HOUSTON — One of the men charged in the death of 12-year-old Jocelyn Nungaray appeared before a Houston judge Monday morning.
Franklin Jose Peña Ramos, 26, is charged with capital murder in Jocelyn’s death. The judge set his bond at $10 million.
Johan Jose Rangel Martinez, 22, is also charged with capital murder in the case. He is scheduled to make his first court appearance later this week.
Houston Mayor John Whitmire has already weighed in on the topic of bonds.
“I want to reach out to the court system, the justice system, we are going to be watching you,” Whitmire said after the arrests were announced. “We have filed charges. If there is any circumstance where you deny bail, this is it.”
At a news conference, District Attorney Kim Ogg said Peña and Martinez aren’t eligible for the death penalty but that could change if the evidence shows that Jocelyn was kidnapped or raped.
“Both underlying offenses would make this capital murder and these individuals death penalty eligible,” Ogg explained. “Make no mistake, this is a horrific crime. And when we take charges, we do it based on the evidence we have at the moment.”
If the charges are upgraded, Ogg said they will ask that both men be held without bond.
Jocelyn’s mother, Alexis Nungaray, also spoke at the news conference. She thanked the community for the outpouring of support and said she’s trying to focus on the positive memories of Jocelyn.
“Her dorkiness, her quirkiness. She definitely made people laugh,” Alexis said. “She had such a bright future ahead of her and I knew she was going to go very far. And, you know, these, these monsters took that opportunity from her, from our family.”
Warning: Some details are graphic
How Houston police identified accused killers of 12-year-old girl
Both men were arrested last Thursday in their north Houston apartment, not far from where Jocelyn’s body was found in a north Houston creek.
Acting Houston Police Chief Larry Satterwhite said the department worked around the clock to identify the killers and begin the process of finding justice for Jocelyn and her family.
“Their hard work paid off,” Satterwhite said.
Investigators used surveillance cameras to track the movements of Martinez and Ramos before and after Jocelyn was strangled and dumped in the creek. They said the suspects ate at a restaurant on Northborough late Sunday and left on foot. They met Jocelyn near Kuykendahl Road and the three walked to a nearby convenience store. They left the store and walked to the bridge on West Rankin Road where Jocelyn was killed.
According to court documents, they lured Jocelyn under the bridge, where they stayed for two hours. Court records say the men took off her pants, tied her up, killed her and threw her body into the bayou.
Peña and Martinez were arrested early Thursday morning at the Canfield Lakes apartments on Northborough Drive where they lived together.
Surveillance cameras showed Jocelyn Dungaray with suspects
The arrests came a day after new surveillance photos obtained by KHOU 11 News showed Jocelyn with one of the men. In one photo, they were walking into the 7-Eleven convenience store. In the other, they were in a parking lot and Jocelyn was looking at her phone and the taller man was walking beside her.
Earlier this week, Houston Mayor John Whitmire said Jocelyn was at a convenience store and was talking to her 13-year-old boyfriend on the phone after she snuck out of her family’s apartment late Sunday. The boyfriend told police that he could hear Jocelyn talking with two grown-ups.
Hours later, Jocelyn was found in shallow water below the bridge on West Rankin Road near I-45. She’d been strangled and Whitmire said she was also raped. HPD hasn’t confirmed that.
At Thursday’s news conference, the mayor said this case was personal.
“As the mayor, as a grandfather and a father, it doesn’t get any worse,” Whitmire said.
He credited HPD’s tireless efforts as they combined “old-fashioned police work with new technology” to identify the suspects.
Whitmire also credited the community, area businesses and the media as everyone came together for Jocelyn and her family. Now that the accused killers are in custody, Whitmire said it’s up to the courts to do their job.
Satterwhite said they still want to hear from possible witnesses as they work to build a solid case against Martinez and Ramos.
‘It could have been my child’
Neighbors at the complex where the Peña and Martinez lived said HPD showed up around 4 a.m. Thursday and used a loudspeaker to order the men to come out. When they didn’t, officers approached the second-floor apartment with weapons drawn.
A neighbor said one of the guys tried to jump off the balcony to get away but HPD had the place surrounded and they quickly grabbed him.
Witnesses gave us images showing the suspects being questioned.
KHOU 11 cameras were at the complex when HPD forensic investigators removed boxes of evidence from the apartment.
One woman who lives in the complex with her 14-year-old daughter was shaken up by the fact the accused killers lived so close.
“It could have been my child, you know, it’s very emotional,” she told us.
The woman, who asked us not to use her name, said Peña and Martinez moved in a few weeks ago.
“What did y’all move to our complex for? What were you thinking about? This was a 12-year-old girl, these are grown men,” she said.
Residents told us that Ramos and Martinez often sat on their balcony and yelled things at women who passed by.
ICE: Men charged with capital murder entered US illegally
According to U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, Peña Ramos and Martinez Rangel, “illegally entered the U.S. without inspection, parole or admission by a U.S. immigration officer on an unknown date and at an unknown location.”
On March 14, Martinez was taken into U.S. Border Patrol custody near El Paso. That same day he was released on an order of recognizance with a notice to appear, the statement said.
Peña was also taken into custody by the U.S. Border Patrol on May 28 near El Paso. He was also released on an order of recognizance with a notice to appear the same day he was apprehended.