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Two more suspects held in McDonald’s beating as prosecutors say Brooklyn attack was planned for months

  • Tilani Marshall, 17, a suspect in the McDonald's beatdown, is...

    Sam Costanza for New York Daily News

    Tilani Marshall, 17, a suspect in the McDonald's beatdown, is marched out of the 70th Precinct Friday night. She was awaiting arraignment on robbery and gang assault charges.

  • A suspect in the near-fatal beating of a teenage girl...

    Andrew Hinderaker for New York Daily News

    A suspect in the near-fatal beating of a teenage girl at a Brooklyn McDonald's is led from the 70th Precinct station house, Thursday, March 12, 2015, in Brooklyn, NY.(Andrew Hinderaker for New York Daily News)Suspect ID'ed by the reporter as Aniah Ferguson. *** Local Caption *** Checked with reporter Laura Bult who verified by phone the individual is Aniah Ferguson.

  • One day after media attention surrounding a gang fight in...

    Jeff Bachner for New York Daily News

    One day after media attention surrounding a gang fight in this McDonalds on Flatbush Avenue brought heavy NYPD presence, the media are gone and there are no police officers in sight, Thursday, March 12, 2015, Brooklyn, NY. (Jeff Bachner for New York Daily News)

  • Aniah Ferguson is removed by NYPD detectives from the 70th...

    Sam Costanza/for New York Daily News

    Aniah Ferguson is removed by NYPD detectives from the 70th precinct to be transfered to Brooklyn Central Booking related to the attack on another girl in a Brooklyn McDonald's. This picture was made 8:30pm on 3/12/15.

  • Another teen suspect, not yet identified by police, is escorted...

    Jeff Bachner for New York Daily News

    Another teen suspect, not yet identified by police, is escorted with their hands cuffed.

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Beatdown and then wheels up.

The bra-baring ringleader of the vicious McDonald’s attack was behind bars at Rikers Island held on $500,000 bond, as authorities grabbed a second teen suspect trying to flee the country on a plane bound for Jamaica.

The 15-year-old suspect was apprehended in Atlanta just moments away from flying off to the Caribbean. Atlanta authorities had been alerted to the brute’s travel plans and pulled her off the plane, officials said.

Of the four other girls implicated in the brawl, two other girls were awaiting arraignment in Brooklyn Friday — and two others were still on the lam.

“It appears they have been lying low,” a high-ranking police source said of the remaining suspects. “We couldn’t find them at home or school.”

One of the two girls being held was identified as 17-year-old Tilani Marshall of Midwood. The other, a 15-year-old, was not named by police. Both teens were marched from the 70th Precinct stationhouse with their hands cuffed just after midnight and were awaiting arraignment on robbery and gang assault charges.

EDITORIAL: DE BLASIO THE CULTURAL WARRIOR NEEDED IN WAKE OF BRUTAL MCDONALD’S MELEE

Neither spoke as they tried to cover their faces from the cameras. One, wearing jeans and Uggs, buried her nose in her grey zip-up sweatshirt. The other pulled her purple hood over her head and kept her head down.

Word of the additional arrests came hours after the Daily News obtained stunning details of 16-year-old Aniah Ferguson’s confession to cops.

Another teen suspect, not yet identified by police, is escorted with their hands cuffed.
Another teen suspect, not yet identified by police, is escorted with their hands cuffed.

Ferguson, smiling for the cameras after her arrest on Thursday, told investigators she had been hunting her prey since January because the victim had “done something to a very close friend,” a source said.

She was hit with felony gang assault and robbery charges which could land her in prison for up to 25 years. The troubled teen with a history of violence faced the court alone, without support from friends or family. She said nothing when Brooklyn Criminal Court Judge Joy Campanelli sent her to jail on a stunning half-million dollar bond.

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But the teen hell-raiser ran her mouth to detectives after getting picked up Thursday morning.

Ferguson’s exhaustive confession — summarized by a source — portrays a group of girls bent on exacting revenge.

Six girls were hanging out at one of their homes Monday when an unidentified male called to tell them that victim Ariana Taylor, 15, was inside a nearby McDonald’s.

HAMILL: NO WINNERS IN THE ‘VILE’ MCDONALD’S FIGHT

Since there are two of the fast food joints in the area, the girls split up.

Ferguson and at least one of her pals found Taylor at the Flatbush Ave. eatery.

They told a girl inside the McDonald’s with Taylor that the pint-sized Erasmus Hall High School freshman was going to “get it.”

They warned the girl that “they will jump (her) if she got involved.”

Taylor was getting ready to leave, so Ferguson called a friend and told her to “hurry up.”

Once the other friend showed up, they approached Taylor and “put the beats on her,” the source said.

Minutes went by before an adult intervened. Several onlookers snapped photos and took video as Taylor was punched, kicked, pulled and stomped by a half-dozen girls.

The three-minute attack — caught on video and shared across the globe — was denounced by a parade of pols and police officials.

Some witnesses can be heard in the video cheering on the violence.

It wasn’t until Taylor was limp on the floor, with Ferguson stomping on her head, that a couple of customers stepped between them.

Ferguson’s hoodie came off amid the melee. But she kept punching and kicking Taylor while wearing only a purple bra.

Even after Taylor was lying motionless , Ferguson stomped her repeatedly because she was “still mad” about what the victim had done to her friend. A different police source said the clash was tied to a shooting, but didn’t provide details.

Ferguson walked out of the McDonald’s with Taylor’s coat, makeup bag and phone — and tossed them in the garbage, authorities said.

RELATED: SUSPECT IS MEMBER OF YOUNG SAVAGES GANG, OFFICIALS SAY

Brooklyn Borough President Eric Adams is offering a $1,000 reward — cash he is putting up personally — for information leading to the arrest of the other suspects.

At Ferguson’s Friday arraignment, prosecutor Leila Rosini emphasized the brutality of the attack.

“As the victim lies lifeless, she continues to kick her,” Rosini said.

The prosecutor told the judge that Ferguson, who has a 1-year-old daughter and a long rap sheet, belongs to the Young Savages gang.

The gang is an offshoot of Folk Nation, a violent group known to carry out credit card scams.

Defense lawyer Sarah O’Leary pleaded for leniency from the judge, saying that Ferguson was trying to turn her life around.

“She was making some efforts to better things in her life,” said O’Leary.

O’Leary said the video “speaks for itself,” but claimed Taylor didn’t sustain serious injuries in the mob-style assault. The victim suffered a concussion and multiple bruises and contusions on her body, court records show.

A police source said Ferguson was targeting Taylor because of her involvement in a previous shooting. No other details were available Friday.

Taylor, who has links to the 30 Crips gang and has been bragging about her newfound fame on social media, has not been fully cooperative with police, sources said.

But investigators were still able to quickly identify her attackers.

One of the 15-year-old suspects surrendered Friday at the 70th Precinct stationhouse with her mother at her side.

The other was joined by her lawyer when she was taken into custody, sources said. The suspects were not immediately identified.

Ferguson was well-known to cops.

The Brooklyn teen has been arrested six times since she turned 16 last July. She was busted on Feb. 3 for stabbing her brother in the arm with a knife. Four months earlier, on Oct. 14, 2014, she was charged with assault for beating up her 64-year-old grandmother.

At the time of Ferguson’s arrest, she had four outstanding warrants, prosecutors said.

Neighbors described her as a deeply troubled ticking time bomb.

Even Ferguson’s own mother has refused to come to her defense.

“I didn’t raise her like this,” she told The News Thursday. “I’m not sure why she did it.”

With Kerry Burke, Terence Cullen

rschapiro@nydailynews.com