Police arrested and charged a father and son early Thursday in connection with the murder of a pregnant teenager who was about to give birth, and her boyfriend, in San Antonio last month.

Christopher Preciado, 19, was charged with capital murder while his father, 53-year-old Ramon Preciado, was charged with abuse of a corpse for allegedly helping to move the bodies of Savanah Soto, 18, and Matthew Guerra, 22, who were found shot dead in a car.

A conviction for capital murder is punishable by the death penalty or life imprisonment.

San Antonio Police Department confirmed the charges in a statement and said more charges are pending, possibly relating to the death of the unborn child.

  • @[email protected]
    link
    fedilink
    216 months ago

    While I agree with you, abortion doesn’t seem to play into this at all. The girl was planning on giving birth.

      • @MagicShel
        link
        -66 months ago

        Adding more charges because she was pregnant is definitely political and the fact that it can be mistaken for non-political is the exact danger I was highlighting here. Agree that the guy should be punished extra for killing a fetus is just a foothold for them to shift that logic to the abortion debate and turn the tables. “You agreed to punishing people for killing a fetus, which makes it a criminal act. Checkmate libs.”

        I’m suggesting people get ahead of that argument. Call for monetary compensation and when they disagree you haul out the text that underpins their entire argument.

        • @[email protected]
          link
          fedilink
          76 months ago

          …killing a pregnant woman has always had more charges. That’s not political. Are you like 15 or something?

          • @MagicShel
            link
            -36 months ago

            Such a law failed to go anywhere in 2001 under threat of veto by Clinton. I’m not aware of it ever being passed. Although it looks like there are some state laws on the books in some red states, so no this hasn’t always been the case. So no, I’m pretty far from fifteen since I was going off of memory until I had to double check myself after your comment.

              • @MagicShel
                link
                -4
                edit-2
                6 months ago

                I missed one law and found the earlier attempt that failed. 2004 certainly isn’t always unless you are 15.

                • @[email protected]
                  link
                  fedilink
                  2
                  edit-2
                  6 months ago

                  That’s just it on the federal level, you somehow managed to miss the “In the U.S., 38 states have laws with more harsh penalties if the victim is murdered while pregnant.”, I guess you struggle with reading. Those laws didn’t pop up recently, either. And those laws mandate an extra charge, in almost all cases, it results in two murder charges even in states where it’s not specifically mandated.

    • Omega
      link
      fedilink
      26 months ago

      They’re stating that the Bible covers literally this scenario, and it demands financial compensation. The fact that this is so much worse than an elective abortion just reiterates that point. Unless someone wanted to argue that murdering a planned, viable, unborn child isn’t as bad.

      Now the Bible is way too radical for me on this. But that’s what it says.

    • @MagicShel
      link
      1
      edit-2
      6 months ago

      My point is, the abortion debate is the pretext for saying killing the fetus is murder. If you agree additional punishment is deserved, then you are buying into the anti-abortion argument. It’s a trap.

      The biblically correct consequence for killing the fetus is that the killer can be sued by the father. Not a criminal consequence.