Crime & Safety

Man Accused Of Kidnapping And Killing Jassy Correia Heads To Trial

Louis Coleman is accused of kidnapping Jassy Correia from outside a Boston nightclub after her body was found in the trunk of his car.

Coleman (left) is accused of kidnapping Jassy Correia (right) from outside the Boston nightclub Venu in February 2019, where she was waiting for an Uber after spending the night out with friends celebrating her 23rd birthday.
Coleman (left) is accused of kidnapping Jassy Correia (right) from outside the Boston nightclub Venu in February 2019, where she was waiting for an Uber after spending the night out with friends celebrating her 23rd birthday. (Boston Police Department)

BOSTON — The trial for the man who federal authorities said kidnapped a Boston woman and was pulled over on I-95 in Delaware with her body in the trunk of his car is scheduled to begin Monday.

Louis Coleman III, now 35, of Providence, R.I., is charged with one count of kidnapping, resulting in death. That federal charge faces a mandatory life sentence and is also death-penalty eligible if convicted.

Coleman is accused of kidnapping Jassy Correia from outside the Boston nightclub Venu in February 2019, where she was waiting for an Uber after spending the night out with friends celebrating her 23rd birthday. Her case — just weeks after another Boston woman was kidnapped — garnered national attention and set off a multi-state manhunt.

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According to surveillance footage from early Sunday morning Feb. 24, 2019, Correia was last seen standing on the sidewalk when a man approached her and led her to a car parked nearby, at one point stopping to carry her on his shoulders.

An all-out search for Correia ensued, and investigators worked to find a person of interest. Eventually, police released surveillance footage from Coleman's apartment on Chestnut Street in Providence, allegedly showing him carrying a body matching the description of Correia from his car to his apartment.

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Correia's body was found five days later inside a suitcase in the trunk of Coleman's car while he was driving on I-95 in Delaware. U.S. Attorney Andrew Lelling said police found her body naked, bound, bruised, and covered in what was believed to be baking soda.

Lelling said it appears Correia died from blunt force trauma and strangulation and there is probable cause that Coleman killed her. Coleman had a scratch on his face that he told authorities came from her, according to Lelling.

Coleman has pled not guilty to the charge of kidnapping resulting in death. Federal prosecutors have also decided not to seek the death penalty.

The trial will be held at U.S. District Court in Boston.

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