US News

LI SLAY MYSTERY

Cops are investigating whether two Bronx immigrants were executed in former Jet linebacker Jonathan Vilma’s million-dollar Long Island condo before their bodies were dumped in Brooklyn and Queens, sources said yesterday.

Neighbors called cops Thursday night after hearing two shots fired in the unit — part of the posh, gated Eagle Chase complex in Woodbury –after five men drove up in a car and a Ford F- 150 truck.

The men, including one who iden tified himself as Vilma’s cousin, had everything they needed to enter the 99-unit luxury compound — the password, the electronic gate opener and the keys to Vilma’s home, said a condo-board member who asked to remain anonymous.

The men did not stay long, leav ing after backing the truck into the garage of the home, closing the ga rage door and apparently loading something into the trunk, the board member said.

Police are looking for the man who claimed to be Vilma’s cousin.

Vilma, who now plays for the New Orleans Saints and is trying to sell the condo, is not believed to be a target of the investigation, but cops want to talk to him about who might have been using the home, according to law-enforcement sources.

Shortly after midnight Thursday, two men tossed the body of a man believed to be one of the victims, identified by police sources as Bronx cabby Sekou Sakor, 31, into Jamaica Bay from the Paerdegat Bridge in Canarsie. He had been shot once in the head.

Several hours later, cops found the body of a man thought to be the second victim, identified as Ansu Keita, 32, also of The Bronx, in a weed-strewn lot in South Ozone Park. He, too, died of a single gunshot to the head.

Relatives said the men, immigrants from Liberia, were good friends. Law-enforcement sources said they may have been part of a an Internet money scam.

A resident of a condo that adjoins Vilma’s said he heard two shots fired five seconds apart on Thursday night.

One bullet passed through the headboard in his mother’s bedroom, he said.

“You just don’t expect anything like this to happen in a place like this,” he said. “This could have killed my mother.”

Condos at the posh complex sell for $800,000 to $1.4 million. Vilma’s home has been vacant for a year, the condo board’s president said.

The linebacker could not be reached for comment.

Funeral services for Sakor, who leaves behind a 3-year-old son, Arrasane, were held yesterday.

“He was a hardworking guy. He loved his son dearly. I felt I was dead, too, when I found out,” said Mawa Kamara, 27, who described herself as Sakor’s best friend. She said he “never associated with the wrong” crowd.

His sister, Mariana Sakor, who lives in Philadelphia, said, “I’m in pain right now. I cannot talk.”

Additional reporting by Brigitte Williams-James and Andy Geller

selim.algar@nypost.com