29 December 2015

'Affluenza' teen detained in Mexico


CNN has an article by Evan Perez about yet another idiot criminal:
Mexican authorities have detained so-called "affluenza" teen Ethan Couch (photo) and his mother near the popular Mexican beach resort town of Puerto Vallarta, officials briefed on the matter told CNN.
Couch, now eighteen, went missing earlier this month, two years after he made national news when he was sentenced to probation for a drunken driving crash that killed four people. Couch is expected to be turned over to the US Marshals Service, who have spent weeks searching for him. A spokesman for the service declined to comment.
He is wanted by authorities in Tarrant County in Texas, for allegedly violating probation. His mother was listed by Texas authorities as a missing person after their disappearance, and the authorities said they believe she was assisting her son.
A warrant had been issued for the teen to be taken into custody after his probation officer couldn't reach him earlier this month. His apparent disappearance came after a video allegedly showed him at a party where alcohol was being consumed, authorities said.
Word of the search for Couch has reignited controversy over the case, which drew widespread attention after a psychologist testified that Couch, who was sixteen at the time, suffered from "affluenza", describing him as a rich kid whose parents didn't set limits for him.
Prosecutors had requested that Couch be sentenced to twenty years behind bars. The judge's decision to give him probation instead of jail time was controversial at the time, and more so after the recent video appeared to show the teen playing a drinking game at a party.
District Attorney Sharen Wilson has said it "certainly looks like him" in the video, but added that, without further investigation, the video alone did not prove he violated his probation. But leaving the county and not meeting his probation officer are violations, she said.
When asked to confirm Couch's attendance at the event, his attorneys, Scott Brown and William Reagan Wynn, told CNN's sister network HLN they knew authorities were investigating whether their client violated his probation conditions. "It would not be prudent for us to make any further statement on Ethan's behalf until the investigations are concluded and it is determined what, if any, action will be taken against him," the lawyers added. At the time of his conviction, prosecutors said Couch could be incarcerated up to ten years for violating his probation terms.
Rico says he knows that 'idiot criminal' is redundant, but what else are you gonna call 'em?

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