Houston Chronicle

‘Affluenza’ teen wants justices to set him free

- By Tasha Tsiaperas DALLAS MORNING NEWS

The attorneys for “affluenza” teen Ethan Couch have asked the Texas Supreme Court to intervene in his case, a move that could release him from jail.

The lawyers allege in the court filing that the judge who sentenced Couch to nearly two years behind bars after his case was moved from juvenile court to adult court didn’t have the authority to do so.

Couch gained national notoriety when he was sentenced to 10 years’ probation for killing four people and seriously injuring two others in a drunken driving crash in 2013. He was 16 at the time. A psychologi­st testified that he suffered “affluenza” because of his dysfunctio­nal relationsh­ip with his wealthy parents.

A video surfaced in December 2015 that appeared to show Couch at a party where people were playing beer pong, which violated the terms of his probation. He missed a meeting with his probation officer and fled with his mother, Tonya Couch, to Mexico.

After he was arrested and returned to the U.S., his case was transferre­d from the juvenile system to the adult system last year, and a judge sentenced him to almost two years behind bars — 180 days for each of the four people he killed. He is scheduled to be released next year.

But his attorneys have argued that state District Judge Wayne Salvant should have been removed from the case and that Salvant oversteppe­d his bounds transferri­ng the case to adult court and sentencing Couch to jail time.

A motion to have Couch released from jail was denied in September, and a motion in the appeals court was denied in February.

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