BOSTON – A Brockton woman was sentenced today in federal
court in Boston for the armed kidnapping of a Quincy man and two children.
Yesenia Diaz, 24, was sentenced by U.S. District Court Chief
Judge Patti B. Saris to four years in prison and two years of supervised
release. In December 2017, Diaz pleaded guilty to kidnapping.
In January 2018, co-defendant Malik Bangura, 20, was
sentenced to 17 years in prison and two years of supervised release. On Aug.
23, 2018, co-defendant Sedrick Oliveira, 26, of Stoughton, was sentenced to 21
years in prison and five years of supervised release. On Aug. 16, 2018, Diego
Pires was sentenced to 217 months in prison and five years of supervised
release.
On Oct. 8, 2016, at approximately 10:25 p.m., a 30-year-old
man was kidnapped from the driveway of his Quincy home after being struck in
the head with a revolver as he got out of his truck, and dragged into a nearby
sedan. The victim had two children strapped into car seats in his truck, as
well as approximately 30 pounds of marijuana, at the time he was assaulted.
Once the victim was in the sedan, two masked perpetrators,
later identified as Pires and Bangura, drove the victim’s truck, with the
children still inside, to a secluded location where they unloaded the marijuana
and $20,000 from the victim’s truck, into the sedan. The victim, who was
face-down in the backseat of the sedan at gunpoint, begged for his life and the
life of the two children who were still in their car seats in the back of his
truck.
Pires, Bangura, Diaz, and Oliveira then drove the sedan with
the drugs, cash and the victim, from Quincy to Brockton and called the victim’s
wife demanding $100,000. Law enforcement officers spotted the sedan as it drove
through Brockton, recognized the vehicle from a drive-by shooting that occurred
in August 2016, and began to follow it. After the defendants recognized the
police, they attempted to flee, but ultimately abandoned the sedan in a
Brockton driveway. The victim escaped, flagged down law enforcement officers,
and described to them the secluded location where the truck had been deserted.
Law enforcement located the truck with the children inside, who were
unharmed. Diaz was subsequently found
standing by the sedan and arrested.
United States Attorney Andrew E. Lelling; Harold H. Shaw,
Special Agent in Charge of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, Boston Field
Division; Mickey D. Leadingham, Special Agent in Charge of the Bureau of
Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms & Explosives, Boston Field Division; Colonel
Kerry A. Gilpin, Superintendent of the Massachusetts State Police; Brockton
Police Chief John Crowley; and Quincy Police Chief Paul Keenan, made the
announcement today. Assistant U.S. Attorney Emily O. Cannon of Lelling’s
Organized Crime and Gang Unit is prosecuting the case.
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