Twelve-year-old Teketria Buggs was killed on the night of December 3, 2005, and searchers found her body nearly two weeks later in the Brazos River not far from her Orchard home in rural Fort Bend County. Teketria's body was found floating in the Brazos a few hundred yards from the FM 1489 bridge. She had been beaten in the head and stabbed multiple times.
Steve Carrington. Lot of 2: Handwritten ALS. Commercial #10 (4.125” x 9.5”) envelopes. Pmks: (1) March 21, 2007. Content unknown. Pristine; (2) April 13, 2007. Content unknown. Pristine.
Steve Carrington pleaded guilty to a murder charge of killing his 12-year-old step daughter Teketria Buggs and received a 57-year sentence.
Steve Carrington, 33, made the plea in the death of Teketria Buggs, 12.
Carrington also pleaded guilty in another murder case and a charge of sexual assault of a child.
Carrington became the main suspect the case shortly after his stepdaughter's disappearance. As detectives began following leads, investigators uncovered evidence about the unsolved disappearance of Carrington's cousin, Corey Brooks, 22. Police were able to link Carrington to Brooks' 1998 death and to the sexual assault of a young family member.
Carrington received a 40-year sentence in the death of Brooks and a 10-year sentence in the sexual assault case.
All the sentences will run concurrently.
Carrington faced a maximum penalty of life in prison on all three charges.
State law allows a person sentenced to life to become eligible for parole after serving 30 years. Carrington will become eligible to be considered for parole after serving half his 57-year sentence.
Prosecutors accepted the plea bargain after relatives of the victims agreed to the sentences.
Carrington was first arrested on a warrant unrelated to Teketria's case two days after the girl disappeared.
Detectives immediately became suspicious about Carrington because he had been the focus of the 1998 missing person probe involving Brooks, who had been last seen by relatives in June of that year.
Sheriff's detectives began receiving bits of information and tips about Brooks and on Dec. 16, one day after Teketria's body was pulled from the river, Carrington admitted shooting his cousin.
His body was never found. Carrington told police he and Brooks argued about money and that he shot and killed him and then dumped his body in the nearby river.i
Exactly one week later—on the day of Teketria's funeral—Carrington confessed he had killed the girl. An autopsy showed she had been beaten and stabbed to death.
In January 2006, a Fort Bend County grand jury indicted Carrington on a charge of murder in the death of Brooks. In August, he was indicted for murder in connection with the slaying of Teketria and for aggravated sexual assault in a case involving another young relative.
Seven hours after 12-year-old Teketria Buggs Friday funeral in
Richmond, her stepfather, Steven Carrington, confessed to her
murder.
It was Carrington’s second such confession in two weeks; on Dec.
16 he admitted to the 1998 killing of Corey Brooks.
Brooks,
21 at the time of his death, lived on Johnson Road about a mile east
of Orchard the same property where Teketria Buggs lived, and where
she was last seen alive Dec. 2.
At a press conference at
the Fort Bend County Sheriff's Office on Saturday, Chief Deputy Craig
Brady discussed details of Carrington’s most recent
confession.
Carrington, 31, told investigators on Friday
that he'd been smoking crack cocaine on the night of Dec. 2 and was in
a utility room at one end of the house he shared with Teketria Buggs,
her mother and other relatives.
According to Brady,
Carrington told detectives the Buggs girl approached him, but he was
hallucinating and thought it was Brooks, whom he'd already admitted to
killing. Carrington confessed to hitting the girl in the head and
knocking her down. At that point, he told investigators, he could see
that he'd just hit Teketria. But she got back up and, he said, he
again believed it was Brooks. He hit the girl in the head again and
stabbed her.
Then, he told investigators, he put her body
in a car, drove to the same nearby bridge over the Brazos River where
he admitted disposing of Brooks body seven years ago, and threw
Teketria Buggs into the water.
Brady called Carrington
cold and calculating, and termed his statements about the
hallucinations self-serving. Brady said information gathered in the
case has led him to believe Carrington sexually assaulted the
girl.
Investigators don't have evidence necessary to prove
that belief, Brady said. However, the medical examiners office said a
preliminary autopsy shows the young girl had been sexually active for
some time.
If we can show sexual assault was involved,
then we can upgrade the charges to capital murder, Brady
said.
Carrington will face first-degree murder charges in
his stepdaughter's death, and already has been charged with
first-degree murder in Corey Brooks death. He is in the county jail
on $500,000 bond.
The confession was extracted after
several days of questioning by sheriff's detectives and the Texas
Rangers, Brady said. Finally, on the day of the young girls funeral
at Pilgrim Journey Baptist Church, just a few hundred yards east of
the county jail, what little bit of a conscience (Carrington)
evidently does have got to him and he admitted to the murder, Brady
said.
He kept talking about not wanting to be known as a
child killer, Brady said of Carrington. And he kept referring to
(Teketria) as his baby.
Investigators went back to the
Johnson Road property after the confession and have been acting on
information Carrington provided, Brady said. A burn pile behind
Carrington’s house is being examined because detectives believe a
blunt object used in the killing may have been tossed in the pile.
Investigators also believe Teketria Buggs shoes and clothing, and
Carrington’s shoes were put in the pile to burn.
Brady
said Carrington’s family is not cooperating with investigators.
A
lack of cooperation by potential witnesses was cited as preventing
the Corey Brooks case from being solved for years.
According
to an affidavit, Carrington told investigators he shot Brooks and
wrapped him in blankets on a stormy night in 1998. Then, with the
help of another man identified as Janus Parker, Carrington put Brooks
body into the trunk of a car. The two men drove to a bridge on F.M.
1489 over the flooded river and threw Brooks body into the torrent
below.
On Saturday, Brady said no charges have been filed
against Parker or anyone else besides Carrington in either killing,
but there's a possibility others may be charged in the Brooks
case.
Sheriff's investigators arrested Carrington Dec. 5,
while the search for his missing stepdaughter got under way, on
unrelated charges of failure to appear in court. He has been in the
county jail since, but now is being held on murder charges.
The
Orchard girls body was discovered in the river at about 1pm Dec.
15 by a four-person Texas EquuSearch team and a cadaver dog,
specially trained to detect human remains. The dog and team members
were in a boat in the river.
Texas EquuSearch is a
non-profit Dickinson-based search-and-rescue organization that
specializes in searching for missing people.
State, county
and city law enforcement officers and volunteers had conducted an
intensive search beginning Dec. 4 for the girl, at first
concentrating on the 12-acre property and outbuildings around the
girls home. Then searchers progressively expanded the search and
included the nearby Brazos River.
If some of the
individuals that withheld information in the Corey Brooks case would
have come forward seven years ago, Brady said, the little girl
would've been alive today.ii
Archiving
Protocol:
Handled with White Gloves ab initio
Photo Pages/Sheet Protectors: Heavyweight Clear Sheet Protectors, Acid Free & Archival Safe, 8.5” x 11”, Top Load
White Backing Board – Acid Free
Shipping/Packaging:
Rigid Mailer 9.5” x 12.5”. White, self seal, stay flat, kraft
cardboard, no bend. Each rigid mailer is made of heavy cardboard,
which has strong resistance to bending and tearing. Thicker that the
USPS mailers. Shipping cost never more than it absolutely has to be
to get it from me to you.
i Hanson, E. (2008) Fort Bend killer gets 57 years in death of stepdaughter, 12. Houston Chronicle. Available at: https://www.chron.com/news/houston-texas/article/Fort-Bend-killer-gets-57-years-in-death-of-1655879.php (Accessed: April 13, 2023).
ii Phillips, C. and crimes, O. (2006) Cynteria Heaven - In memory of Cynteria Phillips-Teketria Buggs , Cynteria Heaven - In memory of Cynteria Phillips. Available at: https://www.tapatalk.com/groups/angelsresort/teketria-buggs-t560.html (Accessed: 13 April 2023).