WTOP’s Matt Kaufax embarks on a journey to learn about the bizarre, yet true, story of a relatively unknown criminal from D.C.’s past who burst onto the scene in the 1890s, “cutting” his way through the community.
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Do you know the tale of DC’s ‘Jack the Slasher?’
It’s the bizarre, yet true story of a relatively unknown criminal from D.C.’s past who burst on the scene in the 1890s, cutting his way through the region — and striking fear into the hearts of the community.
In today’s episode of “Matt About Town,” we’re going on a journey back to 1893, where attacks first began in D.C.’s Mount Pleasant neighborhood (though it was ultimately Tenleytown where the madman would be caught in 1894).
In this bewildering saga, there’s a twist: “Jack the Slasher” wasn’t actually slashing people. And perhaps that’s the only reason why we do not know his actual name today.
Buckle up for an amusing, true crime, historical deep dive you’ve probably never heard of before, featuring some research assistance from the host of “Best Address,” D.C. realtor Joe Himali.
Hear “Matt About Town” first every Tuesday and Thursday on 103.5 FM!
If you have a story idea you’d like Matt to cover, email him, or chat with him on Instagram and TikTok.
A new documentary tells the story of artists who moved to D.C. after fleeing El Salvador in the 1980s and have found solace in their art forms.
Edwin dancing on Mount Pleasant Street in D.C.
(Courtesy “The Most Beautiful Deaths In The World”)
Courtesy “The Most Beautiful Deaths In The World”
Many families from El Salvador ended up in D.C., particularly in Mount Pleasant and Adams Morgan.
(Courtesy “The Most Beautiful Deaths In The World”)
Courtesy “The Most Beautiful Deaths In The World”
Aviles said the largest Latin American immigrant group in the region is from El Salvador.
(Courtesy “The Most Beautiful Deaths In The World”)
Courtesy “The Most Beautiful Deaths In The World”
Aviles believes that the art featured in the film showcases how each artist found some sort of peace.
(Courtesy “The Most Beautiful Deaths In The World”)
Courtesy “The Most Beautiful Deaths In The World”
The film documents how Aviles, and four other artists who relocated to D.C., tried to come to terms with what they’d lived through in El Salvador, and what they were experiencing in their new home.
(Courtesy “The Most Beautiful Deaths In The World”)
WTOP celebrates National Hispanic Heritage Month this Sept. 15 through Oct. 15, with stories spotlighting the contributions, culture and accomplishments of Hispanic communities across the D.C. region.
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Artists who fled El Salvador for DC are focus of new documentary
When he walks down Mount Pleasant Street, in Northwest D.C., Quique Aviles is repeatedly greeted by people who know him, from his decades as a poet, performer and community activist.
Born in El Salvador, Aviles fled when he was 15, “Because of the civil war that broke out in 1980 between the leftist guerrillas and the military dictators that he been in power for more than 50 years.”
Many families from El Salvador ended up in D.C., particularly in Mount Pleasant and Adams Morgan.
“The war kind of put the migration at warp speed,” said Aviles. “When your house is on fire, you run, right? So we ran. And for some reason, a lot of Salvadorans came to D.C.”
During a WTOP interview, Aviles returned to 3045 15th Street NW, near the intersection of Irving Street and 16th Street.
“This was the Latin American Youth Center. This was my after-school place. I lived down the street. And this is where I became an artist,” Aviles recalled.
The youth center was located next door to what was known as the Wilson Center, in the basement of the Central Presbyterian Church, which became a legendary D.C. punk venue through the 1980s.
“We all had something in common,” said Aviles. “This was a hub of political activism.”
The film documents how Aviles, and four other artists who relocated to D.C., tried to come to terms with what they’d lived through in El Salvador, and what they were experiencing in their new home.
“The different types of arts that are featured in the film shows you how each one of us that came from this very troubled situation found some kind of solace, no?”
Aviles said the largest Latin American immigrant group in the region is from El Salvador.
“We thought we were just passing by, fleeing the war, and when it’s over we would go back,” said Aviles, “But you fall in love, you get a good job, you buy a house, you have kids, and all of a sudden we had roots here, and we stayed.”
Today, walking through Mount Pleasant, evidence of the Trump administration’s recent federal law enforcement surge is present in flyers posted on utility boxes and sidewalks.
“It kind of has this feel, right now, that we’re living in the same situation that made us come here in the first place,” Aviles said. “For us, seeing troops, people my age, that brings back a lot of baggage, and a lot of discomfort.”
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On the inside of La Tejana in D.C., you’d see a chorus of women cooking Michelin-grade breakfast tacos in a tiny kitchen and homages to co-owner Ana-Maria Jaramillo’s Tex-Mex roots.
WTOP celebrates National Hispanic Heritage Month this Sept. 15 through Oct. 15, with stories spotlighting the contributions, culture and accomplishments of Hispanic communities across the D.C. region.
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From Texas to the nation’s capital: La Tejana brings a taste of Hispanic traditions to DC
From the outside, La Tejana in D.C.’s Mount Pleasant neighborhood is inconspicuously humble — from its windowsill and stool eatery to the retro font on its banner. But, on the inside, you’d see a chorus of women cooking Michelin-grade breakfast tacos in a tiny kitchen and homages to co-owner Ana-Maria Jaramillo’s Tex-Mex roots.
Jaramillo — the daughter of Colombian immigrants — grew up in Monterrey, Mexico, before eventually moving a bit north to the border town of McAllen, Texas.
“(It’s) the birthplace of the breakfast taco. It’s like the Mecca of Tex-Mex,” she told WTOP.
During a visit to her hometown, Jaramillo took her now-husband and coworker, Takoma Park-native Gus May, to one of her all-time favorite breakfast taco joints.
“He takes a bite, and he’s like, ‘Oh my god. What is this? I have never had a tortilla like this. I have never had eggs like this,’” she recalled. “He was like, ‘We don’t have anything like this in D.C. If you and I stay together … and you end up moving to D.C., we have to open up a breakfast taco shop.’”
In August of 2022, Ana-Maria Jaramillo and Gus May opened up their first brick-and-mortar location at 3211 Mt. Pleasant St. NW.
(Courtesy Jason Garza)
Courtesy Jason Garza
La Tejana co-owner Ana-Maria Jaramillo (right) talks with front-of-house employees Alexis Urrutia Quintanilla (left) and Kathy Zelaya .
(center)
center
On the inside of La Tejana is a chorus of women cooking Michelin-grade breakfast tacos in a tiny kitchen.
(WTOP/Ciara Wells)
WTOP/Ciara Wells
The tortilleros in the La Tejana kitchen make nearly 6,000 tortillas a week, according to co-owner Ana-Maria Jaramillo.
(WTOP/Ciara Wells)
WTOP/Ciara Wells
The tacos vary from vegan and vegetarian options to the perfect meal for meat-lovers.
(WTOP/Ciara Wells)
WTOP/Ciara Wells
The breakfast tacos come with a flight of side salsitas — cilantro crema, charred tomato and the à la carte avocado tomatillo and habanero salsa.
(WTOP/Ciara Wells)
WTOP/Ciara Wells
Its prices range from one taco for $4.15, three for $13 and six for $24.
(WTOP/Ciara Wells)
WTOP/Ciara Wells
A few years later, they were growing the business from their front door step — literally. The two began their journey doing pop-ups and selling and delivering fresh tortillas during the pandemic.
“I don’t know how, it became this cult thing. Very quickly, everybody was ordering via (direct messages). We were selling 700 tortillas in one day, all over D.C. — not making money!” she said. “We were there, waking up at 3 a.m., making 700 tortillas in our apartment … driving all over, dropping them off, and doing it again the next weekend.”
From there, the business’ cult following led to the couple selling out pop-up after pop-up. As its clientele base grew, they knew they needed to think bigger.
“These are uncomplicated, unfussy bundles of joy that don’t take reservations or require any other kind of long-term planning,” the Michelin guide said of the restaurant.
Mentions of McAllen and Mexico blanket the walls alongside a simplistic menu touting only eight options featuring cheesy scrambled eggs, a slew of sauces, veggies and meats reflecting core Tex-Mex staples. The tacos vary from vegan and vegetarian options to the perfect meals for meat-lovers. They also come with a flight of side salsitas — cilantro crema, charred tomato, as well as the à la carte avocado tomatillo and habanero salsa.
Its prices range from one taco for $4.15, three for $13 and six for $24.
‘Putting out fires’
La Tejana just celebrated its two-year anniversary and lines around the block prove the restaurant has cemented itself in the D.C. foodie scene.
Although she’s incredibly grateful for their success, Jaramillo said it didn’t come without challenges.
“Half of the responsibility you have as a restaurant owner is putting out fires,” she said. “Besides the financial piece — that’s one part of running a restaurant — it’s also finding an amazing team that respects you and respects the vision.”
On top of limiting employee turnover by paying livable wages, Jaramillo said operating a small business was at times “virtually impossible” with roadblocks put in their way by the D.C. government.
“The amount of times I had to call DDOT and ask about permitting the sidewalk just to be able to get a streatery out there. That was like a six to eight month process, because nothing online was working,” she said. “If I’m having a hard time understanding how to open or apply for a grant, can you imagine how (people with less proficient English language skills) are struggling?”
“Hispanic Heritage Month, to me, really is an opportunity to support, financially, all of the businesses that are owned and operated by Latin people in this community. I think there’s not a lot of emphasis on the fact that immigrants, specifically Latin American immigrants, carry the restaurant industry on their backs every single day,” she said. “I think if every Latino worker were to quit, every restaurant would shut down in this country.”
Bolstering their business were the customers (both new and old) that stuck by them over the last two years. Jaramillo said when the couple started the pop-up in their neighborhood, they often saw recurring customers who would come back every weekend.
“I’ve never felt that in any neighborhood that I’ve lived in my life, and I think just being part of that, I was like, ‘Gus, there’s no other place that we can open a brick and mortar. It has to be in our neighborhood. This is where we live. This is where we have roots,’” she said.
“When this place became available, it was like a no-brainer. Was the kitchen too small? Sure, but, for us, it’s worth the sacrifice to be able to be part of the community here,” she added.
What’s next?
Outside of the restaurant, Jaramillo works full-time as a pediatric speech pathologist and part-time as an adjunct professor at George Washington University in the college’s Department of Speech, Language and Hearing Sciences.
She said her husband was the one with the restaurant industry skills but her “dream was to always have a clinic and serve the immigrant population in the DMV.”
At her clinic, Voz Speech Therapy, she works with bilingual children that have physical and mental deficiencies and focuses on dropping the barrier between access to health care and the local immigrant community.
“When La Tejana was still a pop-up, and I still kind of had a grip on things … it seemed kind of seamless for me to open the clinic. It’s been really, really challenging juggling both of my lives,” Jaramillo said.
Even though she wears multiple hats, Jaramillo still has her eyes on the next thing for the restaurant. After adding a cocktail bar to its upstairs space earlier this year, La Tejana has plans to expand to a second location.
Their tortilleros in the kitchen make nearly 6,000 tortillas a week, according to Jaramillo, but they have no plans to return to their original format of selling just tortillas because, she said, “we can’t keep up with the demands, and the tortilleros can’t work any harder.”
Where they’ll be opening their next location is still up in the air, but Jaramillo said one thing they’ll definitely need is a bigger kitchen.
“We want people all over D.C. to have access to (our tacos),” she said.
“The goal is just to continue to feed the city with the best, most legit, authentic, Tex-Mex breakfast tacos that you can get, and filling people with happiness. … We’re really proud of what we do at La Tejana every day,” Jaramillo added.
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There is a thriving market for pet alligators in Michigan and many of the reptiles are killed or abandoned when they start to get too big.
Local 4 investigated and found alligators for sale at an expo in Kalamazoo, among other locations.
The Critchlow Alligator Sanctuary has 200 alligators under their care that had been abandoned. They are a rescue facility for unwanted reptiles.
“One particular alligator was locked in a dog crate for seven years. He was never able to touch water or swim or touch the ground,” Lina Kelly said. “Some have come in really horrible situations where their mouths have been taped shut and I’ve had wounds all over their faces. So, some of them are locked away in closets and misshapen their spines.”
Kelly said most people don’t realize how big alligators can get. They can reach up to 15 feet long and live for 60 to 70 years.
Local 4 went in undercover with cameras rolling to a Mt. Pleasant home where alligators are being sold.
“How big are they gonna get?” Local 4 asked.
“They can get up to 15 feet. I mean, so, they can get pretty big,” Mike Morningstar said. “Obviously, a 15-foot gator — it’ll kill ya.”
Alligators can grow to be absolutely massive, but that doesn’t stop Mike and Raquel Morningstar from selling young alligators for $200 each. The couple admits the animals they sell usually wind up discarded.
‘They either keep them, or they eat them, or turn them into boots’
“What do people do when they get really big?” Local 4 asked.
“They either keep them, or they eat them, or turn them into boots,” Raquel Morningstar said.
Raquel actually suggested people could eat their alligators when they get too big to handle.
Baby alligators are also listed for sale online with ads that say they “won’t last long.” Who’s buying them? Mike Morningstar said random people.
The Morningstars are licensed to sell alligators. They said they buy them from a breeder in Florida. They resell the animals and mail them around the country.
“We started out with like six and then we had 10 and had an order of 18 and we had 12 more after that and they’ve gone quick,” Raquel Morningstar said.
Mike Morningstar said that there are no legal issues in Michigan and that they can own and sell them. That it’s “not a big deal.”
That isn’t completely true though. While there aren’t any state laws against alligator sales, some Michigan cities have banned them.
The Morningstars told our undercover producer that this is the end of alligator season — but it’s not the end of the issue.
Local 4 spoke with health officials in Detroit and they confirmed they are getting calls for alligators in the city.
The sanctuary Local 4 visited said they have 200 alligators right now and worry more could be dumping off their pets as winter sets in and the gators continue to grow.
CROSS DONATIONS ON WISN.COM AND THE WISN 12 APP. TONIGHT, AN ARREST AND CHARGES IN THE SHOOTING OF A 16-YEAR-OLD STUDENT OUTSIDE RACINE’S CASE HIGH SCHOOL. PATRICK: MOUNT PLEASANT POLICE SAY LAW ENFORCEMENT TOOK 19-YEAR-OLD TYRESE LOVE, OF RACINE, INTO CUSTODY IN CHICAGO THIS MORNING. THE SHOOTING HAPPENED WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON AT THE DELTA HOTEL, ACROSS THE STREET FROM THE SCHOOL. ACCORDING TO A CRIMINAL COMPLAINT FILED TODAY, THE VICTIM BEGAN VERBALLY SPARRING WITH LOVE. LOVE THEN PULLED A GUN FROM HIS WAISTBAND AND FIRED. THE VICTIM WAS STRUCK ONCE. FOUR OTHER PEOPLE, WHO WERE ALSO THERE, RAN TO THE HIGH SCHOOL. POLICE SAY THE VICTIM IS IN SERIOUS, BUT STABLE CONDITION. POLICE SAY THE SUSPECT REMAI
19-year-old arrested in shooting of Racine Case football player
16-year-old Zysean Golden was found shot in the parking lot of a hotel across the street from Case High School.
Updated: 10:18 PM CDT Sep 30, 2022
Mount Pleasant Police say they have arrested a 19-year-old in the shooting of a Racine Case High School football player. Zysean Golden, 16, was found on Wednesday, September 28th, suffering from a gunshot wound in the parking lot of the Delta Hotel. That’s across the street from Case High School.On Friday, police say with the help of the FBI Gang Task Force, U.S. Marshals, and Chicago Police they arrested Tyrese Love from Racine. Police say Love fled the scene on a bicycle. The 19-year-old was found in Chicago and is being held in the Cook County Jail awaiting extradition to Racine for attempted homicide charges.Golden’s mother tells WISN 12 News that he is still recovering from the gunshot wound at Froedtert Hospital, but is in stable condition.
MOUNT PLEASANT, Wis. —
Mount Pleasant Police say they have arrested a 19-year-old in the shooting of a Racine Case High School football player. Zysean Golden, 16, was found on Wednesday, September 28th, suffering from a gunshot wound in the parking lot of the Delta Hotel. That’s across the street from Case High School.
On Friday, police say with the help of the FBI Gang Task Force, U.S. Marshals, and Chicago Police they arrested Tyrese Love from Racine. Police say Love fled the scene on a bicycle. The 19-year-old was found in Chicago and is being held in the Cook County Jail awaiting extradition to Racine for attempted homicide charges.
Golden’s mother tells WISN 12 News that he is still recovering from the gunshot wound at Froedtert Hospital, but is in stable condition.