FORT WORTH, Texas (Reuters) - The mother of a Texas teenager who used an "affluenza" defense after killing four people in a 2013 drunken-driving crash was formally charged with money laundering on Thursday, related to her helping him flee to Mexico last year, her attorney said.
Tonya Couch, 49, previously was charged with hindering his
apprehension, also a felony. She was formally indicted on both charges by a
local grand jury this week, her lawyer, Don Carter, said in a telephone
interview.
She was arraigned Thursday morning before Judge Wayne
Salvant and then posted $10,000 bail on the new charge of money laundering,
Carter said.
Tarrant County District Attorney Office spokeswoman
Samantha Jordan confirmed the indictment, declining further comment because the
judge in the case has imposed a gag order.
Couch and her son, Ethan, drew worldwide attention last
winter after fleeing the United States in an attempt to avoid his punishment
for violating his initial sentence of probation.
At his trial in juvenile court in 2013 when he was 16, a
psychologist testifying on his behalf said Couch was so spoiled by his wealthy
parents that he could not tell right from wrong. The psychologist described the
affliction as "affluenza," a term that quickly became a media buzzword.
He was sentenced to 10 years of probation, a penalty that
sparked outrage from critics who ridiculed the affluenza defense and said his
family's wealth had helped keep him out of jail.
Late last year, he and his mother fled to a resort town on
Mexico's Pacific Coast after a video on social media appeared to show him at a
party where alcohol was being consumed, which would have violated the drink-
and drug-free terms of his probation.
They were eventually taken into custody by Mexican
authorities and returned to the United States.
Tonya Couch was charged with aiding her son's flight, a
felony punishable with up to 10 years in prison.
After Thursday's arraignment, she remains under home
confinement, having posted $85,000 total bail on the charges.
Ethan Couch, now 19, is currently serving a two-year
sentence in a maximum security jail. After his flight, his case was transferred
to the adult system, where he was sentenced to four consecutive jail terms of
180 days.
By Marice Richter
(Writing by Letitia
Stein; Editing by Alan Crosby)