The court of Cold Spring -East Texas, Texas, was found in a prison four times after acknowledging the murder of five Honduras immigrants near Cleveland, Texas in April 2023 without the possibility of parole. He declared illegal foreigners who were expelled abroad. The Mexican people sued. In exchange for the ruling, he is convicted of guilty murder.
A petition, Prosecutor Todd Diron, Sanjacinto, said that the petition would solve all the incidents that came out of the incident on the night of April 28, 2023, when Francisco Torres Olopezu killed five neighbors. Dilon said that the petition guarantees that Olopeza will remain in detention of the Texas criminal judicial, until his death.
Related article:
Following the murder, Olopeza led the police in a five -day manhunt involving hundreds of states, regions, and federal law.
Bright Bart Texas reported on the case extensively and was in court in August 2023 when Olopezu was innocent.
The victims of the murder were previously identified by the Sanjacint County Sheriff Office.
- Julisa Morina Rivera, 31 years old
- Sonia, Argentina and Guzman, 25 years old
- Diana Velazquez Alvarad, 21 years old
- Jose Jonathan Casales, 18 years old
- Daniel Enrique Laso, 9 years old
US Immigration Customs Authorities said to Bright Bart News in 2023 that Olopeza was excluded four times from the United States.
Immigrant judge first ordered Francisco Olopeso Perez Torres (38) to remove the United States on March 19, 2009. The Ice Execution and Removal Operation Office forced immigration to Mexico late a month.
After this, Olopezo was illegally re -entered in the United States and was deleted again in September 2009. He was deleted twice in January 2012 and July 2016.
In January 2012, the Texas Court in Montgomery County (a neighbor of Sanjacinto County, where the murder was held), was convicted that the Mexican people were driving while they were drunk. The court declared a prison period that was not reported.
Both the victim and the defendant's family were in court.
In a statement of the victims who shed tears, Olopeza stared at the speaker without expression. When BREITBART TEXAS asked the defense team about this after hearing, lawyer Anthony OSSO said that all clients did not express their emotions between these statements. When Olopeza pressed whether he had repented in the killing, Osso stated: He never lives in a life he lived in a free world. “
Osso said, “Yes, he regrets. There is a nine -year -old boy who was shot. He regretted.
Diron explains the judicial agreement process and states:
The judicial transaction of life without parole was expanded only after several meetings of the victims of Olopeza and the prosecutor's family. These conferences were held in Spanish, answered the questions of the whole family, and did not conclude until they were able to give their opinions on the preliminary members of the regional prosecutor's office. Eventually, the consensus was a petition for life without parole, which guarantees the results of his actions until Olopezu dies, and saves the trial trauma and risk. Follow -up meetings were also held in Spanish, confirming that this was a legitimate and desirable result.
The forecast cost of a single death murder trial would have exceeded 400 % of the annual budget for lawyers appointed by the court. In addition, the trial has a guarantee, and the fiscal tension of the appeal will continue after the trial.
In the 411th District Court, Judge Albert McKaig accepted the judicial agreement and sentenced Francisco Torres Orepes to spend his life in prison without the possibility of parole.
“Olopeza never breathe in another breath of free air for the rest of his life, and Dyron does not have to worry that he is a threat to its citizens.” The written statement was concluded.
At a press conference following the hearing, Dilion told the reporters that his family had the opportunity to sleep without worrying that Olopes would be free again. “The biggest thing for them is the certainty of what will happen,” Dilon told reporters. “They don't need to guess. They don't have to worry about what will happen.”
“They know they are in prison until they die,” continued the local prosecutor. “That is its own death sentence, that he dies in prison.”
Bob Price BREITBART TEXAS-BORDER team associate editor and senior news contributor. He is an original member of the Bright Bart Texas team. Price is a regular panelist of Fox 26 Houston What are your points? Sunday morning talk show. He is also the president Blue Wonder Gun Care Products。

