CBS News
Venezuelan gangs are trying to recruit children from migrant families. Here’s what the NYPD is doing to stop them.
NEW YORK — There is growing concern among the police over an increase in Venezuelan gang activity across New York City.
The NYPD believes some gang members are recruiting children living in migrant shelters, and that the members have blended in with the asylum seekers who began to arrive in the Big Apple in 2022.
“Once they commit their crimes they go back to the migrant community, where they assimilate themselves with people that are actually here obeying the laws,” NYPD Chief of Detectives Joseph Kenny said.
NYPD is cracking down on Tren de Aragua
Police say Tren de Aragua is the Venezuelan gang that is living in the shelter system and recruiting children.
“We have 39 members of TDA that have been identified and we have an additional four members that have been identified of a subgroup called Little Devils of 42nd Street. Those are much younger kids,” Kenny said.
And those are just the members police have been able to identify.
“We have no fingerprints on file for them. We have no photographs on file for them. We have no prior criminal history on them,” Kenny said. “They swap out their IDs. We have no way of tracking or knowing who they are when they enter the country.”
Kenny said undocumented criminals as young as 11 years old are carrying out retail robberies and committing crimes on scooters, like snatching people’s jewelry, watches and cellphones at gunpoint and knifepoint. There were more than 300 incidents last year and more than 800 so far this year.
Kenny said they have brazenly shot at police officers, too.
“When we do make arrests and we’re able to charge them on four, five, six incidents, when they go before a judge in New York City, and their arrest record is run, they show no prior criminal history,” Kenny said. “They’re released on their own recognizance. They’re not offered bail and they’re released back into the public.”
Migrant parents worried gangs will go after their kids
Some migrant mothers told CBS News New York they fear their boys will be forced into the world of crime.
“People have warned us to be careful with the child because they are recruiting younger children. It worries me a lot,” Airada Pereira said in Spanish.
Pereira and her 11-year-old son, Dillan Batista, live in a Manhattan migrant shelter. They arrived from Colombia last year. When she’s not volunteering at Metro-Baptist Church, she says she’s with her son, warning him of the dangers of gangs.
“We are afraid he will get recruited and they will force and manipulate him to do bad things. Things that will get him into trouble,” Pereira said.
“I don’t want to be like them”
Power Malu, co-founder of Resources Opportunities Connections and Community, is trying to keep migrant kids off the streets by creating youth programs, including a soccer club.
“I absolutely know that the soccer program is important for the kids to be able to get involved with something where they feel like they belong, and they are having fun as kids, being able to support each other, build community, and stay away from the streets, and be able to not have to get into the violence and get into the gang activity,” Malu said.
More than 60 kids ages 5-14 have been enrolled so far, including Batista.
“It’s fun because we get to eat pizza and I have so many friends and we play,” he said.
He said he wants no part of the gang life.
“I don’t want to be like them. I don’t want to be bad. I want to be good, helping the people,” Batista said.
Malu says more resources and spaces are needed to help the nearly 22,000 migrant kids in city shelters. They represent 38% of the migrant population currently in the system.
“The newest New Yorkers are coming here and they don’t have any programs for them, so then they are looking to do something. They are looking for something to do. So they are easy targets,” Malu said.
It’s not just children being targeted
The NYPD is working with its federal partners to curb the growth of the gang violence sprouting at some migrant shelters from spilling onto city streets, and in some cases, detectives say, even among migrant families who are also becoming targets.
“What we are also seeing is the majority of the migrant community, sometimes themselves, are the victims of crimes. They are preyed upon by these gangs, and there’s a reluctance to report it sometimes because they feel that that might get them deported or that might get them in trouble with the police,” Kenny said.
Police say they’re also seeing Venezuelan gang members recruit other migrants who are here from other countries. They say it’s important to know that only a small portion of the migrant community is committing the majority of the crimes.
CBS News
Israeli strikes kill dozens in Lebanon as Israel accuses Hezbollah of firing a barrage of some 250 rockets
Tel Aviv — Israel said a barrage of hundreds of rockets was fired at the north of the country Sunday by Iran-backed Hezbollah militants in neighboring Lebanon. The assault came after days of devastating strikes by the Israel Defense Forces, which said it was targeting Hezbollah sites around the Lebanese capital Beirut.
Israeli officials said there were some injuries caused by the Hezbollah rocket fire, but many of the weapons were intercepted by Israel’s advanced missile defense systems.
The IDF’s intense assault on Hezbollah saw it send missiles slamming into buildings in longtime Hezbollah strongholds around Beirut over the weekend, killing dozens of people, according to Lebanese health officials.
Hezbollah started launching rockets at Israel in support of its Gaza-based Hamas allies the day after they sparked the ongoing war in the Palestinian territory with their Oct. 7, 2023 terrorist attack.
Israel’s exchange of fire with Iran’s most powerful so-called proxy group has been escalating in recent days despite yet another U.S. diplomatic push for a cease-fire.
American and Israeli officials said over the weekend, even as the death toll mounted in Lebanon, that a truce agreement between Hezbollah and Israel could be imminent.
Israeli Ambassador to the U.S. Mike Herzog told Israel’s Army Radio on Monday that a cease-fire deal could be reached “within days.”
The deal in the works “is supposed to distance Hezbollah, to allow the residents of the north [of Israel] to return to their homes,” he said, referring to the Israeli government’s long-stated objective of enabling tens of thousands of residents to come back to homes abandoned close to the Lebanese border amid the Hezbollah rocket fire.
He said that if a deal was reached, Israel would maintain the right to respond to “disturbances” going forward. He said some, unspecified points still needed to be finalized in the negotiations, but added: “We are close to a deal,” and “it can happen within days.”
In lieu of any agreement thus far, tension remained high across Lebanon on Monday, where the health ministry said Israeli’s offensive against Hezbollah had killed more than 3,750 people as of Sunday, left some 15,630 more wounded and displaced about 1.4 million people from their homes. Many of the casualties have been women and children, according to the ministry.
All school and university classes in Beirut were cancelled by the nation’s education ministry until January, citing safety concerns in the wake of Israel’s devastating strikes over the past week.
That includes one of the deadliest strikes on central Beirut to date. Carried out over the weekend, the IDF attack killed more than 80 people, according to the Lebanese health ministry.
The IDF said it was targeting Hezbollah weapons and fighters embedded within the civilian population and infrastructure around Beirut.
Beirut resident Abeer Darwich disputed that, claiming Israel had “attacked peaceful people in their homes.”
Tucker Reals and
contributed to this report.
CBS News
More than 30 stranded whales rescued in New Zealand by people lifting them on sheets
More than 30 pilot whales that stranded themselves on a beach in New Zealand were safely returned to the ocean after conservation workers and residents helped to refloat them by lifting them on sheets. Four of the pilot whales died, New Zealand’s conservation agency said.
New Zealand is a whale stranding hotspot and pilot whales are especially prolific stranders.
A team was monitoring Ruakākā Beach near the city of Whangārei in New Zealand’s north on Monday to ensure there were no signs of the whales saved Sunday stranding again, the Department of Conservation told The Associated Press. The agency praised as “incredible” the efforts made by hundreds of people to help save the foundering pod.
“It’s amazing to witness the genuine care and compassion people have shown toward these magnificent animals,” Joel Lauterbach, a Department of Conservation spokesperson, said in a statement. “This response demonstrates the deep connection we all share with our marine environment.”
The agency released images of the rescue effort on social media.
A Māori cultural ceremony for the three adult whales and one calf that died in the stranding took place on Monday. New Zealand’s Indigenous people consider whales a taonga – a sacred treasure – of cultural significance.
New Zealand has recorded more than 5,000 whale strandings since 1840. The largest pilot whale stranding was of an estimated 1,000 whales at the Chatham Islands in 1918, according to the Department of Conservation.
It’s often not clear why strandings happen but the island nation’s geography is believed to be a factor. Both the North and South Islands feature stretches of protruding coastline with shallow, sloping beaches that can confuse species such as pilot whales – which rely on echolocation to navigate.
Mass strandings of pilot whales have happened elsewhere in recent months.
In July, 77 long-finned pilot whales were found washed ashore off the northeast coast of Scotland, 65 of them already dead. The 12 whales that initially survived the mass stranding had to be euthanized.
In April, a mass stranding of long-finned pilot whales in southwestern Australia led to the deaths of 29 of the beached creatures, but about 100 of the whales were rescued and redirected out to sea.
Last year, nearly 100 pilot whales became stranded on a beach in Western Australia, but after a rescue attempt, they all died.
Pilot whales are a large species of dolphin, with individuals usually measuring between 19 and 25 feet in length and weighing between 2,900 and 5,000 pounds, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. A pilot whale’s typical lifespan is anywhere from 35 to 60 years, although their survival is threatened by several factors including chemical contaminants, disease, entanglement in fishing gear and ocean noise. They tend to travel in dense pods, and much of what is known about the species and their behaviors has come out of other mass strandings.
contributed to this report.
CBS News
Monastery in Thailand under investigation after authorities find 41 bodies allegedly used for meditation
A Buddhist monastery in Thailand is under investigation after authorities discovered more than 40 bodies on site which were allegedly used for meditation practices, police said Sunday.
Forty-one cadavers were found at Pa Nakhon Chaibovorn monastery in Thailand’s Phichit province on Saturday, a senior police officer told AFP.
“The bodies were accompanied with death and body donation certificates,” he said, adding that so far no charges have been filed.
He said police were reaching out to relatives of the deceased to confirm that the bodies were donated willingly.
“We are trying to make sure that none of the dead bodies were stolen,” said the officer who requested anonymity.
The search came days after police discovered 12 bodies at another monastery in neighboring Kamphaeng Phet province on Wednesday, according to Thai local media.
The head of the Phichit province monastery, Phra Ajarn Saifon Phandito, told Thai PBS television channel that the use of corpses was part of a “meditation technique” he developed.
“Many of the people who come to learn are abbots and all these monks… pass on the knowledge,” he said. “I don’t know how many have adopted my technique.”
He also told another local TV station that “practitioners meditate in pavilions that hold coffins with the human remains.”
Kom Pattarakulprasert, director of the Phichit Office of Buddhism, told the Bangkok Post that the inclusion of bodies in meditation was unusual.
“I asked Phra Ajarn Saifon Phandito if there were any cadavers and was told that there were none,” Kom told the outlet. “But when journalists discovered the 41 bodies, I was taken aback by the conflicting stories. I will discuss whether this practice is appropriate with the local head of the clergy.”
Phichit police said they are working with authorities in other provinces to investigate how widespread this practice is.