Woman Charged In South Florida Teen's Machete Death Seeking Plea Deal
MIAMI (CBSMiami/AP) — In an effort to avoid a life sentence, a woman accused of participating in the machete killing of a South Florida teen almost seven years ago is ready to take a plea deal, according to her attorney.
Desiray Strickland was 19 when she and four others were arrested following the June 2015 death of 17-year-old Jose Amaya Guardado. Police said he was hacked to death and buried in a shallow grave in Homestead.
"I did not kill that boy, I promise!" Strickland screamed at a Miami-Dade detective in a police interrogation video.
This week, Strickland's attorney told Circuit Judge Cristina Miranda that she plans to plead guilty to conspiracy to murder, which could send her to prison for 15 years, according to CBS4 news partner The Miami Herald.
The next hearing in the case is scheduled for late June. Strickland remains in jail.
Strickland and four others were indicted by a grand jury on first-degree murder charges. Prosecutors said they killed Guardado, who was a fellow student at the Homestead Job Corps, a federally run residential school for at-risk youth.
Prosecutors said Strickland's boyfriend, Kaheem Arbelo, swung the blows that killed Guardado, and in 2017 the state attorney's office decided to seek the death penalty for him but not the other four defendants.
Police said Strickland and Arbelo had sex in the woods after the boy's body was buried. And witnesses told detectives that Strickland "complained that she had missed the first series of machete strikes because she had walked away for a few minutes to urinate in the woods," according to an arrest report.
Authorities believe the teen was killed over a debt owed to Arbelo, who was a suspected drug dealer.
Fellow students Jonathan Lucas, Christian Colon, and Joseph Michael Cabrera were also charged in Jose's death, records show.
Arbelo, Lucas and Colon confessed when they were detained in August 2015, police said.
Lucas and Cabrera pleaded guilty to a charge of conspiracy to commit murder in 2020. Lucas was sentenced to five years in prison and 15 years' probation. Cabrera received less punishment, according to the Herald.
Arbelo and Colon, who have both been detained since August 2015, are still awaiting trial.
(© Copyright 2022 CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved. The Associated Press contributed to this report.)