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Tammy King was 61 years old when she was shot in the head in her Bacliff, Texas home. Her granddaughter Tara, 17, and Tara's boyfriend Uriah Urick, 18, are charged with capital murder. Today, Detective Arturo Espinosa reads Instagram messages between the teen couple from the days and weeks before the killing. What he reads is devastating: discussions about killing Tammy, tactical planning, and Uriah asking if he should kill her "next time." Tara's response: "I would regret it because I want to kill her." The defense has not yet cross-examined this witness. These messages will be challenged for context, interpretation, and whether they represent genuine intent or dark teenage venting that was never meant literally. The jury heard Uriah write "I don't want to kill her if it ruins our lives or isn't on your command." They heard Tara say she was "so close" to grabbing the gun herself. What weight will twelve people give to Instagram DMs between two teenagers? ⏰ KEY MOMENTS 00:46 - Detective Espinosa takes the stand 06:37 - Surveillance video shows Nissan Altima at the house 10:58 - Tammy's phone recovered in League City 14:11 - Instagram warrants for "South Park Emo" accounts 22:50 - "I don't want to kill her if it ruins our lives or isn't on your command" 24:50 - "Do I kill her next time?" "I would regret it because I want to kill her" 29:17 - "I fear I might grab a damn knife and stab her" 35:01 - February 4 messages, the night before the murder 📖 JUSTICE BREAKDOWN: Coming soon CASE BACKGROUND REPORT: https://docs.google.com/document/d/1Y... 📖 CASE BACKGROUND On February 5, 2025, Galveston County Sheriff's Office deputies discovered 61-year-old Tammy King dead in her Bacliff home with a gunshot wound to her head. Her house was ransacked. Gun safes were open. Firearms were missing. Her granddaughter Tara King, 17, and Tara's boyfriend Uriah Urick, 18, were both living in the home and quickly became persons of interest. The State is charging this as capital murder during the commission of robbery, arguing that Tammy was killed while the defendants were stealing money and firearms. Under Texas law, capital murder carries mandatory life sentences. Tara King, who was 17 at the time, faces life in prison with the possibility of parole. Uriah Urick, who was 18, faces life without parole unless prosecutors seek the death penalty. 📂 PLAYLISTS & RESOURCES ► Full Trial Live Broadcasts: • TX v. Uriah Urick - Daily Live Broadcast ► No Breaks Edition: • TX v. Uriah Urick - No Breaks Edition ► Trial Analysis Podcast: • TX v. Uriah Urick - Trial Podcast ► Key Moments Playlist: • TX v. Uriah Urick - Key Moments and Testimony ► Subscribe for Daily Coverage: / @justiceisaprocess ⚖️ ABOUT JUSTICE IS A PROCESS This channel continues the work of Steven M. Askin, a criminal defense attorney who was disbarred in 1998 for refusing to violate attorney-client privilege, then criminally convicted in 2010 for teaching people their constitutional rights from a coffee shop in Martinsburg, West Virginia. He passed away in February 2024, but not before he and I started this channel together. I am Steven M. Askin II. I am not an attorney. I am a watchdog. I cover criminal trials to educate the public about due process, the presumption of innocence, and constitutional protections. Every video on this channel is part of building the machine the system feared my father would create: a public trained to watch, question, and demand accountability. This is not entertainment. This is education. This is oversight. This is Justice Is A Process. ⚖️ FAIR USE & EDUCATIONAL PURPOSE This content is produced under Fair Use (17 U.S.C. § 107) for news reporting, criticism, and educational purposes. We provide transformative commentary on public court proceedings, advancing public understanding of the judicial process through timestamps, analysis, and educational context. No copyright infringement is intended. All video content is used for transformative educational purposes with added legal analysis and commentary. #JusticeIsAProcess #UriahUrickTaraKingTrial #TexasCapitalMurder #GalvestonCounty #TrueCrime #CourtroomCoverage #CriminalJustice #LegalAnalysis