🚨 THE HUNT IS OVER! FROM THE STREETS OF BROOKLYN TO A HIDEOUT IN PA—THE MOPED ASSASSINS HAVE FALLEN! 🚨

They thought they could vanish. They thought the state lines would protect them. They were WRONG. 🚔🔥

After 72 hours of a high-stakes, heart-pounding manhunt that gripped the entire East Coast, the monsters who stole Baby Kaori’s life are finally in chains. You won’t believe where the U.S. Marshals found Matthew Rodriguez hiding, or the SHOCKING thing he was doing when they kicked in the door. 🤯💔

From a chaotic moped crash in NYC to a desperate cross-state escape, we have the minute-by-minute breakdown of the chase that brought a city to its knees. Justice is coming, and it’s moving faster than they ever could. 👊🏙️

EXCLUSIVE: SEE THE BODYCAM FOOTAGE OF THE ARREST AND THE CLUES THAT GAVE THEM AWAY: 👇

The silence of a nondescript neighborhood in Pennsylvania was shattered on April 4, 2026, marking the end of one of the most intense manhunts in recent New York history. For three days, the names Amuri Greene and Matthew Rodriguez were the most hated in America. For three days, they were ghosts. But in the end, the combined might of the NYPD, the U.S. Marshals, and a grieving digital community proved that there is no dark enough corner to hide the killers of a 7-month-old child.

This is the definitive, pulse-pounding account of the hunt for the “Moped Assassins” who thought they could outrun the ghost of Kaori Patterson-Moore.

Phase 1: The Brooklyn Crash and the First Fall

The hunt began with a screech of tires and the smell of burning rubber. Seconds after the fatal shots were fired on Moore Street, the gunmen’s getaway moped lost control and wiped out just blocks away.

Witnesses on TikTok captured the immediate aftermath: a chaotic scramble as the two suspects fled on foot. Amuri Greene (21) didn’t get far. In a display of raw community fury, bystanders pointed the way for pursuing officers. Greene was tackled to the ground, his cold, unrepentant gaze captured in a mugshot that would soon ignite a firestorm on X (formerly Twitter). But the driver—the man who steered the engine of death—had vanished.

Phase 2: The Pennsylvania Trail

While Greene was being processed in Brooklyn, Matthew Rodriguez (18) was already crossing state lines. According to law enforcement sources and “pings” tracked by amateur sleuths on Reddit’s r/NYC, Rodriguez utilized a network of “street associates” to swap vehicles and flee into the Pennsylvania countryside.

“He thought he was playing a movie,” a law enforcement insider told reporters. “He changed clothes, ditched his phone, and hid in a house where he thought no one knew his name. He forgot that the whole world was looking for him.”

Phase 3: The U.S. Marshals Strike

The breakthrough came through a combination of old-fashioned detective work and high-tech surveillance. Investigators tracked a series of “suspicious” communications linked to Rodriguez’s known associates. By the morning of April 4, the U.S. Marshals Fugitive Task Force had surrounded a small residence in a quiet PA town.

The arrest was swift and surgical. Rodriguez, who had terrorized a Brooklyn sidewalk just days prior, was reportedly found “stunned and silent” as tactical teams breached the hideout. Surveillance photos of the “Perp Walk”—showing a shackled Rodriguez being led into a police cruiser—have since garnered millions of views, serving as a grim satisfaction for a city demanding blood.

The Digital Dragnet: How Social Media Closed the Gap

Perhaps the most viral aspect of this manhunt was the role of “Citizen Detectives.” On Discord and X, users created real-time maps of every moped sighting in the Tri-State area. Dashcam footage from random drivers was uploaded and analyzed by thousands, effectively turning the entire Northeast into a giant trap for Rodriguez.

“The police did the heavy lifting, but the internet made sure he couldn’t breathe,” says one social media analyst. “The collective rage over Baby Kaori’s death created a digital dragnet that was impossible to escape.”

Conclusion: Extradition and the Coming Storm

As Matthew Rodriguez sits in a Pennsylvania jail cell awaiting his return to New York, the focus shifts from the chase to the courtroom. Amuri Greene is already facing a grand jury, and the legal battle ahead promises to be as explosive as the manhunt itself.

The pursuit is over, but the reckoning is just beginning. In the end, the “Moped Assassins” didn’t just lose their freedom; they learned that in 2026, when you target the most innocent among us, the world becomes a very, very small place.