Las Vegas dad of seven killed by carjacker who gunned down his own mom and fired at cops

A Las Vegas father of seven was killed on his way to work when he was carjacked by a heavily armed man who was being chased by cops for gunning down his own mother.

Gerardo “Jerry” Lopez-Martinez, 39, had just left home at about 3:45 a.m. Wednesday when he was stopped by gunman Justin Davidson, 36, who’d already killed his mom and swiped a squad car after firing at responding cops, according to authorities.

“The guy just walked up shot my husband and threw him out of the vehicle,” Lopez-Martinez’s wife of 13 years, Karen Lopez, told KVVU.

The killer then “ran him over and took our vehicle,” she said.

Four officers saw Davidson shoot the dad and push him out of the vehicle, running him over as he fled despite being hit multiple times, police said.

The gunman — who’d also carjacked another vehicle in the terrifying spree — was later found dead in Lopez-Martinez’s stolen vehicle, police said.

Gerardo “Jerry” Lopez-Martinez, a father of seven from Las Vegas, was killed by the ambush-ready gunman. Courtesy Karen Lopez

He was wearing camouflage clothing and a tactical vest and investigators found a notebook “with a diagram of a potential ambush situation indicating he was prepared for an armed confrontation with law enforcement,” police said.

“At two residences associated with Davidson, investigators found tactical equipment, prepper supplies, numerous military manuals, and documents regarding police responses to mass casualty incidents.”

Lopez said her husband was excited to get to work as a driver for a medical linen supply company as he had recently been promoted. He likely pulled over because he saw police pursuing the killer.

She collapsed when told what had happened to the man who “always made me feel loved.”

Gerardo “Jerry” Lopez-Martinez, his wife, Karen, and their seven children. GoFundMe

“My stepdad had to catch me because I just collapsed in the middle of the road kind of passed out because I couldn’t handle it, it didn’t seem real,” she said.

The loss is also too much for their seven adopted kids, especially their eldest, an 11-year-old son.

“Last night he kept texting my husband’s phone and he said, ‘I know daddy isn’t going to answer but I hope daddy can still read the messages and know I love him,’” the widow told KVVU.

 “We were supposed to grow old together and raise them together.”

The deadly rampage began after Davidson fired a rifle behind his parents’ home, police said.

Justin Davidson AP

“As his parents approached the wash area, Davidson began shooting toward them, killing his mother,” cops said. “His father retreated to his vehicle and Davidson shot at the fleeing truck.”

When police arrived, the gunman began firing at them from a hidden location, shot out the windows of a patrol car and took off in it, according to investigators.

Davidson soon bailed from the police car and carjacked a truck full of people at gunpoint without harming them, police said.

Karen Lopez said her husband had just left for work as a driver for a medical linen supply company when he was killed. KVVU-TV

He drove the truck to a gas station and tried to carjack a motorist who was pumping gas, fleeing when cops caught up and opened fire.

He then cornered Lopez-Martinez and shot him dead with a long rifle, police said.

Gerardo “Jerry” Lopez-Martinez and his wife, Karen, in an undated photo. AP
The couple adopted six of their seven children. Courtesy Karen Lopez

Among the weapons used by Davidson was an assault rifle with an erased serial number stolen from a Las Vegas gun show, authorities said.

Clark County Assistant Sheriff Yasenia Yatomi provided photos of evidence collected by investigators that suggests he could have been planning for a large-scale attack.

Two of the assault rifles police have recovered from the gunman. AP

The evidence included a notebook with a hand-drawn diagram “of a potential ambush situation,” a stockpile of items that could be used to build firearm silencers and explosive devices, and documents outlining how police respond “to mass casualty incidents.”

“We do not know if the suspect was attempting to build an improvised explosive device,” Yatomi told reporters. “With the materials we found in his homes, we do not know why the suspect started shooting.”

Clark County Assistant Sheriff Yasenia Yatomi. AP

Davidson, who was wearing camouflage clothing and a tactical vest during the rampage, had a lengthy criminal history dating to 2009, including arrests on drug and weapons charges, she said.

Yatomi said investigators searched the desert area where Davidson started firing off shots.

They found loaded magazines of various calibers in multiple locations, but authorities don’t yet know if the ammo was left behind when the police chase began or if he had been hiding them there for some time.

Police have more locations to search as part of the probe, but for now, Yatomi said: “We’ve painted a picture and I’ve showed you evidence of a story that should be very disturbing.”

A GoFundMe page for the family has raised more than $388,000 as of Tuesday morning.

With Post Wires
 

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Parents of college student from NJ killed by stray bullet speak out

The grieving family of the New Jersey teen killed by a stray bullet on her Nashville college campus have paid tribute to her “beautiful soul” — with her mom saying that part of her own heart was taken with the loss.

Jillian Ludwig, 18, a freshman at Belmont University, died overnight Thursday, two days after she was first found struck in the back of the head by a round allegedly fired by a career criminal.

“There’s a piece of my heart that was taken from me,” Ludwig’s mom, Jessica, told WKRN-TV.

The slain teen’s dad, Matt, said: “It’s kind of hard to comprehend. She was thriving so well and doing so well in so many ways, in every way.

“For it to all change so suddenly — it’s, it’s hard to, it’s hard to process. It’s impossible to process,” he added.

The family had raced to Vanderbilt University Medical Center when their daughter was at first fighting for her life, before succumbing to her injuries, WSMV reported.

Jillian Ludwig, center, with her parents, Matt and Jessica.
Family Handout

Her aunt Geri Wainwright sent the outlet a text shortly before the family received the horrible news that she had died.

“Jillian has such a beautiful soul,” her aunt Geri Wainwright texted the outlet shortly before news of her niece’s death was announced.

“Her smile lights up any room and she is loved by everyone lucky enough to know her,” she wrote.

Jillian Ludwig was an accomplished musician who regularly gigged in her native New Jersey.
Facebook / Jillian Ludwig

“Jillian is fierce. She lives every day with passion. Her fearlessness, spontaneity, love of laughter, kindness and compassion make her irreplaceable to our family. Losing her would forever change the fabric of our lives,” Wainwright wrote at the time.

“We sent our girl into the world to do amazing things. Given the opportunity, she would have. So we have to ask, why was this man free?” she continued.

“What kind of world do we live in where it’s not safe to take a walk near your college dorm in broad daylight? How could someone so carelessly dim the light of a star destined to shine so bright?” the aunt added.

Ludwig was struck by a stray bullet as she walked near her Nashville campus.
Metro Nashville Police Department

Ludwig, a graduate of Wall High School in New Jersey, was an “accomplished student, musician, and vocalist,” she said.

“She chose to study Music Business at Belmont University. She loved the short time she’s spent at Belmont. She loves her life, her friends, parents and her younger brothers, Shane & Trevor,” Wainwright added.

On Thursday, the Wall Township Committee sent a letter to the community, remembering Ludwig and offering mental health resources, according to WKRN.

“We are incredibly saddened to hear about the tragic and untimely passing of Jillian Ludwig. Jillian was an exceptional young leader within our community,” it wrote.

“She graced us with her beautiful voice to sing the National Anthem at many township community events. Jillian was a member of the Young Women’s Leadership Committee of Wall Township and was the recipient of the 2023 Women’s Leadership Committee Scholarship Award,” the local committee said.

Ludwig performed at venues around her New Jersey community, playing bass and guitar along with singing during the Asbury Park Porch Fest and Red Bank in New Jersey, The Tennessean reported.

Her first show was more than two years ago, when she performed at The Saint in Asbury Park with her band Arcadia.  

Accused shooter Shaquille Taylor.
Metro Nashville Police Department

Ludwig was shot about 2:30 p.m. Tuesday while walking at Edgehill Community Memorial Gardens Park in Nashville.

Shaquille Taylor, 29, allegedly opened fire on a car from a public housing complex across the street — striking her as she walked on a track, police said.

Surveillance video and witnesses led cops to the suspected gunman, who admitted to firing shots, police said. He has been charged over previous shootings — but was released from custody earlier this year after being deemed incompetent to stand trial.

The suspect was accused of giving the gun to another person after Tuesday’s shooting, The Tennessean reported, citing court records. His girlfriend also told investigators that he admitted to her that he was involved in a shooting, according to police records cited by the paper.

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Letters to the Editor — April 16, 2023

Free to kill

Regarding “Two slays in 2 days,” (April 12), New York’s obscene no-bail “reforms” and the irresponsible judges who “enforce” them are directly responsible for two more murders in the city.

Messiah Nantwi was arrested in February 2021 for allegedly shooting at police and initially held without bail.

Over the prosecution’s objections, his bail was reduced to $300,000, which his family met by posting a $30,000 bond.

Last weekend, video shows that Nantwi allegedly shot and killed a man in a Harlem smoke shop after reportedly killing another on a Manhattan street.

No matter what Assemblyman Carl Heastie and Sen. Andrea Stewart-Cousins say, this is blood on their hands.

Marc E. Kasowitz

Manhattan

Shelter squabble

Thank you for once again reporting about the failed policies of the de Blasio administration that have been carried forward by Mayor Eric Adams (“Storm from the shelters,” April 9).

No residential New York City neighborhood should be inundated by homeless.

While “safe havens” can work on a smaller scale, it is an inappropriate model for New York City.

With the uptick in crime committed by homeless mentally ill, it’s not a good idea to place folks in a stimulating environment in what is a cultural and economic engine in the city.

This is not a NIMBY issue. It’s common sense.

There are hundreds, if not thousands, of acres in the state where former state schools and hospitals were once situated.

Create a mini-community on these unused acres with social and health services available.

One can use renovated buildings, tiny houses, trailers or modular units for that purpose.

Please start thinking differently, or we will continue on this long, downward and dangerous road.

Laura Logue Rood

Manhattan

Stepmom horror

The evil stepmom who placed two children in a freezing garage was sentenced to 25 to life (“Rot, evil stepmom,” April 12).

One of the boys, an autistic 8-year-old, died.

How any human being could do that is just beyond understanding.

The judge remarked at the sentencing that it’s too bad there was no garage at the prison.

My prayers for the two boys.

Walter Murray

Clearwater, Fla.

Anti-pill push

Why does the fight against the anti-abortion crowd appear so difficult (“AOC to Joe: Just ignore abort-pill ruling,” April 9)?

Their argument as to when life begins — whether it’s after 15 weeks, 12 weeks or at conception — is based on faith rather than scientific fact.

Their claim that they are concerned with the right to life of the unborn raises the question: Where is their concern for the health and well-being of the already born?

The argument over the “abortion pill” proves that point.

The “pill” has been shown to be safe and effective for decades.

They are, in effect, attempting to impose their religious beliefs on other Americans.

Addressing each and every anti-abortion argument when raised is a waste of time and energy.

Irving Gelb

North Bergen, NJ

Stern’s turn

Howard Stern is a washed-up, leftist big-mouth (“Stern spanks Kid,” April 12).

It seems like during COVID, he transitioned from kind of an edgy guy to a typical, full-blown leftist and paranoid millionaire hypocrite.

He is insulated by his obscene wealth and is clueless about the decline of this country.

Raymond Fontana

Westbrook, Conn.

Want to weigh in on today’s stories? Send your thoughts (along with your full name and city of residence) to letters@nypost.com. Letters are subject to editing for clarity, length, accuracy and style.

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Intact families help keep our kids safe from predators

As parents, we are vigilant about our children’s proximity to danger as we presume the worst must always come from outside our homes.

We believe predators can only reach as far as our doorsteps because we would never knowingly let a wolf into our henhouse.

But the deterioration of the nuclear family and marriage in America has created a major vulnerability for our children.

The wolves of the world exploit our familial disconnection by providing an illusion of a loving relationship to gain access beyond our doorsteps.

One of these wolves, 28-year-old Tyresse Minter, allegedly devoured the life of his stepson, 15-year-old Corde Scott, after a suspected argument in their Westchester Square apartment in The Bronx.

Minter, who was released from prison on parole just a month before Scott’s death, allegedly put his stepson in a chokehold, cutting off his oxygen supply, and proceeded to wrap his legs around Scott while holding his neck until he lost consciousness.

Despite the heinous nature of the child’s strangulation, Judge Naita Semaj released Minter immediately after his arraignment Wednesday, though he was on parole for a felony-assault conviction.

After The Post put Scott on its Thursday cover, Gov. Kathy Hochul stepped in.


Tyresse Minter, 28, allegedly strangled his stepson, Corde Scott, 15, to death after a suspected argument.
Tyrese Minter./Facebook

“My top priority is public safety. Earlier today, the Department of Corrections and Community Supervision issued a warrant for Tyresse Minter, and he is now in custody,” Hochul said Thursday.

“DOCCS is initiating the parole revocation process due to his indictment for criminal negligent homicide and manslaughter.”

We’ve neglected to understand how our children’s proximity to danger coincides with the solidity of our family structure — it’s the most important risk factor for child abuse.

The American perspective of family has been tainted by the selfishness of whatever benefits the adults at a given moment rather than what can benefit our children for a lifetime.


Gov. Kathy Hochul issued a statement that “the Department of Corrections and Community Supervision issued a warrant for Tyresse Minter, and he is now in custody.”
Pacific Press/LightRocket via Getty Images

We tell each other our children are resilient and adaptable to rationalize choosing familial dysfunction through divorce to chase potential romance instead of chasing our children’s needs.

Though we are adults, we often act like whimsical children, pursuing our sexual desires and never questioning if the quality of our sexual partners is on par with the quality of parental figures our children need.

Our children are the ones who suffer from our choices the most, as their primary advocates for safety and prosperity have unintentionally become the ones who relocate that danger directly into their homes.


After The Post’s Thursday cover, New York’s governor stepped up.
New York Post

The statistics are clear: Children are 40 times as likely to be sexually or physically abused if their parent finds a new partner than if they live with their biological parents.

And even more tragic, they are nearly 50 times more likely to die of inflicted injuries living in a home with unrelated adults than children who live with their biological parents.

Children living without either parent (foster children) are 10 times more likely to be sexually abused than children living with both biological parents.

Kids who live with a single parent who has a live-in partner are at the highest risk: They’re 20 times more likely to be sexual-abuse victims than children living with both biological parents.

The American nuclear family is rapidly decaying, and opportunistic vultures have long been circling our children patiently waiting to feast on their innocence.

The list of children who have been murdered by their parent’s partners is disturbingly long.

Eight-year old Sophia Mason of Merced, Calif., was allegedly murdered by her mother’s boyfriend; police found her lifeless body battered from long-term abuse and malnourishment in a bathtub.

Houston 5-year-old Samuel Olson was allegedly murdered by his father’s girlfriend; his body was found in a black tote with a lid secured by zip ties.

We had a hand in the downfall as nearly a quarter of America’s children are growing up in single-parent homes — the most in the world.

But if we have the power to destroy, we have the power to rebuild.

The reconstruction of our homes will only help to save a child like Corde Scott from becoming another tragic victim and statistic.

If we’re going to make America great again, it has to start from within our own homes.

Adam B. Coleman is the author of “Black Victim to Black Victor” and founder of Wrong Speak Publishing. Follow him on Substack: adambcoleman.substack.com.

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Stepfather indicted for choking teen stepson to death released by Bronx judge

A stepfather charged with strangling his 15-year-old stepson to death was freed by a Bronx judge on Wednesday — despite a request by prosecutors that he be remanded.

Tyresse Minter, 28, was indicted for criminal negligent homicide and manslaughter last week for allegedly fatally choking his teen stepson Corde Scott on Jan. 23, the Bronx District Attorney’s Office announced.

Minter was arraigned on Wednesday in Bronx Criminal Court before notoriously lenient Judge Naiti Semaj, who ordered he be released, even though the DA’s office asked he remain locked up ahead of his trial, prosecutors said.

According to investigators, Minter — who was on parole after being released from prison a month earlier — got into an argument with Scott in the Parkchester home.


Minter has been charged with homicide in the death of his 15-year-old stepson, Corde Scott.

Minter allegedly put his stepson in a chokehold, cutting off his oxygen supply, prosecutors said. He then allegedly wrapped his legs around Scott and held him until he lost consciousness.

Scott died at the scene. It remains unclear what the two were arguing over.

The stepfather did not call 911 for about 20 minutes after he lost consciousness, prosecutors said.


Scott was choked to death by Minter during an altercation in their Bronx home on Jan. 23.

Minter was on parole for an assault that landed him in prison for three years, state Department of Corrections records show. He was released this past December.

He is scheduled to return to court on June 20.


Bronx Judge Naita Semaj-Williams ordered Minter be released after his arraignment on Wednesday.
YouTube/BronxNet

Semaj, a Democrat who was elected in 2021 after earlier serving in Bronx Civil Court, has a history of cutting loose allegedly violent offenders.

In one case last May, she sparked outrage after she ruled in favor of 16-year-old rapper Camrin Williams, known as “C Blu,” who was accused of shooting and wounding an NYPD officer during a scuffle while he was on probation for a prior gun case.

Semaj ruled the cop had no reason to search the teen during a Jan. 18 incident and Williams’ case was dropped.

Minter’s release comes as Gov. Kathy Hochul is reportedly negotiating with state lawmakers to pass a budget that eliminates a rule requiring judges impose the “least restrictive means” that will ensure defendants return to court.

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Stephen Smith’s body exhumed in Murdaugh-linked homicide investigation

The body of Stephen Smith, a South Carolina teen whose unsolved 2015 murder has gained new traction thanks to the Alex Murdaugh case, was exhumed over the weekend, the family’s lawyer confirmed.

Smith’s body was removed from his grave, re-examined in a second autopsy and returned to his final resting place, attorney Eric Bland tweeted Sunday.

The 19-year-old was found dead, with head trauma, on the side of a road in Hampton County on July 8, 2015 in what investigators at the time ruled a hit-and-run.


Sandy Smith holds a photo of her late son, 19-year-old Stephen Smith in Hampton, S.C.
AP

Last month — nearly eight years later — the South Carolina Law Enforcement Division (SLED) reclassified his death as a homicide after investigators found “new evidence” about the teenager’s final moments in the course of their probe into the 2021 murders of Paul and Maggie Murdaugh.

“I now believe that Stephen can really rest at ease because SLED and our team are going to do everything possible to find out just how he died,” Bland said in his tweet.


Stephen Smith’s body was exhumed after his death was ruled a homicide.
Sandy Smith/GoFundMe

He also announced that the late teen’s mother Sandy Smith is offering a $35,000 reward for information leading to the arrest of the person or persons responsible for her son’s death.

The money was raised as part of a GoFundMe for the distraught mother.

Much of the more than $100,000 raised was used to fund the exhumation and private autopsy of Smith’s body.


More than $100,000 raised was used to fund the exhumation and private autopsy of Smith’s body.
Sandy Smith/GoFundMe

Smith’s mysterious death gained renewed attention after the closely watched trial of patriarch Alex Murdaugh for the shooting deaths of his son and wife on the family’s property.

Smith’s body was found laying in the street not far from the 1,700-acre estate and the teen was a high school classmate of Alex Murdaugh’s surviving son Buster.

Sandy Smith linked Buster — who was rumored to have had a romantic relationship with Smith, who was gay — to her son’s murder in a letter she sent to federal investigators in 2016.

She also said local law enforcement botched the investigation.

Buster has denied the “vicious rumors” that he was involved in Smith’s death.

Investigators are reportedly eyeing two other men, who were also teens in 2015, as potential suspects.

“Stephen for many, many years I can only imagine was not so much at peace in his grave,” Bland said in a video posted on Twitter. “He probably was pounding on his coffin to anybody who could hear ‘I was not hit by a car but I was intentionally killed.’ And now we’ve told him we hear his voice.”

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Inside NYC ‘roofie’ murders, including death of Gaga designer

Two separate gangs were apparently preying on both straight and gay club-goers in Manhattan, from the Lower East Side to Hell’s Kitchen, for months — drugging and then robbing them via their phones — before it became clear it was a pattern, some of the victims’ parents told The Post.

Cops are investigating at least 43 incidents that took place all over the city between September 2021 and December 2022. Ten men with lengthy rap sheets have been identified as part of one gang and five in the other one, police sources told The Post. A number of them are reportedly from the Farragut Houses in Brooklyn.

Up-and-coming fashion designer Kathryn “Katie” Gallagher was among the victims of one of the two gangs, police said. The 35-year-old, who dressed Lady Gaga and other celebrities, was found dead of an overdose in her Eldridge Street apartment last year. On March 24, cops publicly declared her death a homicide.

Six members of one gang who preyed on gay men at Hell’s Kitchen nightclubs were indicted last week for the so-called “roofie” murders of John Umberger, 33, and Julio Ramirez, 25, last year.

Late Friday, police said they were seeking three members of one crew, Jayquan Hamilton, 35, Robert DeMaio, 34, both of Brooklyn, and Jacob Barroso, 30, of Harlem, in connection with the deaths of Umberger and Ramirez.


Cops say that fashion designer Kathryn “Katie” Gallagher, 35, who dressed Lady Gaga and others, was murdered with a drug cocktail last year by an organized gang.
REUTERS

But well before the indictments, the father of a man who survived being drugged and robbed after being at a gay club went to the police with evidence, including electronic receipts, from his son’s phone.

“It seemed really clear by what I could see that this was more of an organized criminal enterprise than a one-off crime,” the father, who wanted to remain anonymous to ensure his son’s privacy, told The Post. “But they sat on it. We knew it was something bigger so it was frustrating when nothing was done.”

Linda Clary, Umberger’s mother, said more people came forward when they heard about other victims, but that it took a while for anyone to realize that there were organized criminal rings at work.


Police say John Umberger, 33, a Washington, DC, political consultant, was the victim of a homicide that’s just one in a pattern of citywide “drug-facilitated thefts.”

In most cases, the victims left bars with their assailants and were robbed after passing out from being drugged, or “roofied.” Even as they were unconscious, the suspects used facial recognition technology to unlock victims’ phones and then drained their bank accounts.

The only suspect arrested so far is Andre Butts, 28, who was caught using Ramirez’s credit card to buy two pairs of Nikes for $544.38 not long after Ramirez was found dead in a taxi in April 2022. Butts’ attorney, Terrence J. Grifferty, did not return calls from The Post.

“I think the police department and the mayor’s office knew that something like this was going on and they didn’t want to talk about it because New York was just coming out of the pandemic and people were going out again and they didn’t want to scare them off,” Clary said.


Julio Ramirez, a 25-year-old Brooklyn social worker, was found dead in the back of a taxi on the Lower East Side after leaving the Ritz Bar and Lounge in Hell’s Kitchen with three unidentified men.

“The city has provided the perfect environment for this kind of crime to become rampant with so many [criminals] allowed back on the street no matter how long their rap sheets.”

Both parents said police seemed to initially downplay the incidents, as if they were accidental overdoses or, in the case of one young man who survived being drugged and robbed, that he had maybe “fallen asleep” and then been robbed.

“Who falls asleep in your apartment with two strangers there?” the father said.


Jayquan Hamilton, 35, of Brooklyn, is wanted by the NYPD in connection with the drug-facilitated murders of John Umberger and Julio Ramirez.
Robert Dimaio, 34, of Brooklyn, is wanted by the NYPD in connection with the drug-facilitated murders of John Umberger and Julio Ramirez.

Jacob Barroso, 30, of Harlem is being sought by police in connection with the drug-facilitated murders of John Umberger and Julio Ramirez.

Warrants were issued March 24 for the arrest of three of the men in the crew operating in the Hell’s Kitchen area for first-degree murder, while all six men have been hit with charges of grand larceny and first-degree robbery as well as conspiracy to drug and rob at least a dozen victims.

Umberger, 33, and Ramirez, 25, died from “acute intoxication” from a mix of fentanyl, cocaine, ethanol and other drugs, the city Medical Examiner found on March 3.

Both men were victims of homicides caused by “drug-facilitated thefts,” after leaving the Q NYC and Ritz Bar and Lounge gay nightclubs, the ME found.


The Ritz Bar and Lounge, a gay bar on West 46th Street where Brooklyn social worker Julio Ramirez was socializing before he left with strangers and wound up dead.
Getty Images

The city medical examiner determined that Gallagher died from acute intoxication from the combined effects of fentanyl, ethanol and the designer opioid p-Fluorofentanyl.

Umberger, a Washington, DC, political consultant, disappeared on Saturday, May 28, 2022, after a night out at The Q NYC, a gay nightclub at 795 Eighth Ave., while visiting New York for work. 

His credit card was used around 3 a.m. at the club and he was last seen an hour later on a surveillance camera, with three unidentified men in a car outside the Upper East Side townhouse where he was staying. 

His body was found there four days later, on June 1.


Linda Clary, mother of victim John Umberger (pictured here) credits NYPD Det. Randy Rose with helping crack the case involving the two gangs.

Umberger’s cellphone and credit cards were missing. More than $25,000 had been transferred out of his accounts through cash apps on his phone such as Venmo and PayPal. 

Five weeks earlier, on Thursday, April 21, and in similar circumstances, Ramirez, a Brooklyn social worker, was found dead in the back of a taxi on the Lower East Side at about 4 am. 

An hour earlier he had been captured by a security camera with three unidentified men leaving the Ritz Bar and Lounge, a gay club on West 46th Street, two blocks from Q NYC.

Like Umberger, Ramirez’s phone and wallet were missing, and his bank accounts had been emptied of about $20,000 via apps such as Venmo and Zelle; later, his credit cards were maxed out on expensive dinners and spa services. 


Drag performer Jaé, pictured outside the Ritz Bar and Lounge in Hell’s Kitchen, says she still feels safe in her “home bar” but never lets her drink out of her sight.
Dana Kennedy for NY Post

According to sources familiar with the investigation, one gang operated mainly in Lower Manhattan while the other focused both on Lower Manhattan and Midtown. They used similar methods to befriend and then drug and rob their victims, but authorities reportedly but don’t believe the two crews are related.

One gang chose certain locations “because there are a lot of good-looking girls there.”

The two gangs are believed to have been involved in at least 43 separate incidents.

A drag performer named Jaé, who performs regularly at the Ritz on 46th Street where Ramirez evidently met the men who drugged him, told The Post Thursday night that everyone there knows what happened to Ramires and is aware of the danger in clubs — but she still feels safe.


Fentanyl is among the deadly ingredients used in some of the drugging robberies.
Shutterstock

Clutching a Long Island iced tea in one hand while she stood by the bar and spoke over a Cube Guys remix of “I Wanna Dance with Somebody,” Jaé said the Ritz is her “home bar” and her “therapy.”

“I’ve always been careful whenever I’m out and about even before all this,” she said. “I hold my drinks when I’m out because you can’t just trust who’s around you. You’re around strangers and you don’t know what their intentions are. Just be safe … But don’t stop going out and having fun.”


The Q nightclub on 8th Avenue in Hell’s Kitchen where John Umberger went and later left with three unidentified men who allegedly fatally drugged him and robbed him.

A Youtuber named Sky Santana who was standing near the now-shuttered Q club Thursday night said she believed that only gay people were being targeted and said she didn’t believe reports that straight clubgoers are also being victimized.

“They are going after the LGBTQ community, they are going after us,” she said.

Police sources said, however, that sexual orientation is not believed to be part of the gangs’ MO — just money.


Cops say the two crews believed to be preying on NYC club goers use facial recognition technology to unlock victims’ phones, then drain their bank accounts and max out their credit cards.
Shutterstock

A bouncer at another gay club in Hell’s Kitchen on Ninth Avenue, who asked to remain anonymous, said he and other club employees keep their eyes on customers at all times and don’t let them go into the bathroom together or leave drinks unattended.

“We watching,” he said.

Added the father of the young man who survived being drugged and robbed: “Everyone out there should re-consider whether unlocking your phone with your face is a good idea.”

Additional reporting by Joe Marino



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Tiktoker faces backlash for selfie near Canadian dad slain at Starbucks

A TikToker who recorded a Canadian dad being fatally stabbed in front of his daughter and fiancée at a Starbucks is facing backlash after he allegedly took a selfie next to the victim’s body and smiled while filming the horrifying scene.

Alex Bodger shot a sickening video of Paul Stanley Schmidt being attacked outside the Vancouver coffee shop on Sunday after asking his alleged assailant to not to vape in front of his 3-year-old daughter, the Toronto Sun reported.

Bodger — who goes by Gora Pakora on TikTok — appeared to smirk when he shot the unfolding incident, according to the news outlet.

“This motherf— just died, bro. He just died, bro, holy f—!” he exclaimed, drawing the wrath of people who slammed him for capitalizing on a ghastly crime.


Canadian TikToker Alex Bodger recorded himself smiling after shooting horrifying video of Paul Stanley Schmidt being fatally stabbed outside a Vancouver Starbucks.
Twitter / @chaosismygoal

Bodger reportedly returned to the crime scene to smoke a cigarette the following day.
Twitter / @chaosismygoal

“This is the TikTok generation. I fear for our disgusting future,” one Twitter user wrote.

Another wrote, “I was so disgusted by his actions and words that I honestly was speechless… No emotion period.”

But Bodger told Global News that he was traumatized by the event.

“It’s not something you think you would see walking down the street in Vancouver on a Sunday,” Bodger told the outlet. “Every time I think about the situation I get this feeling in my chest which is pure fear.”

But according to one Twitter user, Bodger also took a selfie next to the victim’s body and even returned the following day to smoke at the crime scene.

The man later posted a video in which he tried to explain his actions — saying he tends to smile during “uncomfortable situations.”


Paul Stanley Schmidt was fatally stabbed in front of his daughter, Erica, and his fiancee, Ashley Umali, after he told the attacker to not vape in front of his child.
Courtesy of Family

“So I’m walking down the road, I thought I see a street fight … so I start running over there. I start videotaping and I see some blood an d so I just thought maybe there was a bloody nose or something,” he says in the video.

“My brain wasn’t allowing me to believe what was happening. And I knew he was dead, but at the same time, this my first time ever experiencing this right so like, my brain is just like ‘he’s dead’ so I start screaming,” Bodger says.

“The murderer is standing right there, all that’s going through my head is like, ‘Holy f—, I’m standing right here screaming he’s dead … what if he come at me and f— kills me.’ But I’m in so much shock just standing there,” he continues.

Bodger then goes on to explain his “controversial” smile.


The brutal attack was caught in a horrifying video captured by the bystander.

The suspect, 32-year-old Inderdeep Singh Gosa (pictured), has been charged with murder.

“I was so uncomfortable. I didn’t know what just happened. That’s how I always am in uncomfortable situations,” he says. “I put a little bit of a smile on my face. I’m sorry for the people that it pissed off.”

The TikToker then bizarrely goes on to say: “Yeah, this s— (the stabbing), it doesn’t faze me too much. I’ll just say human life, to me, the way I look at it, if I don’t know you, is meaningless … he’s dead. What can we do now?”

The suspect, 32-year-old Inderdeep Singh Gosa, was arrested inside the Starbucks and was charged with second-degree murder.

Schmidt’s mother, Kathy Schmidt, said she was told the suspect attacked her son after he asked him not to vape in front of 3-year-old Erica.

The 37-year-old dad’s fiancée, Ashley Umali, was getting drinks at the time of the bloody attack but witnessed her partner’s last breaths.

“This is so horribly wrong what happened. He was just trying to protect his daughter. I’m angry and I’m sad,” Schmidt said. “It all started because he was vaping beside the baby. Ashley’s in shock — she watched the whole thing. She’s so devastated.”

The family and police have urged people not to share the shocking footage of the savage attack.



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Mourners remember Shaeed Woodard, one of 2 Americans gunned down by cartel in Mexico

LAKE CITY, S.C. — Photos of a peewee football player flashed across a slideshow. The image of a smiling young man adorned memorial T-shirts. But the body of the American gunned down three weeks ago by the Gulf cartel in Mexico was kept shielded from funeral-goers.

Over 100 people gathered Saturday to remember Shaeed Woodard at the first funeral service for the two people killed in the attack in the border town of Matamoros. The sendoff came at the end of a month that should have featured birthday celebrations for the man slain just days before he turned 34 during a tightknit group’s road trip to help Woodard’s cousin get cosmetic surgery.

Instead, friends and family shuffled across the maroon carpeting of Good News Deliverance Temple on an overcast afternoon in Lake City, South Carolina. The 6,000-person town was thrust into the international spotlight in early March when Woodard and three friends with ties to the area were attacked over 1,400 miles away.

On March 2, just a few miles across the border, a vehicle crashed into the group’s van as they made their way to a medical appointment for Latavia McGee. Several men with tactical vests and assault rifles surrounded them and shots rang out.

Woodard and Zindell Brown died; McGee and Eric Williams survived.


Pallbearers carry Woodard’s casket.
AP

The cartel’s Scorpions faction apologized in a letter obtained by The Associated Press through a Tamaulipas state law enforcement official.

At the funeral, spiritual leaders rejected vengeful thinking.

“We are asking you to give us a clean heart. Because no cartel, no demon, no evil spirit, no hellmaker, no one… We won’t seek retribution,” Minister Dearest Price said. “But, Lord, we ask you to deliver us from evil.”

There, Nisheeka Simmons read a letter poem for her cousin whose “untimely departure” brought everyone together “in solidarity.” She recalled his sweet nature, strength of mind, and the safety others felt around him.

A handout featured another poem suggesting Woodard “wanted to celebrate this birthday far different from before” with music, laughter and jokes “out on the open road.”

“If any of you knew the outcome, you would have cautioned me to stay,” the poem continued. “But those plans were of my Master and could not be delayed.”

The day contained mixed emotions.


Hands clapped and voices rang out during powerful medleys of songs.
AP

Pastor Hugh Samuels shared words of consolation for the family shocked by the sudden loss of Woodard and heartened by the return of his cousin, McGee, who survived the brutal kidnappings. A reading from the Old Testament Book of Ecclesiastes reminded attendees that there is “a time to weep and a time to laugh” and “a time to mourn and a time to dance.”

Hands clapped and voices rang out during powerful medleys of songs.

Samuels thanked God for bringing people together in Woodard’s death, which he said should remind people of the future’s uncertainty.

“Brother Shaeed and three others went to Mexico. But the Son of Man called Brother Shaeed down,” Samuels said. “We are not promised to walk out of this place today. You don’t know when God is going to call your name.”


Shaeed Woodard was among two who died in the attack.
Facebook / Shaeed Woodard

State Cemetery marked the final resting place for Woodard, whose body had been handed over to U.S. authorities on March 9 after crossing the international bridge to Brownsville, Texas.

Since then, the Woodards have received an outpouring of support, said Colin Ram, an attorney for the family. Local officials’ sympathy cards were read at the funeral. A nearby activist network promised to raise money. Ram pledged to guide them through the injustice’s fallout.

“Make no mistake, what happened in Mexico was an act of terrorism that affected the lives of four Americans, of four South Carolinians,” Ram told The Associated Press.

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Footage shows Irvo Otieno pinned down in leadup to death

Sheriff officials and mental hospital workers in Virginia forcefully pinned down patient Irvo Otieno until he stopped moving and his body went limp, according to footage of the deadly encounter released Tuesday.

The video, released by prosecutors who charged seven sheriff deputies and three hospital staffers with murder in Otieno’s death, shows the 28-year-old struggling under the body weight of multiple officials inside Central State Hospital on March 6.

At one point it appeared at least ten people were pushing down on Otieno while he was restrained and on the floor, according to the footage that has no audio.

Around 4 p.m., he arrived at the hospital before a different camera showed him being led into a room with tables and chairs around 4:20 p.m., according to timestamps on the video.

He’s brought to a seat before slumping to the floor.


Virginia sheriff deputies can be seen wrestling with Irvo Otieno at the mental hospital.
via REUTERS

At first, he’s seated but then lies flat.

And then it appears he starts to move around, leading to a growing number of workers pressing him down, the footage shows.

By close to 4:40 p.m., someone took his pulse as he laid unresponsive and moments later he was injected twice. Shortly after that, CPR began on his seemingly lifeless body as other life-saving efforts continued without much hope for about an hour.


Footage showed Irvo Otieno, the 28-year-old Black man, arrive at the hospital around 4 p.m.
Ben Crump Law/AFP via Getty Images

By 5:48 p.m., a white sheet covered his body.

Dinwiddie Commonwealth’s Attorney Ann Cabell Baskervill asserted in court Tuesday workers held him down “from his braids down to his toes.”

“He certainly did not deserve to be smothered to death, which is what happened,” Baskervill said.


Irvo Otieno was given CPR to his seemingly lifeless body before a white sheet covered his body.
via REUTERS

Baskervill has said multiple times he died from asphyxiation, though a final autopsy report has not been issued.

Defense attorneys have claimed the injections helped lead to his death, but Baskervill argued he was dead by the time the shots were administered.

Seven deputies and three hospital workers have been charged with second-degree murder.

A grand jury signed off on the charges Tuesday.


Medical staff aid Irvo Otieno, as the 28-year-old is positioned on his back in one of the hospital rooms.
via REUTERS

Lawyers representing many of the defendants have said they plan to strongly fight against the charges.

Some attorneys tried to minimize their clients’ roles in the incident either in court or speaking to the Associated Press Tuesday.

Baskervill’s filing that included the release of the footage also disclosed audio from 911 calls tied to the case.


Caroline Ouko (center left), mother of Irvo Otieno, speaks of her son with attorney Mark Krudys (left), her older son, Leon Ochieng (center right), and attorney Ben Crump (right) at First Baptist Church of South Richmond on March 21, 2023.
AP

One caller from the hospital said Otieno had been “very aggressive,” but stopped breathing during attempts to restrain him.

Other calls complain about the slow response from EMS to help Otieno.

“Those 10 monsters, those 10 criminals, I was happy to hear that they were indicted,” Otieno’s mother, Caroline Ouko, said during a Tuesday news conference. “And that is just the beginning step.”

A probe into the events before Otieno’s death – both at Henrico County hospital where he was taken and the jail where his family said he was allegedly mistreated – is ongoing, prosecutors with Henrico County said. 

With Post wires

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