Christian "Coco" Lugo, 38, a South Bronx auto body shop owner, has been sentenced to 19 years in prison for his role in a deadly drive-by shooting that left rival business owner Gloria Ortiz dead. The brazen murder was the culmination of a long-standing feud between Lugo's operation and Ortiz's shop over who should control the lucrative towing industry.
According to prosecutors, Lugo had built a lucrative scheme by dispatching unlicensed tow truck drivers to crashes, where they would then haul wrecked vehicles to his Mott Haven body shop. There, workers would inflate damage to defraud insurance companies, earning tens of thousands of dollars per vehicle. However, when Ortiz's shop gained traction and began competing with Lugo for customers, he became increasingly aggressive in protecting his territory.
The dispute boiled over on February 7, 2022, when a crash occurred. Lugo allegedly allowed and encouraged the shooting, telling the gunman to "take care of it" or face consequences. The ensuing drive-by left Ortiz dead and two others wounded. Lugo fled to Florida while employees of Ortiz's shop took over his business.
At sentencing in Manhattan federal court, Ortiz's son Jacob Brito tearfully testified about the devastating loss of his mother, who had taken over her late husband's body shop after he was killed in a separate dispute related to the towing industry. Brito said that his mother's death led him to enlist in the military and that she had been working tirelessly to legitimize her business by replacing unlicensed tow trucks with licensed ones.
Prosecutors argued that Lugo's actions had propagated a culture of violence in the industry, leading to the fatal shooting. Assistant U.S. Attorney Michael Herman stated that while employees from Ortiz's shop returned fire at Lugo's employees, he bore responsibility for the murder.
Judge Dale Ho described the shooting as "the most terrible act" he has seen on his bench. In a rare display of remorse, Lugo pleaded guilty to racketeering conspiracy and firearm possession, stating that Ortiz was like a mother figure to one of his children and that her death had broken him.
According to prosecutors, Lugo had built a lucrative scheme by dispatching unlicensed tow truck drivers to crashes, where they would then haul wrecked vehicles to his Mott Haven body shop. There, workers would inflate damage to defraud insurance companies, earning tens of thousands of dollars per vehicle. However, when Ortiz's shop gained traction and began competing with Lugo for customers, he became increasingly aggressive in protecting his territory.
The dispute boiled over on February 7, 2022, when a crash occurred. Lugo allegedly allowed and encouraged the shooting, telling the gunman to "take care of it" or face consequences. The ensuing drive-by left Ortiz dead and two others wounded. Lugo fled to Florida while employees of Ortiz's shop took over his business.
At sentencing in Manhattan federal court, Ortiz's son Jacob Brito tearfully testified about the devastating loss of his mother, who had taken over her late husband's body shop after he was killed in a separate dispute related to the towing industry. Brito said that his mother's death led him to enlist in the military and that she had been working tirelessly to legitimize her business by replacing unlicensed tow trucks with licensed ones.
Prosecutors argued that Lugo's actions had propagated a culture of violence in the industry, leading to the fatal shooting. Assistant U.S. Attorney Michael Herman stated that while employees from Ortiz's shop returned fire at Lugo's employees, he bore responsibility for the murder.
Judge Dale Ho described the shooting as "the most terrible act" he has seen on his bench. In a rare display of remorse, Lugo pleaded guilty to racketeering conspiracy and firearm possession, stating that Ortiz was like a mother figure to one of his children and that her death had broken him.