FORT WORTH, Texas -- The teenager who used an "affluenza" defense in a fatal drunken-driving crash was booked into a Texas juvenile detention center after his deportation from Mexico on Thursday, more than a month after he and his mother fled the U.S. as prosecutors investigated whether he had violated his probation.
Ethan Couch, 18, arrived at Dallas-Fort Worth International Airport late Thursday morning and could be seen walking through the airport, escorted by law enforcement. Couch and his mother were apprehended in the Mexican resort city of Puerto Vallarta on Dec. 28, after a call for pizza delivery tipped off authorities to their whereabouts.
Couch initially fought deportation, but he dropped the fight this week. His mother was deported last month.
"We've reached a great milestone," Tarrant County, Texas, Sheriff Dee Anderson said outside the juvenile facility in Fort Worth. "This is a day we've looked forward to, when we have them both here and back under the jurisdiction here. We're hoping that the day comes for justice for the families and the four victims that were killed."
Couch is scheduled for a court hearing today, where a judge could decide to move him to an adult jail, which Anderson said he would support given the severity of Couch's offenses.
Couch also faces a hearing Feb. 19 to determine whether his case will be transferred to the adult system, where he could face more time behind bars.
"He's certainly capable of understanding now what's going on, and I'd feel better if he was there (in an adult jail)," Anderson said.
Authorities believe Couch and his mother fled Texas in her pickup truck in early December, after an online video appeared to show Couch at a party where people were drinking. Couch was sentenced to 10 years' probation in juvenile court for the 2013 wreck that killed four people and injured several others. The terms prohibit him from drinking or leaving Tarrant County.
During the trial in the juvenile case, a defense witness argued that the then-16-year-old Couch had been coddled into a sense of irresponsibility by his wealthy parents. The expert deemed the condition "affluenza," which isn't recognized as a medical diagnosis by the American Psychiatric Association.
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