March 3, 2009 12:30 PM

Boy, 13, Accused Of Killing Rival Brother

(AP)  Like most boys, 13-year-old Mykel Mendes looked up to his big brother, Jordan. The two rode bikes together, did yard work together and hung out together. But when it came to the family business - a major drug ring - Mykel did not want to share, police say.

Mykel is now accused of masterminding the slaying of his 16-year-old half-brother so he could take over the drug operation - one police say they inherited from their father, who is in prison for running one of the biggest cocaine rings on Cape Cod in Massachusetts.

Jordan was found shot, stabbed 27 times and dumped into a pit, where his body was torched. Another 13-year-old friend and a 20-year-old cousin also are charged with murder.

The killing has shaken the normal quiet of winter on Cape Cod, the summer tourist destination known for its beautiful beaches, salt water taffy and famous residents. Jordan Mendes lived just a few miles from the compound of the Kennedy political dynasty in Hyannis Port.

"It's very disturbing," said Debra Dagwan, a Hyannis resident and member of the local school board. "It indicates what drugs can do to people, whether they are involved with drugs or selling them. It's a dangerous life, no matter how you look at it."

Mykel's lawyer, John Cunha, dismissed claims by authorities that Mykel planned his brother's death to take over his drug business.

"He loved his brother," Cunha said. "He's not the 13-year-old Al Capone."

The boys' father, Manuel Mendes, 33, ran a drug ring that brought large quantities of cocaine to the Cape from New York and Boston. Jordan was 8 and Mykel just 5 when he was arrested and sent to prison to serve eight to 10 years. Two years later, in 2002, authorities caught him running the drug business from behind bars. That time, he was sentenced to 35 years on federal drug trafficking charges.

Authorities say Jordan took over where his father left off, selling OxyContin and cocaine. District Attorney Michael O'Keefe said Jordan was a "significant drug dealer."

Mykel, according to authorities, was jealous of the money Jordan was making and wanted to take over.

(AP/Barnstable Police Department)
Over two days in December, police say Mykel, his 20-year-old cousin, Robert Vacher (left), and 13-year-old Kevin Ribeiro stole $10,000 in cash from Jordan, killed him, poured gasoline on his body and set him on fire.

The three walked into a car dealership, pulled the $10,000 out of their pockets and bought a used silver BMW, O'Keefe said.

Lawyers for all three youths deny they took part in the slaying.

"To actually kill somebody to obtain money to buy a used car, which they have no license for and won't be able to get a license for almost four years - that's not the way 13-year-olds think," said William Gens, Ribeiro's lawyer.

Mykel, who has a different mother, did not grow up in the same house as Jordan. But after Mykel moved to the Cape with his mother, the boys became inseparable, according to family members and friends.

"Jordan was very close to Mykel. He took care of him, looked out for him. He loved him," said Jordan's mother, Paula Carberry.

After his father was sent to prison, Jordan - named after basketball star Michael Jordan - became "the little man in the house," Carberry said.

Two years later, his father's brother, Danuel Mendes - also an alleged drug dealer - was killed. Carberry said losing his father and uncle was tough on Jordan.

"He was hurt," she said. "I think he would get angry because there wasn't anything he could do."

Carberry denies Jordan was involved in drugs and says he had recently begun to turn his life around after some minor scrapes with the law, including arrests for marijuana possession and trespassing. His mother said his grades in school had recently improved and he had talked with an ex-girlfriend about moving to Florida after finishing high school to open a clothing store.

(WBZ)
When Jordan did not come home from school Dec. 15, Carberry and other family members went out to look for him. The next day, they found his body - still burning - in a pit in woods less than a mile from Carberry's home.

Ribeiro's chilling account of the slaying is outlined in a one-page police report.

As Jordan walked down the basement stairs of Mykel's house, Vacher shot him, then stabbed him repeatedly in the neck, Ribeiro told police.

Ribeiro said he and Vacher then rolled Mendes' body in a rug and took it to the pit. The next day, he said, they brought a container of gasoline and set Mendes' body on fire, according to the police report.

The two boys are now in the custody of the state Department of Youth Services. Because of their age, they cannot be tried as adults for murder. If convicted, the teens would remain in state custody until they reach 18. Vacher was being held without bail on charges of robbery and first-degree murder.

Carberry said she always thought Mykel was jealous of Jordan, but cannot understand how he could do what he is accused of doing.

"What ever happened to my brother's keeper?" she said.

"You were supposed to be my brother's keeper, and he was yours."

© 2009 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Add a Comment See all 26 Comments
by triplearocks December 4, 2009 3:39 PM EST
what a ******' ******* kid, doing the wrongful thing to his brother... Give him the death penalty & execute him!!! he will regret the wrongful **** he did to his own brother!!
Reply to this comment
by inachu1 March 13, 2009 4:12 PM EDT
Mommy always did love you best!
You always got the coolest toys and got the best clothes and given money while I got nothing!

Yep boys like the above need to take prozac
Reply to this comment
by loneeagle57 March 4, 2009 12:26 PM EST
Well its nice to know that they kept the business in the family. "Oh he loved his brother." That might be true but I think he loved money more. I hope the whole family fries.
Reply to this comment
by NancyLou9 March 4, 2009 9:06 AM EST
Four down, about 40 million more to go. Drugs are the scourge of our society and seems to be the impetus behind more and more crimes these days - if only it were just marijuana behind this but it's not, it's the crap being sent over the border every single day. Close the borders, make it harder for drugs to enter the country. Also, crack down on the criminals that are caught here with drugs, any drugs, and keep it out of the hands of 13 year old children who decide to kill to take over their dad's drug business... This whole thing creeps me out.
Reply to this comment
by GODSnLIBERALS March 3, 2009 9:40 PM EST
this kind of sh!!t happens all the time..WHAT DOES NOT HAPPEN we properly punishing morons like these people
Reply to this comment
by zipadeedodah March 3, 2009 7:47 PM EST
Six degrees of separation...in the human web that is our society, almost everyone knows someone who is imprisoned. Drug dealers have LOTS of customers. Some estimates say that 30 to 40 million Americans have used illegal drugs within the last year.

So, since we're talking in terms of "trash", does that mean we are all living in a landfill?
Reply to this comment
by asrealasitgets09 March 3, 2009 7:17 PM EST
This message is for Dumb Ass thomas dthomas5010 in case you haven't realized these are kids no matter what race they are. What should have brought a tear to your eye was how stupid you sound.

NOW THATS FUNNY!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
I hope you feel like a damn fool because you sound like one.
Please think about it.This is our future, MEN are letting our kids down this comes from a lack of guidence. Instead of Men stepping to the plate and trying to help our youth they are making decisions that are ruining our kids future the sad part is the MOTHER is normally the first one to be blamed. My heart goes out to all of these Lost kids. Its not for me or you to judge. We all know who does the judging (whatever you believe in) Just think it could have been your child/children.
GET OVER YOUR SELF
Reply to this comment
by toolmangler-2009 March 3, 2009 7:02 PM EST
Posted by debinok1 at 12:56 PM : Mar 3, 2009




Very,very well said and very true!!!
Reply to this comment
by msay3 March 3, 2009 4:54 PM EST
LORD OF THE FLIES anyone?
Reply to this comment
by debinok1 March 3, 2009 3:56 PM EST
In the 1900's we started taking mothers out of our homes and putting them to work in factories. We disconnected the family unit by moving families away from their extended families. Children were left to raise themselves. In 100 years we have dismantled the village that was the backbone of family and replaced it with daycare, cellphones, TV and video games. Dad no longer has time to take junior out behind the wood shed for a good old-fashioned "talk", and the states say "That's abuse". Then they go wild and we blame the child. We fixed what wasn't broken and now it is broken and can't be fixed.
Reply to this comment
See all 26 Comments
.
Scroll Left
Scroll Right More »
CBS News on Facebook