SAN ANTONIO — A father and son in Texas have been charged in the killings of an 18-year-old pregnant woman who disappeared before Christmas and her boyfriend.
Authorities said the pregnant woman and her boyfriend were fatally shot in the head before their bodies were moved and discovered days later in a car.
The arrests Wednesday night came more than a week after the bodies of Savanah Nicole Soto, 18, and Matthew Guerra, 22, were found in the parking lot of a San Antonio apartment complex, a crime scene that the city’s police chief originally described as very, very perplexing.
San Antonio police Sgt. Washington Moscoso told reporters that their deaths appeared to be the result of a drug deal, but did not elaborate.
These two individuals are the only suspects that we were looking for, he said.
Police said Christopher Preciado, 19, was charged with capital murder and his father, Ramon Preciado, 53, was charged with abuse of a corpse for allegedly helping to move the bodies.
As he was placed in a patrol car late Wednesday night, Ramon Preciado was asked by reporters whether he had remorse.
Aren’t you sorry for lying about what you’re saying? You don’t even know what’s going on. You just make stuff up like always, Preciado said.
Moscoso said prosecutors may pursue more charges against the men, whom he described as the only suspects in the killings.
Bexar County District Attorney Joe Gonzales on Thursday commended police for the arrests and said his office would make charging decisions once they received the complete investigation files. Gonzales said in a statement that if Preciado is indicted for capital murder, his staff would consider whether to pursue the death penalty.
The county medical examiner’s office had ruled both deaths homicides caused by gunshot wounds to the head.
Soto’s family has said her baby was overdue and that she had been scheduled to be induced when she went missing the weekend before Christmas. Moscoso said investigators now believe the couple were killed on Dec. 21, meaning they had been dead for several days before police found them in Guerra’s car the day after Christmas.
The killings have drawn attention beyond Texas and Moscoso said misinformation about the case had taken off on social media.
That vehicle led police to a house where they found the father and son. He said Ramon Preciado answered the door and cooperated with the investigation.
He knew why the police were there, Moscoso said.
Soto had been scheduled to have labor induced the weekend before Christmas, her family told KENS-TV. But her mother said she got no answer when she knocked on the door of Soto’s apartment in the suburb of Leon Valley.
The family spent Christmas night searching the area and Leon Valley police issued a missing person alert.