By The Associated Press
CANANDAIGUA, NY (AP) โ New York State Police charged five people Feb. 14 with murder in the killing of a missing man who authorities said died following repeated acts of violence and torture for more than a month by multiple individuals who later discarded his body in a field.
The victim, Sam Nordquist, a 24-year-old transgender man originally from Minnesota, was reported missing on Feb. 9. Police said he arrived in New York in September and had lost contact with loved ones.
Maj. Kevin Sucher, commander of the state police troop that includes the Finger Lakes region, said the facts and circumstances of the case were โbeyond depravedโ and โby far the worstโ homicide investigation the office has ever been part of.

โNo human being should have to endure what Sam endured,โ he said, during a televised news conference. Police did not share many details of the case, noting it remained under active investigation.
When asked if Nordquistโs torture and death were considered a hate crime, Capt. Kelly Swift, of the New York State Police Troop Eโs Bureau of Criminal Investigation, said police hadnโt ruled it out but stressed the investigation was continuing. Investigators also need to determine Nordquistโs relationship with the suspects as well as the suspectsโ relationships with one another.
Those arrested include Precious Arzuaga, 38, and Patrick Goodwin, 30, of Canandaigua, New York; Kyle Sage, 33, of Rochester, New York; Jennifer Quijano, 30, of Geneva, New York; and Emily Motyka, 19, of Lima, New York. All five were charged with second-degree murder after police on Feb. 13 searched a room at the Pattyโs Lodge motel in Canandaigua, the last place Nordquist was known to be staying.
All five were being held in police custody, pending arraignment. It was unclear whether any had obtained an attorney.
The investigation has so far revealed a โdeeply disturbing pattern of abuseโ that ultimately resulted in Nordquistโs death, said Swift, who called it โone of the most horrific crimesโ she has ever investigated in her 20-year law enforcement career.

