Incident location, Long Island
What Happened
A 38-year-old Ecuadorian national was indicted Thursday on kidnapping charges after allegedly luring a 4-year-old girl away from her family at a Patchogue laundromat and taking her to a nearby library, according to News 12 Long Island. The incident has sent shockwaves through the Suffolk County community and resulted in a grand jury indictment that could carry a maximum sentence of 25 years in prison.
The suspect, identified as Carlos Corte, 38, of Ecuador, allegedly approached the young girl around 11:30 a.m. on Friday, March 28, at Laundry Kingdom, a laundromat located in Patchogue, Suffolk County. Prosecutors say Corte — who had no prior relationship with the child or her family — gestured for the girl to leave the building with him, reportedly promising to bring her to a so-called “secret room” in order to lure her away, according to News 12 Long Island. The child complied, and Corte walked her away from the laundromat without her family’s knowledge or consent.
Corte took the 4-year-old girl to the children’s department of the Patchogue-Medford Library, a short distance from the laundromat. Library staff initially believed the man was the child’s father and had no immediate cause for alarm. However, suspicions were raised when Corte told librarians that the girl had simply followed him there on her own — a claim that prompted staff to alert library security, the Suffolk County District Attorney’s office reported. The shift from apparent parental escort to a stranger’s implausible explanation triggered the alert that ultimately helped bring the situation to resolution.
Meanwhile, back at Laundry Kingdom, the child’s mother discovered that her daughter was missing and began frantically searching for her. The mother eventually located her daughter at the library in the company of Corte, according to News 12 Long Island. The child was reunited with her family following the incident, and Corte was subsequently taken into custody. News 12’s Tara Rincon, who broke and followed the story through its development, reported the indictment on May 15, 2026 — approximately seven weeks after the original incident occurred on March 28.
The case underscores the speed with which a child can go missing in a public space, even when a parent or guardian is present in the same building. In this instance, the child was taken from a laundromat — an everyday setting that most families would not regard as a high-risk environment — during the late morning hours on a Friday. The fact that Corte had no connection whatsoever to the victim or her family makes the alleged crime all the more alarming to Suffolk County residents and law enforcement officials alike.
Location & Road Context
The incident originated at Laundry Kingdom in Patchogue, a village within the Town of Brookhaven in Suffolk County. Patchogue is a densely populated South Shore community known for its active downtown corridor, proximity to Great South Bay, and well-trafficked commercial strips. The Patchogue-Medford Library, where the child was taken, is a well-known community institution that serves families throughout the surrounding area. Our database shows Patchogue has seen a number of serious incidents in recent months, including a crane collapse in April 2026 and several DWI-related arrests in East Patchogue just days before this kidnapping occurred.
Investigation & Legal Proceedings
A grand jury returned an indictment against Corte on Thursday, May 15, 2026. He was arraigned on that indictment before Justice John B. Collins of Suffolk County, who ordered Corte remanded — meaning he will be held in custody without bail — for the duration of the pending case. Corte entered a plea of not guilty at the arraignment, according to News 12 Long Island. The top charge against him is kidnapping in the second degree, a Class B violent felony under New York State Penal Law, which carries a maximum sentence of up to 25 years in state prison if he is convicted. The Suffolk County District Attorney’s office is prosecuting the case. Given Corte’s status as an Ecuadorian national with no identified ties to the community, the remand order by Justice Collins effectively ensures he will remain detained and unavailable for flight while the case proceeds through the Suffolk County court system.
Broader Impact
The charge of kidnapping in the second degree in New York — applicable here because the victim is a minor under 17 years of age who was abducted by a stranger with no lawful authority or parental claim — carries a mandatory minimum of three and a half years and a maximum of 25 years in state prison upon conviction as a Class B violent felony. The involvement of a child under the age of five, combined with the calculated nature of the alleged enticement using the promise of a “secret room,” may be weighed by prosecutors as aggravating factors as the case moves forward. Parents in Suffolk County are encouraged to review public safety resources and remain vigilant in public spaces, particularly in commercial settings where attention can be momentarily diverted.