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Criminal Homicide Felony Suspect Accused of Bludgeoning Woman Clobbered with Iron, Capture on Surveillance Video Footage than Escaped the Scene in with Victim's Belongings According to Police Report

Cory W. Morrel

FEB 20, 2024

Criminal Homicide Felony Suspect Accused of Bludgeoning Woman Clobbered with Iron, Capture on Surveillance Video Footage than Escaped the Scene in with Victim's Belongings According to Police Report

Tuesday February 20th, 2024, 9:08 PM reporting from Saturday, February 17th, 2024, 5:00 PM- A criminal APB was put out by NYPD of a fugitive manhunt on the loose, fitting the description of a felony suspect that committed murder-suicide of deliberately bludgeoning an innocent women killed with an iron in a Manhattan hotel room. New York City police detail they received a tipoff clue which leads them to believe the killer maybe close-by after leaving the gruesome forensic scene. His face was captured on hotel security surveillance while wearing female stockings and other women's lingerie worn of the female taken off and put on from the alleged victim, according to authorities.

The woman who is deceased was a slain mother, notified staff at the SoHo 54 Resort to perform a wellness examination. Since February 7th, a hotel staff team member attempted to reach the guest saying in the room by knocking on the door. There was no success. A "Do Not Disturb" sign was dangling from the handle. The hotel staff employee proceeded to enter the room and saw the woman unconscious, lying on the flood unresponsive bleeding to death. She immediately alerted her supervisor, and the supervisor contacted the police.

NYPD Chief of Detectives Joseph Kenny articulated about the horrid crime scene resulted and weighed his analysis about the situation.

"He saw the victim laying on the floor [covered by] a blanket. [He] didn’t think anything of it and went back downstairs thinking the woman was laying asleep on the floor.”

However, the brutally maimed body of 38-year-old Denisse Oleas-Arancibia was discovered in the hotel room by a housekeeper around 10:30 a.m. on Feb. 8.

The murder weapon was laying next the body, covered in blood, and collected by police and joining FBI special victim's crime's unit division to search for trace pattern forensic genealogy of suspect's DNA for verified identity confirmed and to submission unquestionable evidence facilitated in the courts for arrest and prosecution when the suspect is apprehended by authorities.

Kenny said there were "bits of plastic embedded in her head” from the iron. Oleas-Arancibia, from Queens, also suffered bruises all over her body.

Her death has been ruled a murder homicide.

Authorities also located a set of men's leggings covered in blood inside the hotel room.

Surveillance camera footage caught a possible suspect on video leaving the hotel in a black hooded sweatshirt, a tan jacket, and light-colored leggings.

Video captured imagery detained a possible person of interest named a suspect on the video surveillance remaining behind nothing in conclusion of a cold case easy to solve. He was wearing a black hooded sweatshirt, a tan jacket, and light-colored leggings.


Investigators have a theory clenched that piece of warn wardrobe leggings what the man has been viewed dressed in is that the property of Oleas Arancibia.

"We have video of the woman arriving at the location wearing a distinct pair of leggings and later on we have a male leaving the hotel wearing the same leggings," Kenny said.

Authorities placed a city-wide manhunt using GPS senor smartphone technology satellite tracking equipment enforced to track the suspect's movements through the victim's MetroCard and transactions on her credit card's financial grid system.

WNBC reported, "Oleas-Arancibia periodically stayed at the hotel, though she lived in Queens. It's believed she may have been an escort. Her son told investigators she worked in Manhattan for an unknown man."

Oleas-Arancibia reportedly moved to the United States from Ecuador because she wanted a "better life."

Oleas-Arancibia's 18-year-old son, Edwin Cevallos, told the New York Daily News, "She gave us the life that we always wanted. She was always working for us to give us the best life in this country. She always had money to cover anything in the house. She didn’t owe no money to anybody.”









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