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Texas man gets 35 years for killing ‘innocent stranger’ he mistook for thief

A Texas auto shop owner has been sentenced to 35 years in prison after he shot dead an innocent man he falsely accused of being a thief — and then later fled the country to his native El Salvador to evade justice.

“A man who intentionally kills an innocent stranger and then does everything he can to cover up his crime and run from accountability deserves to spend decades in prison for the pain he caused,” Harris County District Attorney Kim Ogg .

Oscar Aristides Garcia, 35, was sentenced las꧑t Wednesday after pleading guilty to murder for🌸 the October 2018 killing of 37-year-old Nicolas Bautista.

Prosecutors asked that Garcia be sentenced to 50 years in prison. His defense team argue🅰d for 15 years.

Oscar Aristides Garcia was sentenced to 35 years in prison after pleading guilty to murder in a case of mistaken identity. Harris County District Attorney'
Nicolas Bautista, 37, was shot and killed in October 2018 in front of his girlfriend after being mistaken for a thief by Garcia. Harris County District Attorney'

According to investigators, Garcia was in his Pasadena, Texas, transmission repair shop on Oct. 28, ไ2018, when he saw Bautista walk by with his girlfriend. The couple were on their way to a restaurant for Sunday brunch.

“Garcia mistakenly believed Bautista was a man Garcia thought was stealing pickup tailgates from the shop,” the DA’s office stated.

Bautista was never implicated in any theft. But Garc❀ia took a truck that he had been working on in the shop and a gun,𝓀 and followed the 37-year-old man and his girlfriend to confront him about the thefts.

After finding that the restaurant near Garcia’s shop was closed, Bautista and his girlfriend took an Uber to another eatery, with Garcia fo🍷llowing them, accor🦄ding to prosecutors.

Garcia, seen on surveillance video, followed Bautista and his girlfriend all the way to their home, where he confronted the man while brandishing a gun. Pasadena Police Department

After finꦦishing their meal, the couple took another Uber home, and Garcia 🃏continued to pursue them all the way to their address on Wafer Street in Pasadena.

There, Garcia got out of the truck and started to argue with Bautista in Spanish — a language the other man did not speak. Bautista’s girlfriend knew Spanish and told Garcia that he was mistaken.

When Bautista turned around and walked away to call the police, prosecutors said, Garcia shot him in the back. He was pronounced dead a๊t a hospital a short time later.

Garcia also pointed the rifle at Bautis൲ta’s girlfriend and pulled the trigger, but the weapon did not fire.

After shooting Bautista, Garcia aimed the gun at his girlfriend (left) and pulled the trigger, but the gun did not fire. Courtesty Cordelia Bautista

Garcia picked up the shell casing before fleeing to another mechanic’s shop and demanding to store the truck used during the killing inside that person’s garage.

The gunman then returned to his own shop and destroyed his security camera’s recording♐ device so there would be no record of Bautista walking by the business, investigators said.

Garcia also broke into a nearby taqueria and de🃏stroyed its security camera’s recorder, which captured him following Bautista.

Garcia then shuttered his repair business and fled to El Salvador, leaving behind his pregnant 💎wife and three children. The family later joined the fugitive abroad.

After more than t🔥wo years in hiding, he returnಞed to the US and was arrested by the US Marshals Service.

Assistant District Attorney Ryan Volkmer, who prosecuted the case, said last week that listening to Bautista’s fa🦩mily and friends testif♋y in court about losing him was heartbreaking.

“He was a loved son, a loved brother and a loved boyfriend,” Volkmer said. “He worked hard aℱnd is remembered very fondly, and they’re glad they finally got justice.”