SOFAST Arrests Murder Suspect in Cincinnati (Learn More – Video)

U.S. Marshal Pete Tobin announced that during the afternoon hours of February 15, 2017, the U.S. Marshal’s Southern Ohio Fugitive Apprehension Strike Team (SOFAST) arrested fugitive Kamaya Farikafi for an outstanding warrant from the Chelsea District Court for Murder.

Farikafi, 23, was wanted by the Chelsea Police Department, Massachusetts State Police and the U.S. Marshals’ New England HIDTA Fugitive Task Force.

Investigators in Massachusetts discovered Farikafi fled to the State of Ohio.

On February 5, 2017, Farikafi allegedly used a baseball bat to assault Melvin Cortes, 32, in the City of Chelsea. Cortes sustained serious life threating injuries as a result of the assault and succumbed to his injuries on February 11, 2017.

U.S. Marshals’ New England HIDTA Fugitive Task Force and Massachusetts State Police developed information Farikafi was in the Cincinnati area of Southwestern Ohio.

This information was provided to the U.S. Marshals’ Southern Ohio Fugitive Apprehension Strike Team (SOFAST), Cincinnati Office. The U.S. Marshals (SOFAST) and the Colerain Police Department quickly located Farikafi in the 7000 block of Colerain Avenue and arrested him on the outstanding charge.

(An Introduction to the United States Marshals Service narrated by John Walsh from America’s Most Wanted. Courtesy of Shane T. McCoy and YouTube)

Farikafi is currently in custody at the Hamilton County Sheriff’s Office and will soon be extradited back to the State of Massachusetts.

Cincinnati’s SOFAST is a fugitive focused, U.S. Marshals Service-led task force consisting of local, state, and federal authorities including the Hamilton County Sheriff’s Office, Colerain Township Police

Department, Harrison Police Department, Newtown Police Department, Social Security Administration Office of the Inspector General, St. Bernard Police and Warren County Prosecutor’s Office.

U.S. Marshals are the nation’s primary fugitive hunting organization and capture more federal fugitives each year than all other law enforcement agencies combined.

US-Marshals

The United States Marshals Service is the nation’s oldest federal law enforcement agency. Annually, U.S. Marshals arrest more than 50 percent of all federal fugitives and serve more federal warrants than all other federal agencies combined.

Additional information about the U.S. Marshals Service can be found at http://www.usmarshals.gov.

America’s Oldest Federal Law Enforcement Agency