FOOTAGE SHOWS MIGRANT WHO 'SUFFOCATED WOMAN ON HER 21ST BIRTHDAY'

A doorbell camera caught the moment an Ecuadorian man accused of killing a 21-year-old girl carried out her limp body from a residence in Syracuse.

Jhon Moises Chacaguasay-Ilbis, also 21,  can be seen walking into the Airbnb at 916 Hawley Avenue around 4:20 pm on June 18 in the footage, with a still-alive Joselyn Toaquiza. 

Three hours later, the clip cuts to him carrying Toaquiza on his back, with her arms and legs limp. It's unclear from the footage whether she's still alive, ashe would end up buried in a shallow grave a few feet away in Lincoln Park, right across the street.

Toaquiza, who had been celebrating her birthday the day of the murder, studied with Chacaguasay-Ilbis in his native Ecuador. Cops say he traveled to Syracuse last week to meet her, after arriving in the US a year before.

He surrendered himself to feds at the border, and as of writing, it remains unknown where he had been staying. It is also unknown whether or not he was in the process of seeking asylum, as cops this week revealed he had been arrested.

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The newly released footage appears to show her and her alleged accoster - who cops say suffocated her to death - hours before she was murdered.

She is then seen draped over the man's shoulders as he carries her  body out of the house and into the driveway. 

Syracuse police did not find her body until Saturday morning, after which a coworker of Toaquiza's  told CNY Central Thursday, 'I was just overcome,' 

 'He's caught, and it will all come to light,' Jennifer Engel said through tears, as cops were finally were able to locate her lost daughter and cuff her suspected killer.

Asked about the loss, she emotionally added of Toaquiza: 'She's not coming back', after cops revealed the link between the two 21-year-olds..

Cops picked up Chacaguasay-Ilbis Wednesday in Spring Valley, another New York city some 230 miles from the suspected scene of the crime.

Afterwards, he was transported back to Central New York. He is slated to be arraigned Thursday morning, as cops shared the clip to the public.

Officers at the time added the owner of the Airbnb being rented out to the suspect told officers that there was blood found inside the home, though no other details were provided.

After bringing  Toaquiza out to the driveway, the camera loses sight of him, but he later returns and exits with a set of new clothes, the video shows.

He goes onto hop into a waiting Lyft minivan, which cops say brought him to a local Greyhound station.

He went on to board a bus with a ticket to New York City, after which he turned himself in to the police Tuesday evening in Spring Valley.

The city, located in Rockland County, is set about 35 miles northwest of New York City, near the New York-New Jersey border.

Cops in their statement added how much like the past year, Chacaguasay-Ilbis's whereabouts for the past week are for now unknown. 

What is known is that  Chacaguasay-Ilbis travelled to the United States last year and surrendered himself at the border, after which, like so many others in recent years,  he was released into the county.

Cops said he may have been in the process of applying for asylum, but that too remains unknown.

After he was picked up Wednesday morning by Syracuse cops, he was transported back to Central New York, where he was arraigned Thursday morning. 

Police went on to reveal how  Toaquiza too came from Chile, and imigrated from the county last year along with her uncle.

The pair lived together on Syracuse's North Side, not far from the suspected scene of the murder. 

The  surveillance video, they said, came from the owner of the property being used as an Airbnb, who shared it with the woman's family and police.

As of writing, Chacaguasay-Ilbis is being held at the Onondaga County Justice Center without bail, and will face court again on July 2.

Insiders reportedly employed by Homeland Security told The New York Post that Chacaguasay-Ilbis crossed into the US at El Paso, and was cut loose because there wasn’t enough space to hold him.

Last week, three people drowned in the waters of the Rio Grande late Tuesday in far west El Paso, brining the number of migrant deaths in federal run racilitites in the city since October to 102.

In 2023, the El Paso and Del Rio sectors of the border saw more crossings than any other place across the 2,000-mile stretch of land, as 

That year, some 4.2 million pedestrians crossed into El Paso from Juárez through the Stanton-Lerdo and Paso Del Norte bridges Downtown, National Bureau of Transportation Services data shows. 

The Downtown bridges have since seen increases in northbound crossings, though they remain below pre-pandemic numbers. 

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2024-06-30T03:10:36Z dg43tfdfdgfd