In a Pennsylvania courtroom on April 14, 2026, 61-year-old José Luis Rodriguez stood shackled as he pleaded guilty to three counts of first-degree murder, sealing his fate with three consecutive life sentences without any possibility of parole. The brutal killings of a young Dominican family in September 2025 sent shockwaves through Berks County and beyond, leaving a trail of unimaginable grief.

The victims were 31-year-old Geraldina Peguero-Mancebo, her 31-year-old husband Junior Cabrera-Colón, and their innocent one-year-old son, Jeyden. Rodriguez admitted to the horrifying sequence of events that ended three promising lives in a single night of calculated violence.

According to the confession, on the evening of September 12, 2025, Rodriguez picked up Geraldina and her toddler son in Reading. What should have been an ordinary moment turned deadly. He shot the young mother in cold blood, then callously threw the crying one-year-old baby into a muddy marsh near East Huller Lane in Ontelaunee Township. The helpless child, unable to escape the cold water and thick mud, drowned as Rodriguez simply walked away, showing no mercy or remorse.

The next morning, September 13, Junior Cabrera-Colón was discovered shot in the head, his body dumped in the brush along River Road in Reading. The discovery triggered a desperate search for his missing wife and son. A week later, investigators found Geraldina’s body in a wooded area off East Huller Lane. Tragically, little Jeyden’s tiny body was located about 150 yards away, partially submerged in the marshy waters where he had been abandoned.

The motive behind this triple homicide remains deeply disturbing, with reports suggesting elements of a twisted personal obsession or love-related conflict that escalated into pure evil. Rodriguez, who had no prior criminal record, carried out the attacks with chilling premeditation, targeting an entire family and ensuring no one survived to tell the tale.

Family members of the victims, some traveling from the Dominican Republic, filled the courtroom during sentencing. Their pain was palpable as they faced the man who had ripped their loved ones away so violently. Rodriguez offered no statement, no apology, no explanation—only silence as the judge imposed the maximum punishment allowed by law.

This case highlights the random yet devastating nature of violence that can shatter immigrant dreams in America. Geraldina and Junior had built a life together, raising their young son with hopes for a brighter future. Instead, their story ended in a remote Pennsylvania woodland, their bodies left like discarded evidence in a nightmare that no parent or loved one should ever endure.

Prosecutors, including Chief Assistant District Attorney Michael Puma, pushed for the harshest sentence possible, emphasizing the brutality—especially the drowning of a defenseless toddler. Investigators from the Berks County Detective’s Office and Reading Police Department worked tirelessly to piece together the evidence that led to Rodriguez’s arrest and eventual guilty plea.

As Rodriguez begins his life behind bars with no chance of freedom, the community mourns a family stolen too soon. The images of a smiling young couple and their baby boy now serve as haunting reminders of how quickly innocence can be destroyed by one man’s monstrous actions. Justice has been served, but for the surviving relatives, the void left by this senseless tragedy will never truly heal.