Shocking details unearthed after South Florida woman carjacked, set ablaze in massive drug scheme

Miguel Aguasvivas accused in money laundering scheme connected to wife’s death

Katherine Altagracia Guerrero De Aguasvivas, 31 (Seminole County Sheriff's Office)

SEMINOLE COUNTY, Fla. – Last year, a South Florida woman was carjacked in Central Florida, in Winter Springs, before her body was found burnt in the remains of a car fire in Osceola County.

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On Wednesday, WKMG in Orlando uncovered more details about the investigation, including the woman’s apparent role in a wide-ranging drug scheme.

The killing happened in April 2024, when the woman — identified as Katherine Aguasvivas, 41 — was caught on camera being carjacked and kidnapped at an intersection in Winter Springs.

Just a few hours later, Aguasvivas’ body was discovered in her burnt-out Durango at a construction site in Boggy Creek, deputies said at the time.

Katherine Aguasvivas' Durango burning near a construction site in Kissimmee (Copyright 2024 by WKMG ClickOrlando - All rights reserved.)
The burnt-out remains of the Durango (Copyright 2024 by WKMG ClickOrlando - All rights reserved.)

Since then, several people have been indicted in connection to her death, and investigators revealed earlier this year that Aguasvivas had been specifically targeted.

According to these investigators, Aguasvivas had driven up from her home in Homestead to Seminole County to collect $170,000 in drug money from a man named Giovany Crespo Hernandez.

But as Aguasvivas headed home, Hernandez conspired with two others — Jordanish Torres Garcia and Kevin Ocasio Justiniano — to rob and kill her, detectives claimed.

Left to right: Giovany Crespo Hernandez, 27; Jordanish Torres-Garcia, 28; Kevin Ocasio Justiniano, 27 (Copyright 2024 by WKMG ClickOrlando - All rights reserved.)

Court records show that Aguasvivas was supposed to deliver the cash to her husband, Miguel Aguasvivas.

In one such record filed this week, investigators accused Miguel Aguasvivas of being involved in money laundering operations between 2021 and April 2024.

“(Miguel) Aguasvivas was a money courier who would pick up drug proceeds in Central Florida and then drop off money to an individual he believed to be a money launderer (but who was actually a DEA undercover agent) for purposes of converting it to cryptocurrency,” the report reads.

Images included in investigative documents showing Miguel Aguasvivas (Left) and a $111,000 money drop (right) from March 15, 2024 (U.S. District Court Middle District of Florida Orlando Division)

In fact, DEA agents said they were expecting Miguel Aguasvivas or a co-conspirator to drop off drug money collected in Orlando on the day of his wife’s trip to Seminole County, but it was ultimately canceled due to her death.

The DEA had been looking into Miguel Aguasvivas amid a larger investigation into a money laundering ring that would send cryptocurrency to a drug cartel in Colombia, records indicate.

According to investigators, Katherine Aguasvivas and her husband had been separated, but Miguel Aguasvivas reportedly used the April 2024 trip to help her with costs.

“(Miguel) and (Katherine) were separated at the time of her death, and (Miguel) was helping (Katherine) pay rent by giving her the chance to act as a courier and make $1,000 per trip,” the report continues.

Detectives added that Katherine Aguasvivas had previously made over 10 trips to the Orlando area to pick up drug money.

Additional photos that investigators claimed show Miguel Aguasvivas during a money drop in 2021 (U.S. District Court Middle District of Florida Orlando Division)

Miguel Aguasvivas was ultimately indicted on a charge of conspiracy to commit concealment money laundering.

Under the terms of a plea deal filed on Monday, investigators said that Miguel Aguasvivas faces a maximum 20-year prison sentence, as well as a fine of up to $500,000.

He is set to appear in federal court on Friday morning in Orlando to determine whether a judge will accept the deal.

You can read more about the details of the case in the plea agreement attached below.


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