Agents arrest Jose Luis Mendoza-Gonzalez, 52, a Mexican national living in Waukegan, at a market in Chicago in July after he was released from custody in April when he was charged with concealing the body of Megan Bos, 37, of Antioch, (inset) in a trash can. | Provided Photos

Prosecutors have upgraded charges against a Mexican national accused of dumping the body of missing Antioch woman Megan Bos in Waukegan, saying her death was by “homicidal means.”

A grand jury returned an indictment in Lake County Circuit Court charging Jose Luis Mendoza-Gonzalez, 52, of Waukegan, with one count of concealment of a homicidal death, according to documents obtained Friday by Lake and McHenry County Scanner.

Mendoza-Gonzalez also faces previously filed charges of abuse of a corpse, two counts of concealing the death of a person and obstructing justice.

A grand jury indictment said Mendoza-Gonzalez knowingly concealed the death of Megan Bos, 37, of Antioch, while having knowledge that she had died by homicidal means, when he placed her body in a garbage can and covered the can on or about February 19, 2025.

Megan Bos was reported missing to the Antioch Police Department on March 9 after she was last heard from on February 17.

Her body was discovered bleached, decomposed, wrapped in a blanket and in a trash can at a home in the 700 block of Yeoman Street in Waukegan on April 10.

Mendoza-Gonzalez, a Mexican national, told detectives at the time of his April arrest that Bos had come over to his residence on the evening of February 19 and visited with him.

A large police investigation was conducted into the death of Megan Bos, 37, of Antioch, (inset right) as officers blocked off a house in the 700 block of Yeoman Street in Waukegan with crime scene tape on April 10. Bos had been missing for nearly two months before being found. Jose Mendoza-Gonzalez, 52, of Waukegan, (inset left) was arrested in connection with her death. | Background Photo: Marco Montoya; Insets: Provided

He said that Bos snorted unknown drugs and asked if she could hang out in his basement, which he agreed to let her do.

Mendoza-Gonzalez said he returned and believed the woman had overdosed and was deceased.

He reported that he was scared that he was going to be in trouble so he left her in the basement for a few days before moving her to the garbage can in his yard.

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Mendoza-Gonzalez allegedly wrapped Bos’ body, which was bleached, in a blanket before placing it in the garbage can.

She remained there for nearly two months until being located on April 10.

Mendoza-Gonzalez also admitted to breaking Bos’ phone and throwing it into a trash can.

An autopsy on Bos performed by the coroner’s office showed no signs of trauma or a struggle.

Lake County Chief Deputy Coroner Steve Newton told Lake and McHenry County Scanner on Friday that her cause and manner of death remain undetermined, despite the state’s attorney’s office declaration of it being a homicidal death.

Police investigate after the partially decomposed body of Antioch resident Megan Bos was discovered in a garbage can in the rear of a home in the 700 block of Yeoman Street in Waukegan on April 10 after the woman had been missing for nearly two months. A 52-year-old man was charged in connection with her death. | Photo: Marco Montoya

Lake County Assistant State’s Attorney Jeffrey Facklam said this week that the autopsy report from the coroner’s office indicated Bos had a potentially lethal amount of controlled substances in her liver tissue at the time of her death.

The report indicated recent and potentially deadly fentanyl, cocaine and probable heroin use.

A forensic pathologist could not fully rule out a strangulation death due to the decomposition of her body.

“Regardless of the undetermined finding of the cause of death, charges of concealment of a homicidal death are now appropriate. The fact that the coroner labeled Megan’s death as undetermined does not preclude a charge of concealment of a homicidal death,” Facklam said.

“The autopsy report detailing the toxicology results must be read in conjunction with other facts of the case, including defendant’s statements that he observed Megan consume drugs and shortly thereafter, she died, as well as his statement that she was already dead when he placed her in the garbage bin,” the prosecutor said.

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When Mendoza-Gonzalez was initially charged, he was released from custody following a First Appearance Court hearing on April 12, which a judge was required to do because of state law under the SAFE-T Act.

All of the initial charges against Mendoza-Gonzalez were Class 4 felonies but none of them were detainable offenses under the cashless bail law, so prosecutors could not file a petition to have him held pending trial.

Police investigate after the partially decomposed body of Antioch resident Megan Bos was discovered in a garbage can in the rear of a home in the 700 block of Yeoman Street in Waukegan on April 10 after the woman had been missing for nearly two months. A 52-year-old man was charged in connection with her death. | Photo: Marco Montoya

The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) said agents arrested Mendoza-Gonzalez, who is in the country illegally, in July at a market in Chicago, leading to him being held in ICE custody.

The Lake County State’s Attorney’s Office previously said it would seek to have Mendoza-Gonzalez held locally.

“As we have told the family, we believe that a criminal trial and sentencing is more appropriate than deportation procedures,” the state’s attorney’s office said in a statement in July.

Mendoza-Gonzalez is charged with several felonies, which can result in potential consecutive prison sentences upon a conviction.

“As people know, deportation to another country does not lead to prison in that country. If he were to agree to deportation, he could be free in days. We are hopeful that he will be brought to court so that [he] can be held fully accountable for his actions,” the state’s attorney’s office said.

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The newest charge against Mendoza-Gonzalez is a detainable offense based on willful flight and prosecutors have filed a petition to detain Mendoza-Gonzalez in the Lake County Jail once he is processed on the new charge, court records show.

The release of Mendoza-Gonzalez in April prompted local leaders to be outraged at the matter.

Antioch Mayor Scott Gartner spoke out and called for immediate reforms to the Illinois SAFE-T Act to restore judicial discretion and refocus Illinois’ criminal justice system on “public safety and human decency.”

Illinois State Representative Tom Weber (R-Fox Lake) spoke in May and called for reforms to the Illinois SAFE-T Act after a suspect was charged and released pending trial in connection with concealing the death of Megan Bos (inset), whose body was found in a garbage can in Waukegan on April 10 after she was reported missing from Antioch in March. | Provided Photos

“We have lost all common sense when it comes to enforcing law and order,” Gartner said.

“When the SAFE-T Act was being debated, there were voices sounding the alarm about what could happen if it were to become law,” Gartner said.

Prosecutors said that while Mendoza-Gonzalez was on pre-trial release, he violated his 24-hour curfew by traveling to Chicago.

Mendoza-Gonzalez appeared in front of an immigration judge in September and indicated his desire to voluntarily be deported from the United States back to Mexico, which prosecutors worry will allow him not to face the pending criminal charges.

Mendoza-Gonzalez remains held by the Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) at the Clay County, Indiana Justice Center as of Friday.

Lake County Judge Victoria A. Rossetti issued a failure to appear arrest warrant for Mendoza-Gonzalez on Thursday, court records show.

Rossetti scheduled a case management hearing for Wednesday and a jury trial for January 26. A jury trial was previously set for November 10.