[Breaking news update, 11:30 a.m. ET]
Once “affluenza” teen Ethan Couch and his mother, Tonya Couch, are repatriated to the United States, both will be taken into custody, Tarrant County, Texas, Sheriff Dee Anderson said Tuesday morning. Ethan Couch will be put into the juvenile system and appear before a juvenile judge, and his mother will be arrested and face a charge of hindering apprehension.
Couch could face a maximum sentence of four months in the juvenile system, Tarrant County District Attorney Sharen Wilson said. Wilson said she wants to move Couch’s case to adult court, where the punishment could be more severe.
[Previous story, published at 10:55 a.m. ET]
The so-called “affluenza” teen Ethan Couch and his mother, who were being sought by Texas authorities, have been detained in the Pacific resort town town of Puerto Vallarta, Mexico.
Couch’s cell phone use might have led authorities to the pair.
Couch, 18, went missing earlier this month in Texas, where he was under probation for a 2013 drunk driving crash that killed four people and drew nationwide attention over his lawyers’ use of his privileged upbringing as part of their defense at trial.
The U.S. Marshals Service tracked Couch down using electronic surveillance, including tracking a cell phone believed to be linked to him, an official briefed on the investigation told CNN.
The Marshals Service alerted Mexican authorities, who detained Couch and his mother on Monday, the official said.
The two had been staying at a hotel in the Puerto Vallarta area, the source said.
Couch is wanted by authorities in Tarrant County, Texas, for allegedly violating his probation. His mother, Tonya, was listed by Texas authorities as a missing person after her son’s disappearance, and the authorities said they believed she was assisting him.
What comes next
Couch and his mother were turned over to Mexico’s immigration authorities because police couldn’t determine whether they were in the country legally, according to a statement from the Jalisco state prosecutor’s office.
The prosecutor’s office said the pair will be deported to the United States.
Couch is wanted by authorities in Tarrant County, Texas, for violating his probation. His mother, Tonya, was listed by Texas authorities as a missing person after her son’s disappearance.
Trial and sentence fueled debate
A warrant was issued in mid-December for Couch to be taken into custody after his probation officer couldn’t reach him. He appears to have dropped off the radar after a video emerged that allegedly showed him at a party where alcohol was being consumed, according to authorities.
Couch had been ordered to stay away from drugs and alcohol for the duration of his sentence probation.
His sudden disappearance reignited controversy over his case, which attracted widespread attention after a psychologist testified that Couch, who was 16 at the time of the crash, suffered from “affluenza,” describing him as a rich kid whose parents didn’t set limits for him.
His lawyers argued that his parents should share some of the blame for the crash.
Prosecutors had requested that Couch be sentenced to 20 years behind bars. The juvenile court judge’s decision to put him on probation for 10 years instead of sending him to prison outraged victims’ families
It also prompted many observers to question the term “affluenza,” which isn’t recognized as a medical condition in any formal sense.
G. Dick Miller, the psychologist who said the word at the trial, later said he wished he hadn’t used it. And Couch’s lawyers have criticized what they say is the news media’s narrow focus on the term in relation to his case.
Potential 10-year sentence for violating probation
The juvenile court judge also ordered Couch into long-term mental health treatment, at his family’s expense but away from his parents’ influence.
By December of this year, he was back living with his mother.
His disappearance and the recent video that may show him at a party have renewed criticism of the sentence he received.
“Nothing is going to make an impact on this guy unless there’s something severe or certain,” said Kevin McConnell, whose son was injured in the 2013 wreck.
District Attorney Sharen Wilson has said it “certainly looks like” Couch in the video of the party, but added that without further investigation, the video alone doesn’t prove he violated his probation.
Leaving the county and not meeting his probation officer, however, are definitely violations, she said.
Couch’s lawyers have said they know authorities are investigating whether their client violated his probation conditions, but they have declined to comment on whether he attended the party.
At the time of Couch’s conviction, prosecutors said he could be incarcerated for up to 10 years for violating his probation terms.