The December air in Spring Valley, New York, held a chill that went deeper than the weather the night Nicholas Jasiel died. Hillcrest, a neighborhood usually quiet after dark, erupted with the crack of gunfire at the corner of Dwight Avenue and Mallory Road. Jasiel, barely nineteen, was cut down, another ghost added to the city’s ever-growing ledger of unsolved violence. It’s been years, but the FBI hasn’t forgotten, and neither should anyone else. The details are scarce, the shooter – or shooters – vanished into the cold night, leaving behind only questions and a grieving family.
The investigation, a joint effort between the FBI’s New York Field Office and the Ramapo Police Department, has hit a wall. They’re asking the public for help, desperate for a break in a case gone cold. What did Jasiel see? Who wanted him silenced? The FBI isn’t offering much in the way of description. No known aliases, no birthdate, no place of origin. The file is frustratingly blank on basic details – race, sex, even height and weight are listed as unknown. It’s as if the perpetrator intentionally scrubbed themselves from any record, a professional move that speaks volumes about the killer’s experience. There are no reported scars or marks to help identify them, no occupation to tie them to a specific life. Just a void where a face should be.
The silence surrounding this case is deafening. Witnesses, if there were any, haven’t come forward. Fear, loyalty, or simply indifference – the reasons don’t matter now. What matters is bringing a killer to justice. The FBI is offering a substantial reward – up to $25,000 – for information leading to the identification, arrest, and conviction of the person or persons responsible for Jasiel’s murder. It’s a significant sum, but it’s a small price to pay for closure and a measure of peace for a family robbed of their son.
This wasn’t a random act. Someone knew Jasiel, someone had a reason to end his life on a quiet street corner. The lack of information after all this time suggests a calculated effort to bury the truth, to let the case fade into obscurity. But the FBI is refusing to let that happen. They’re revisiting every lead, re-interviewing old contacts, and now, turning to the public for assistance.
If you have any information, no matter how small, about the murder of Nicholas Jasiel, contact the FBI immediately. Don’t let the killer walk free. Don’t let another year pass without answers. The tip line is open, and every detail could be the one that breaks this case wide open. Your anonymity will be protected. Help bring justice to Nicholas Jasiel and peace to his family.
🔠Key Facts
| Full Name | Nicholas Jasiel |
| Charges | Murder Victim Spring Valley, New York December 7, 2019 |
| Aliases | None known |
| Date of Birth | Unknown |
| Race / Sex | Unknown / Unknown |
| Nationality | Unknown |
| Height | Unknown |
| Weight | Unknown |
| Eyes / Hair | Unknown / Unknown |
| Scars & Marks | None reported |
| Location | New York |
📋 Source: FBI Most Wanted — Nicholas Jasiel
If you have information about this fugitive, contact your local FBI field office or submit a tip at tips.fbi.gov.
Related Federal Cases
- Holly Ann Elkins, Stalking Murder, New York, 2024 · New York
- Nicholas Tartaglione, Quad Murder, NY 2016 · New York
- Frank Jenkins, Execution-Style Murder, New York 2014 · Vermont
- Michael Johnson, Abducted Elderly Woman with Dementia, New York Cit… · New York
- Edmanuel Victoria Charged with Armored Truck Robbery, New York, 2024 · New York

