A McLennan County judge has sentenced Erika Martinez-Ramirez to two years in prison after her 14-year-old son, driving under the influence on an errand she sent him on, struck and killed a bicyclist in the early morning hours, according to prosecutors.
Martinez-Ramirez was convicted of endangering a child and received the maximum sentence following a jury verdict on April 7. The case was prosecuted by the McLennan County District Attorney’s Office, which said the charge carried the same punishment range as more serious counts but was easier to prove in court.
The 2024 accident
The fatal crash occurred around 1:30 a.m. on July 14, 2024, in Bellmead, just outside Waco. Authorities say Martinez-Ramirez gave her 14-year-old son the keys to her vehicle and instructed him to drive to a nearby home to pick up clothes, with his 10-year-old sister in the car.
During that trip, the teen — who was not legally allowed to drive — hit a bicyclist identified by local reports as 67-year-old Dennis Welch. The impact killed the cyclist. The teen then crashed into a nearby house.
Investigators later determined the boy was intoxicated at the time of the crash. His younger sister, who was riding in the vehicle, suffered minor injuries.
Martinez-Ramirez’s pattern
The case drew particular scrutiny from prosecutors because it was not the first time Martinez-Ramirez had allowed her underage son to drive. According to authorities, the teen had been stopped by police on at least two prior occasions in late 2023.
In one incident on Dec. 12, 2023, officers pulled him over for speeding while he was driving with multiple children in the car. Martinez-Ramirez was cited for allowing him to drive.
Just weeks later, on Dec. 24, the teen was again behind the wheel when he struck another vehicle and fled the scene. Police again contacted Martinez-Ramirez and warned her against allowing her son to drive.
Prosecutors said those repeated incidents helped establish a pattern of behavior that ultimately led to the fatal crash.
Despite the severity of the outcome, Martinez-Ramirez was not charged with manslaughter. Authorities said there was no evidence she knew her son was intoxicated at the time she allowed him to drive. Instead, they pursued the endangering a child charge, which carries a similar sentencing range under Texas law.
Following the verdict, prosecutors acknowledged the rarity of the case, noting that parents are seldom held criminally liable for their children’s actions. However, they maintained that the “exceptional” nature of the charges was justified by the mother’s history of ignoring repeated police warnings and allowing her son to continue driving.
The teen driver’s legal outcome has not been publicly disclosed due to his age. Texas law restricts the release of information involving juvenile offenders.
Published: Apr 10, 2026 03:42 pm