
Background: Guy Mustgray II (WHAM/YouTube). Inset: Michael DiCesare (GoFundMe).
A New York man is headed to prison for his role in a nearly 20-minute long beating on Christmas morning in 2023 that led to a man’s death.
Mustgray II, aged 34, has been sentenced to 20 years in prison after admitting to manslaughter in the case involving the death of Michael DiCesare. This makes Mustgray the second individual to face sentencing in connection to DiCesare’s tragic passing. In a separate incident last December, Brucewayne Beamon was handed a 25-year prison term following his guilty plea to first-degree manslaughter, as reported by the Monroe County Prosecutor’s Office.
For further insights from Law&Crime: ‘No amount of prison time will ever be enough’: Man given shorter sentence for the fatal assault of a woman’s young daughter and harm to her son after a confession is dismissed by the judge
According to prosecutors, the Rochester police were called to the intersection of Bay Street and Portland Avenue on December 25, 2023, where they discovered DiCesare, aged 50, with severe injuries. Despite being swiftly transported to the hospital by paramedics, he tragically passed away on February 4, 2024. Subsequent investigations revealed that Beamon and Mustgray had robbed and brutally assaulted him for a duration of approximately 18 minutes.
Assistant District Attorney Aliyah Fowler described the beating — which was caught on video — to local ABC affiliate WHAM.
“The 18 minutes kind of consisted of both defendants coming into contact with Michael that morning,” Fowler said. “It started out physical with just fists, and then later the box cutter that was kind of alluded to in court was used, where his face was slashed and he was stomped on. They left, they came back, they left and came back and continued over that 18-minute period — and ultimately ended with a trash can being dumped over his body while he was bleeding out on the sidewalk on Christmas morning.”
DiCesare’s sister Julie Arellano wrote in a letter to the judge before sentencing about the callousness of the beating and its aftermath. WHAM posted a copy of the letter.
“Mustgray left Mike, lifeless, under a pile of trash on the side of a freezing cold street on Christmas morning and did nothing to help him,” she wrote. “This mental picture will haunt my thoughts for the rest of my life.”
The victim’s family couldn’t get ahold of him so instead of celebrating Christmas, they spent the day looking for him. Two days later they learned he was listed under a “John Doe” in the neuro-intensive care unit.
Arellano described her brother who was four years her elder as “funny, lighthearted, giving, enthusiastic and caring.” He was a professional chef and owned restaurants, she said.
For his family, things will never be the same.
“The holiday season, which was once a time of joy for us through our entire lives, is now marked by grief, the memory of the shock of what Mike endured, imagining his pain and fear, this has left us all sick to our stomachs and in complete heartbreak,” Arellano wrote. “We are left with haunting images of the brutal way in which he was taken from us.”
Love true crime? Sign up for our newsletter, The Law&Crime Docket, to get the latest real-life crime stories delivered right to your inbox.