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FORT WORTH, Texas (AP) —
An 18-year-old man accused of posing as a 12-year-old to enroll at a Hurst elementary school has been sentenced to 20 years in prison.
Ricardo Lugo was sentenced to prison Monday for indecency with a child, and received 10 years of probation for possession with intent to promote child pornography. Authorities say Lugo was enrolled in the 6th grade last year at Hurst Hills Elementary School, and his enrollment was supported by false documents presented to the school.
Twenty-nine-year-old Randy Ray Wesson, who Hurst police say posed as Lugo's father, pleaded guilty earlier to federal child pornography charges. Authorities say they discovered thousands of child pornography images in Wesson's home during a raid.
He is scheduled to be sentenced Dec. 3.
LIVINGSTON, Texas (AP) —
A Texas inmate set to be executed Tuesday acknowledges fatally shooting a Mexican man who was robbed of $8 and had just moved his family to Houston, but insists he doesn't deserve to die for the killing 17 years ago.
"This is not a capital case," Juan Martin Garcia, 35, told The Associated Press last month in a prison interview near Livingston. "I got railroaded since I didn't take the stand (to testify at trial)."
Evidence at his 2000 capital murder trial and testimony from a companion identified him as the ringleader of four men involved in the September 1998 shooting and robbery of Hugo Solano outside Solano's apartment complex. The slaying and a string of other violent crimes tied to Garcia convinced a jury he should be put to death.
His lethal injection to be held in Huntsville would be the 11th this year in Texas, which carries out capital punishment more than any other state. Three more executions are scheduled in upcoming weeks.
No late appeals seeking to block the execution were in the courts on Monday. The Texas Board of Pardons and Paroles rejected a clemency petition for Garcia on Friday.
Evidence showed Garcia, who was 18 at the time, had already carried out a carjacking with his two cousins and a third man during the early morning hours of Sept. 17, 1998, when they spotted Solano getting into his van to go to work. Solano's relatives said the 36-year-old, who did Christian missionary work in Guadalajara, Mexico, had moved with his wife to Houston weeks earlier so their children could be educated in the U.S.
Eleazar Mendoza, who pleaded guilty to aggravated robbery and was sentenced to 55 years in prison, testified that Garcia approached Solano and pointed a gun. Mendoza said Garcia, speaking in Spanish, ordered Solano to turn over any money he had and then shot him when he refused.
Garcia, who spoke to the AP on a phone inside a caged-in visitors' area outside the state's death row, blamed Mendoza for initiating the confrontation and Solano for resisting the demand for money.
"He punches me. First thing that came through my mind is that the dude is going to try to kill me," Garcia said. "He grabbed the gun with both of his hands and it discharged."
Solano was shot four times in the head and neck. Garcia said he didn't rob Solano.
"My dad used to beat me," Garcia said. "When that guy hit me, I was high on drugs and the first person I saw was my dad. So I kept shooting."
Court records show Garcia was in a car that was pulled over for a broken headlight 11 days after the killing. He was arrested for possession of a handgun when the weapon hit the floorboard as he was getting out of the car. He was released but arrested again later on an escape warrant as a juvenile fugitive when the gun was matched to Solano's slaying.
At Garcia's trial in Houston, authorities tied him to at least eight aggravated robberies and two attempted capital murders in the weeks before and after Solano's death. He also had an extensive juvenile record starting at age 12.
Another defendant, Raymond McBen, pleaded guilty to aggravated robbery and was sentenced to 30 years in prison. He was paroled a year ago.
The fourth man charged, Gabriel Morales, went to trial and was sentenced to life on a capital murder conviction.
AUSTIN, Texas (AP) —
Texas officials say nearly 400 of the state's 1,200 school districts are using a geography textbook that refers to slaves brought to America as "workers."
Houston mother Roni Dean-Burren said Monday she struggles to understand how that description was approved in her 15-year-old son's textbook. She posted her disbelief on social media last week. An ensuing uproar led the publisher to change the wording.
McGraw-Hill Education is one of the biggest textbook publishers in the U.S. It posted a Facebook message saying the company "can do better" and promised immediate revisions to digital copies. However, the textbook still remains in classrooms.
The Texas State Board of Education approved the book last year. The wording went unnoticed by opponents of the socially conservative board.