DONA ANA County, New Mexico (KTSM) – The second suspect in the kidnapping and attack on an off-duty Border Patrol Agent in early June has been extradited from El Paso to Doña Ana County.

Sergio Ivan Vanegas-Quinonez, 33, was booked into the Doña Ana County Detention Center on Monday, July 3, where he is being charged with Aggravated Assault and Aggravated Battery (May Cause Death or Great Bodily Harm). His bond totals $250,000.

Vanegas-Quinonez is accused along with Fernando Puga of kidnapping off-duty Border Patrol Agent Lorenzo Hernandez on June 6 as he was helping his mother close up her tamale stand on the corner of McCombs and Stan Roberts in Northeast El Paso.

The pair are accused of threatening Hernandez before forcing him to take them to several locations in his car.

Shortly after getting in the car, the men pulled out a gun and a machete on him. They drove the agent to a water canal in New Mexico and one of the men told him he was “going to do whatever they wanted him to do.” The agent says that he saw an opportunity to fight the two and tried to get the gun away from one of the men.

During the altercation, the second man began swinging the machete at the agent. During the attack he sustained serious cuts to his hands, shoulder and head. The agent had two fingers on his right hand that had to be partially amputated, a hemorrhage to his head, hand and arm fractures and multiple cuts to his chest. Court documents state that the agent had lost a significant amount of blood in the attack.

Court documents show that as the kidnapping and attack were underway, the agent’s mother, who had been left at her tamale stand in Northeast El Paso, repeatedly tried calling him and he didn’t answer. Eventually they used a Find my iPhone app and pinged the phone to an area off of I-10 near Mesquite. Court documents do not indicate whether investigators were able to locate his phone after the attack.

In a separate attack, a woman in Chaparral called for police around 9 p.m. in the 100 block of Amparo in Chaparral where Vanegas-Quinonez’s ex-girlfriend called to report that he’d been at her home with a gun. Her sister reported spotted an older-model red Nissan which was the same vehicle the off-duty agent drove and had been abducted in.

Court documents do not indicate whether the Border Patrol agent was in the car during the domestic disturbance in Chaparral or if he’d already been dumped in Las Cruces.

Doña Ana County Sheriff’s Deputies later located the agent’s car across the New Mexico state line on McCombs, near the location of the tamale stand he was taken from.

This article originally posted on ElPasoProud.com