NYC judge puts baby-faced Tren de Aragua ‘asylum seeker’ in his place as 3 gun runners charged in month-long caper

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Three Venezuelan migrants — including a baby-faced Tren de Aragua leader — brazenly peddled illegal pistols, shotguns, riles and ghost guns across New York City, prosecutors alleged.

The accused ringleader Stefano Pachon, 21, and his two confederates shuffled into a Manhattan courtroom Wednesday to face gun trafficking conspiracy charges outlined in a 31-count indictment.

Pachon, who racked up a long rap sheet since he arrived in the Big Apple from Venezuela in late 2023, sold nine different loaded guns during the months-long caper, prosecutors said.

“The defendant has access to a seemingly endless supply of loaded guns,” said Assistant District Attorney Yuval Simchi-Levi. “This defendant sold the guns while out on a bench warrant.”

Stefano Pachon allegedly is a high-ranking Tren de Aragua member. Steven Hirsch

The indictment sprang from a probe into Victor Parra, 30, the leader of an interstate migrant moped gang who spent three months as a fugitive before he was busted by NYPD cops in May.

Parra this week pleaded guilty to grand larceny charges, court records show.

Evidence in the case against Parra eventually led to the gun-trafficking ring allegedly led by Pachon, an alleged high-ranking member of the vicious Tren de Aragua gang, prosecutors said.

Together with Darwin Figuera, 34, and Yorman Serrano, 31, and a fourth as-yet-unnamed defendant, Pachon trafficked an arsenal of high-quality firearms over WhatsApp, according to prosecutors.

The guns allegedly sold included a 9-millimeter pistol with a magazine feeder. Manhattan District Attorney
The gun trafficking ring sold Manhattan District Attorney

One semi-automatic weapon sold was equipped with a “sear switch” that could turn it into an automatic weapon, prosecutors said.

They sold 11 guns, authorities said.

Pachon would negotiate the purchase and price for most weapons, with sales unfolding across the Bronx and an East Harlem gas station at East 125th Street and Second Avenue, officials said.

The trio that appeared in court Wednesday hail from Venezuela and all pleaded not guilty.

Pachon’s attorney Michael Fineman tried playing up how he’s an “asylum seeker” and that he falls under certain protections, but Judge Althea Drysdale quickly cut him off and corrected his bail application.

“Most respectfully, I don’t know if that should be part of your application,” Drysdale shot back. “Just because all [the accused] hail from Venezuela doesn’t mean you get to be an asylum seeker.”

The judge ordered Pachon to be held without bail for his “arrest-rich rap sheet,” which includes allegedly stealing from a Queens Sephora.

Yorman Serrano, 31, hails from Venezuela. Steven Hirsch
Darwin Figuera wore a pair of women’s Cheeta-printed slides in court. Steven Hirsch

Figuera, who shuffled into court wearing a pair of women’s Cheetah-printed Adidas slides, was held on $50,000 cash bail.

Serrano, who alleged tried to sell his own ghost gun, had his bail set at $75,000.

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