned to the Morris Avenue apartment building in Kingsbridge about five days after a 1-year-old was poisoned.
Fentanyl — a powerful opioid that’s at least 50 times stronger than heroin — also sickened an 8-month-old girl and two 2-year-old boys, cops have said.
They were all hospitalized.
On Monday, Mayor Eric Adams said they were saved with naloxone, the overdose-reversal drug commonly known by its brand name, Narcan.
Little Nicholas, however, could not be saved.
The inside of the Bronx day care center where the toddler died on Sept. 15.Police officers removed bags from the daycare on Sept. 18.
His death has devastated his family.
“It’s really hard … we are all heartbroken,” the boy’s dad, Otoniel Feliz, said earlier this week outside the family home in Kingsbridge.
Feliz, who is a golf course maintenance worker in Westchester County, said his son had only been going to the day care for about a week before his tragic death.
“The drugs … this is dangerous,” he said. “My boy died. But it can be yours.”
The tragic incident occurred at 2707 Morris Ave. in the Bronx. Police are seen on Sept. 15 outside the scene.Cops “discovered a kilogram of fentanyl in an area that was used to give the children naps,” NYPD Chief of Detectives Joe Kenny said Monday.
Clark said that she looks at the victims as if they were her own kids.
“I may not have given birth to them, I may not have been the parent to send them to this day-care center, but every single person in this country feels what those parents feel: That they entrusted that day-care center to take care of their children, and one of them ends up dead and three of them almost died,” she said. “It’s horrendous.”
In a Tuesday interview with The Post, the dad of one of the other victims said the drugged-up daycare center’s proprietors should be sent to prison.
Lino’s toddler survived, but Nicholas Feliz Dominici, a 1-year-old boy who also attended the day care, died after also being exposed to the extraordinarily lethal synthetic opioid on Friday.
“Those are bad people,” Jose Lino, 32, said as he cuddled his little boy, Jaziel, at their Bronx home.
Jaziel narrowly escaped death himself – his parents brought him to a Bronx hospital after they picked him up from the center and he couldn’t walk or wake up.
“They’re supposed to be taking care of little kids,” he said. “They’re not supposed to be doing that … in the same apartment.”
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