logo
Memorial set this week for man killed in apparent road rage attack

Memorial set this week for man killed in apparent road rage attack

Yahoo01-04-2025

Editor's note: This video is from a March 18 press conference about Edward Espino's homicide.
AUSTIN (KXAN) — As the Austin Police Department continues to search for whoever shot and killed 47-year-old Edward Espino in an apparent road rage incident earlier this month, his friends and family have organized a memorial event for him, set to take place later this week.
Espino's close friend and roommate, Steven Slyter, described Espino as kind, hard-working and fun. Slyer said the last thing Espino did before he died was give a friend a ride home from a South by Southwest (SXSW) event instead of her having to take an Uber.
'So the last thing he did before he died was a favor,' Slyter said.
Police found Espino dead in his car – a black Mitsubishi Mirage – on Interstate 35 North just north of Braker Lane, around 3:30 a.m. on Sunday, March 16. Investigators initially responded to what was reported as a crash with the Mirage and a Ford Bronco, but then found Espino with gunshot wounds. Police do not believe the driver of the Bronco had anything to do with the homicide.
'Based on our preliminary investigation, we believe road rage was involved,' APD said.
Espino was part of the Austin Gay Men's Chorus, and the group will sing at his memorial event on Wednesday, Slyter said. The event is set for 7 p.m. at St. John's United Methodist Church on Allandale Road.
APD is now seeking community help for any information related to the homicide that could further the investigation. Anyone with information should contact APD at 512-974-TIPS. A reward of up to $1,000 is possible for information leading to an arrest.
KXAN will update this story with more details about who Espino was as a person. Check back for updates.
Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Former cop mom slams policies that let illegal alien allegedly strike son in hit-and-run: ‘A lot of problems'
Former cop mom slams policies that let illegal alien allegedly strike son in hit-and-run: ‘A lot of problems'

Yahoo

time11 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Former cop mom slams policies that let illegal alien allegedly strike son in hit-and-run: ‘A lot of problems'

A former police officer is pleading for the illegal immigrant who nearly killed her son in a hit-and-run on his 21st birthday to stop hiding and own up to his crime. "I keep saying it doesn't go back to if you're legal or illegal or any of that stuff. It's not a race thing. It is not any of that. It's called being a decent human being," Sheena Carach, the mother of Zach Carach, who is still hospitalized, told Fox News Digital. "It's about right and wrong. And if you hit someone, you stop. I mean, that's just what you do. It's inhumane not to stop. I don't care who you are. That makes you a monster." Sheena Carach's life was altered May 19 while she and her family were visiting Nashville from Florida to celebrate her son's 21st birthday. After brunch and touring Music City, she said her son was struck by a speeding car while he was attempting to cross a street, and the driver sped away. Manhunt Underway For Illegal Immigrant Wanted In Serious Nashville Hit-and-run "I can say in that moment, my heart left my body," Carach recalled. "I mean, I can clearly see myself running in the video. I know that happened. I was there, but I don't know how I was even breathing because I immediately thought I had just saw my child be killed. I thought I had lost my child. I ran to him, and I just started praying." Read On The Fox News App Weeks after his near-death encounter, Nashville police announced the suspect wanted in the case was Tony Lopez-Infante, 32, an illegal immigrant from Venezuela who remains at large. WATCH: Video shows hit-and-run crash involving illegal suspect in Nashville A spokesperson for U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) confirmed that Lopez-Infante entered the U.S. illegally in August 2023 and "has a final order of removal." Along with the hit-and-run, police noted that Lopez-Infante has several outstanding warrants, including one in Williamson County for a probation violation for a theft arrest. Police said the vehicle involved in the accident, a Mitsubishi Mirage, was returned by Lopez-Infante, with front-end damage, to a rental business in Mt. Juliet May 19. Homeland Security shared a post on X, stating, "The Biden Administration released this illegal alien into our country in 2023. "This crime was preventable and is the direct result of open border policies that prioritized illegal aliens over the safety of American citizens." "Officers located the car there the next day, on May 20. Investigation resulted in Lopez-Infante of Venezuela being identified as the hit-and-run driver," police said. Carach said her son would "never have gotten hit" if Lopez-Infante would "not have been allowed to rent a vehicle illegally." "He rented a car in February of this year that he had until he hit my son with no driver's license, with no insurance, without a major credit card on file. I mean, I wouldn't be able to walk into a business and do that," she said, after she ran her own investigation into her son's near-fatal crash. "I have to be 25. I have to have a license. I have to have insurance. I have to have a major card to rent a vehicle, but he just did it. And he paid cash every week, $200 every single week to rent this car. So, knowingly driving without a license, knowingly driving without insurance and he was just allowed to do this. There's a lot of problems with that." Illegal Immigrant Held Without Bail In Death Of University Of South Carolina Student Carach added that what was even more frustrating was Lopez-Infante showed no concern about hitting her son. "You know what you did, and you don't care at all? And you haven't come forward. To even try to … not that you could make it right at this point, but to even say like, 'Hey, I'm sorry for what I did.' He has no remorse in my eyes. He's a monster," she said. Carach said that her son will be using a wheelchair the next two months and is hopeful there is no permanent damage. Ice Files Detainers Against 2 Illegal Aliens, Including 1 Facing Attempted Murder Charges For Shooting Spree "I will say it was a hard one for me when this first happened, and I didn't feel like things were going as they should go. And I will say … that I won't put that on the police department. I'll put that on the mayor and everything that's been brought to my attention," Carach explained. She was referring to the backlash Nashville Mayor Freddie O'Connell, a Democrat, has received. U.S. Sen. Bill Hagerty, R-Tenn., said O'Connell "condemned ICE's good work, promoted a fund to provide support dollars for illegal immigrants and their families in Nashville and even updated an executive order to fast-track the collection of all Nashville government employees' interactions with ICE." "It is indefensible that blue city mayors like Mayor O'Connell in Nashville have violated their oath of office by prioritizing illegal aliens over the law-abiding citizens they were elected to serve," Sen. Marsha Blackburn, R-Tenn., told Fox News Digital. "The illegal alien wanted for a hit-and-run in Nashville that left a 21-year-old man wheelchair-bound is exactly the type of person the mayor is protecting. Mayors across the country have a choice: help get these people off our streets or jeopardize the safety of their residents." O'Connell declined to comment to Fox News Digital. Law enforcement officials said that federal partners, including Homeland Security Investigations, are helping in the ongoing efforts to locate Lopez-Infante. "For us, this has just been an ongoing nightmare. To know that this guy, that we've seen his face, we know who he is, he's out there walking around free and then every single day we're sitting by our son's hospital bed," Carach said. "So, for us, it's kind of a little bit freeing, I guess, that you know they have now finally released his face to the public, and we can have that extra help in finding him."Original article source: Former cop mom slams policies that let illegal alien allegedly strike son in hit-and-run: 'A lot of problems'

She stopped at the grocery store before picking up her kids. She was never seen alive again
She stopped at the grocery store before picking up her kids. She was never seen alive again

USA Today

time14 hours ago

  • USA Today

She stopped at the grocery store before picking up her kids. She was never seen alive again

She stopped at the grocery store before picking up her kids. She was never seen alive again More than 30 years after after Carmen Gayheart was kidnapped in broad daylight, raped and murdered, one of her killers is set to be executed in Florida on Tuesday. USA TODAY is remembering her life. Brick by brick, Carmen and Ricky Gayheart watched as their dream home took shape on a 5-acre piece of heaven in northern Florida. They chose the tiny town of Fort White to raise their family and escape the crime in South Florida. The high school sweethearts spent two years living in a trailer on the wooded property as they worked on the house and finally moved in with their 3-year-old son and 5-year-old daughter. Once the home was finished, the young couple hung a sign outside: "Welcome to the Gayheart Corral." Then on April 27, 1994, the stuff of nightmares befell the Gayhearts. Carmen, who was just 23, was raped and murdered after two North Carolina prison escapees kidnapped her while she was on a grocery store run in the middle of the day and fled. Carmen's family was among dozens who searched for any sign of her for five days before sheriff's deputies found her brutalized body off a remote dirt road. Her husband and children moved out of the dream home soon after. "It was a beautiful house and she didn't even get a chance to enjoy it," her sister, Maria David, told USA TODAY in an exclusive interview. "She had just moved in and she was excited. She couldn't wait for us to see it." David added: "I was so happy for her." Now more than 30 years later, Carmen's family is preparing to close at least one chapter of their tragic story as one of her killers, Anthony Wainwright, is executed in Florida on Tuesday. As U.S. executions ramp up this year, USA TODAY is revisiting the criminal cases that led to the tragic deaths of victims and the ongoing trauma for their families and communities. What happened to Carmen Gayheart? On April 24, 1994, Anthony Wainwright and Richard Hamilton escaped from prison in Newport, North Carolina. Wainwright was serving 10 years for breaking and entering, Hamilton 25 years for armed robbery. The men stole a Cadillac and guns and headed south. Three days and nearly 600 miles later, Wainwright and Hamilton spotted a pretty brunette walking into a Winn-Dixie grocery store in Lake City, Florida. It was Carmen Gayheart. She had just finished up a class at nursing school and was stopping at the store on her way to pick up her 5-year-old daughter and 3-year-old son from daycare. Carmen's arms were full of groceries when the men attacked her at gunpoint in the parking lot and shoved her into her blue Bronco. Though it was broad daylight, no one is believed to have witnessed her abduction. Carmen's disappearance set off a frantic search, during which hundreds of volunteers scoured the area for any sign of her. Her body was found five days later. She had been raped and shot twice in the back of the head. She was still wearing a shirt in her favorite color: pink. Wainwright and Hamilton were captured the next day following a shootout with police in Brookhaven, Mississippi, about 520 miles west of the murder scene. The men, who both survived gunshot wounds, had been driving Carmen's Bronco. Wainwright initially told police that he raped Carmen and that Hamilton killed her. He now denies doing either, though he says he was there, according to his spiritual adviser, the Rev. Jeff Hunt. Both men were convicted and sentenced to death. Hamilton died in 2023 of natural causes at the age of 59. Wainwright, 54, is set to be executed on Tuesday by lethal injection about an hour before Alabama executes Greg Hunt by nitrogen gas for the 1988 beating death of a woman he had been dating for a month named Karen Lane. Carmen Gayheart: animal lover, nursing student, doting mother Growing up in Fort Lauderdale, Carmen and Maria Tortora were sisters and best friends. As the oldest, Maria was always looking out for Carmen, whom she described as "beautiful inside and out." Carmen loved animals and respected all creatures so much, that she wouldn't even kill a cockroach, her sister told USA TODAY. "She would catch the bug and take it out. I am so serious," said Maria, whose last name is now David. "She would find a way to capture it safely, not hurt it in any way shape or form. She was one of a kind that's for sure." The sisters grew up around the family of Carmen's future husband, Ricky Gayheart, but the couple didn't experience a spark until high school, David said. "We were walking around campus and he started following us around," the 56-year-old West Palm Beach resident recalled. "He said to her, 'I want you to come with me and take a ride in my truck.' And I was like, 'What? She's not going anywhere without me.' I was very protective over her." The young couple soon fell in love and had their first baby when Carmen was 18. They married before the birth of their son two years later. Carmen loved being a mom so much she was planning on a third baby, David said. She had also returned to school to become a nurse and loved taking care of their dogs, cats and one horse. "She loved animals, she loved people, she loved her children, she loved her husband," David said. "She was building something beautiful." Ricky Gayheart, who did not respond to an interview request for this story, previously told the South Florida Sun Sentinel that his wife's murder shattered him. "I loved her very much," he said through tears in an interview just a couple weeks after the murder. "We moved up here to get away from everything down there. We're in the middle of nowhere, in the middle of the woods . . . It can happen anywhere. It goes to show you." He added: "She didn't have a mean bone in her body. She's too good for this world." Witnessing a killer's execution David plans on being front and center at Wainwright's execution for "accountability" and because her heartbroken parents can't. Her father died in 2013 and her mother died in 2023. Her mother, Joanne Tortora, told WPBF-TV in 2014 that she had been waiting for justice for 20 years after Carmen's murder. "I have friends who say, 'Oh, you can't move on with your life until you forgive them,' and it's just not going to happen," she said of Wainwright and Hamilton. "I can't find it in my heart. I feel it's a betrayal to my daughter. No, they deserve everything they get and more." David said that her emotions have been running high as she relives terrible memories leading up to the execution and that it's been difficult seeing Wainwright's fiancée post photos on Facebook of the two of them smiling and embracing. "He's had 31 years breathing, phone calls, letters, all of that," she said. "Carmen didn't have 31 seconds." Not only were Carmen's children deprived of their mother but now her son Chad is a father to a 9-year-old daughter named Gabriela, named after her slain grandmother's middle name. Carmen's daughter Jessica also married and is a world traveler in the medical field. To help keep Carmen's memory alive, David started a Facebook page and regularly posts about her sister. "She was here, she was loved, she deserves to be remembered, she mattered," she said. David and her family are holding a prayer vigil outside for Gayheart outside the Florida State Prison in Raiford. The vigil will be streamed live here on Tuesday evening, just before David goes inside to watch Wainwright die. "I look a lot like my sister and I'm hoping that he sees a glimpse of Carmen one more time before he goes to where he's going," she said. "It is pretty intimidating to be in the same room with the people that killed your sister but I feel like the strength will be there and it's something I really have to do."

Suspects charged for stealing over $3K of items in Austin, Buda: APD
Suspects charged for stealing over $3K of items in Austin, Buda: APD

Yahoo

time20 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Suspects charged for stealing over $3K of items in Austin, Buda: APD

The Brief Two people were arrested and charged for stealing items totaling over $3,000 APD officials conducted a "shoplifting blitz" in the Lakeline Mall area Additional charges are pending AUSTIN, Texas - Two people were arrested following a shopping blitz by the Austin Police Department. In total, over $3,000 worth of items were stolen from various stores. Officials conducted a "shoplifting blitz" operation in the Lakeline Mall area. This operation was conducted as an ongoing effort to help local retailers to stop shoplifting. The backstory On Tuesday, June 3, around 12:50 p.m., officers responded to a report at Kohl's, at 11111 Lakeline Blvd., regarding two people who were removing security tags and unpaid hiding merch while in the store. When officers arrived, they spoke with store employees, who told them the suspects hid several items in reusable shopping bags and a woman's purse. Officers then found the suspects as they left the store with the stolen items. The suspects got into a black Tesla with the stolen merch and were then taken into custody. About $1,600 worth of merch was stolen from Kohl's. They also found several other stolen items worth around $2,000 that were taken from H-E-B and Home Depot on the same day. There were even stolen items from a Walmart in Buda a few days prior. Officers also found evidence of identity theft and fraud, as well as meth. Ada Johnson was charged with theft with two prior convictions and unlawful possession of a controlled substance. Daryl Johnson was charged with theft. Additional charges are pending for both suspects. Anyone with any information may submit a tip anonymously through the Capital Area Crime Stoppers Program by visiting or by calling 512-472-8477. The Source Information from the Austin Police Department

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store