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Body with ‘cement shoes’ found washed up on Brooklyn shoreline

Posted at 9:32 PM, May 06, 2016
and last updated 2016-05-06 21:32:01-04

It’s the stuff of mafia lore — a doomed target thrown into the depths of the ocean, with his feet encased in cement.

And yet, on an unseasonably cool morning in Brooklyn, a body with so-called “cement shoes” washed ashore this week, igniting the mystery of who committed the crime, and why.

Authorities have identified the body as that of a 28-year-old suspected gang member named Peter Martinez.

Martinez was found wrapped in “black plastic bags, his arms were tied behind him, and his feet were submerged in poured concrete,” said New York Police Chief of Department Robert Boyce.

Martinez’ head, including his mouth and nostrils, were covered in tape, Lt. Thomas Antonetti said.

Tattoos of an 8-ball and a Virgin Mary with a rose, among several others, assisted in identifying Martinez.

Stranger than fiction

The almost mythical “death by cement shoes” was popularized by E. L. Doctorow’s 1989 novel, “Billy Bathgate,” in which a 15-year-old Bronx boy bears witness to the murder of a man thrown into the East River with his feet encased in cement. The man in the novel was killed after he was believed to have betrayed his fellow mobsters.

The motive behind Martinez’s murder remains a mystery. He was reported missing in February.

Martinez had been involved in gangs and was a member of “a subset of the Crips,” Antonetti said. He had several prior arrests and his criminal record includes “possession of stolen property, reckless endangerment, and criminal possession of a weapon,” Antonetti said.

His body was discovered by a college student Monday morning, along the shorelines of Sheepshead Bay, a neighborhood now known for its multiple marinas and its eastern European and Russian immigrant community.

Martinez’s death was from “asphyxia caused by the covering of the mouth and nose by duct tape,” Dr. Barbara Sampson, chief medical examiner for New York City, said in ruling the death a homicide.

Chief Boyce noted at a press conference Tuesday that authorities were also looking to determine how long Martinez had been in the water.