The police of Garland, Texas were looking for a 16-year-old teenager for his alleged connection to two murders recorded on January 14, 2024. They offered his identity and in addition, on Tuesday, January 23, they released the photo to ask citizens to to stop.

Within 72 hours, authorities reported that the young man had been arrested. This is Amancio Anton Noriz. Once again, images of the arrested man were captured by the news and social networks in the United States.

Amancio will be brought to trial on suspicion of causing the violent deaths of Alan Chávez, 18, and Rubén Santibáñez-Arzola, 17.

The teen’s arrest came about thanks to the work of Mexican authorities. They captured him near Monterrey, Nuevo León, Telemundo 39 reported on Friday, January 26.

Amancio, the news network added, “was deported from Mexico and taken by U.S. Marshals to the city of Laredo, Texas, and remains held in a Webb County jail.”

A mother is suing the United States for $100 million for the murder of her autistic daughter

The double murder the teen is accused of

Rubén Santibáñez-Arzola and Alan Chávez were very good friends. Detectives indicated they were from the town of Wylie, Texas, and until mid-week it was not clear to authorities what led them to Garland, 20 minutes from Wylie.

On Sunday the 14th of this month, around 3:15 in the afternoon, Garland officers received a call alerting them to a shooting in the 2300 block of West Buckingham Road,” Telemundo 39 reported.

When the committees arrived, they found the two young people who had been shot dead.

Through surveillance video, Univision reported, detectives determined that Alan and Rubén had met another boy in a parking lot. “That third young man was Amancio.”

“At one point,” investigators explained, “the encounter appeared to become aggressive and at that point Noriz apparently shot the other two teens and fled in a vehicle.”

“Hello, I am the murderer of the brothers”: the alleged criminal who beat three elderly people to death over a debt turned himself in

The premonition of the mother of one of the victims of Garland, Texas

Martha Soto, mother of Alan Chávez, is devastated. She still can’t believe her ‘baby’ was murdered.

“I demand justice and that they answer me.” About his son and “his little friend Rubén,” he told Univision, “They were good kids.”

He said his son left his house after noon on Sunday. The woman said she had a premonition around 3 p.m.

Alan did not return and neither he nor Rubén answered their cell phones. Marta Soto, extremely distraught, said to her other two children, “Something is happening.”

He had a feeling: “It was a pressure in my chest telling me that something was happening to my baby, that something was being done to him, that they were ending his life,” he described to Univisión.

The most painful call came from Alan’s brother. They told him about the shooting.

“I asked God that it wasn’t my child, that it wasn’t him, but it was him… it was him, they killed him, they took his life,” the mother said.

Alan lived in Garland and still frequented a barbershop in that city; I also went to eat. Near a taqueria he was visiting, he fell fatally wounded. A few meters away, his friend Soto remembered for Univisión.

The parent says he does not recognize the suspect, Amancio. Through tears, clinging to her son’s portrait, she told Telemundo 39: “They destroyed our lives.” (JO)