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April 13, 2021

Nobody wins: Child’s brutal death ended with more questions than justice

The morning of December 11, 2011, four-year-old Davaughn Rodriguez was discovered by his mother, Sabrina Vielma, lying on the kitchen floor in a puddle of his own blood.1 Vielma wrapped her small child in a blanket, placed his body in the backseat of her vehicle, and drove to Uvalde Memorial Hospital, where he was pronounced dead.2 The Bexar County medical examiner’s office later determined that the manner of death was homicide, with the cause of death recorded as blunt force trauma to the head.3 But who delivered the blow that ended Davaughn’s life? More than a decade after his death, and with two people behind bars for charges related to this case, the question remains unanswered.

Sabrina Vielma is a mother to two children. At the time of Davaughn’s death, her daughter lived with Vielma’s mother, Francis Garcia.4 Davaughn, the younger of the two half-siblings, resided with Vielma in a two-bedroom apartment at 404 N. Wood Street in Uvalde, Texas.5 Vielma worked at a local hair salon and Davaughn attended pre-K at Dalton Early Childhood Center.6 The Friday before his murder, Vielma’s mother recalled caring for Davaughn after school. Garcia said her grandson was happy, with no obvious signs of physical trauma.7 However, this report differed from that of Uvalde Memorial Hospital’s medical staff.

Sabrina Vielma | Courtesy of Uvalde County Jail

When Vielma arrived at Uvalde Memorial Hospital just before 1 p.m. on Sunday, Dec. 11, 2011, she was met by phlebotomist Mario Vasquez. Vasquez later testified that he followed Vielma to her vehicle, which was parked in front of the emergency room entrance. “I followed her to her car. I can’t remember which one of us opened the backseat door, but I remember seeing a blanket. I uncovered the blanket and I saw a child that, to me, seemed to be lifeless,” Vasquez said. Vasquez said that he cradled the child and rushed him through hospital doors, calling out to nurse Eric DeHoyos, who was standing nearby. DeHoyos took possession of the child and began Cardiopulmonary resuscitation. His efforts were in vain. Dr. Sameta Sosa pronounced Davaughn dead at approximately 1:02 p.m. Davaughn’s pediatrician, Dr. John Preddy, happened to be at the hospital on the day of his death and was asked to examine the young boy. Dr. Preddy later testified that Davaughn was, “…gray, had some blood around his facial area, multiple abrasions over his entire body, including his groin. He was cold and stiff.” When questioned, Dr. Preddy said Vielma told him her son had fallen from a kitchen counter.8

Uvalde Police were tasked with investigating the young child’s death.9 An autopsy was performed by the Bexar County Medical Examiner’s Office and a complete report was generated on December 12, 2011. At the time of examination, Davaughn weighed 32 pounds and measured 40 inches in height. The examiner noted blood smeared on his face, multiple blunt traumatic injuries over his face, and a complex occipital skull fracture extending to the base of his skull. The examiner also noted abrasions on his body.10 Former Uvalde Police Chief Robert MacDonald stated that Davaughn had been dead for hours before his arrival at Uvalde Memorial Hospital. The police chief also noted that Davaughn had recently been in the care of Sabrina Vielma’s ex-boyfriend, Cel’ves Cook.11

Cel’ves Cook | Courtesy of Uvalde County Jail

The pair was ultimately charged with capital murder. At the time, 38th Judicial District Attorney Daniel Kindred announced the state would seek the death penalty, though each defendant would be tried separately. Vielma was indicted in August 2013, at which time she turned herself into law enforcement. She was released after posting a $400,000 bond. She remained free until Nov. 6, 2016, when Vielma was arrested by Uvalde Police Department for driving with an expired driver’s license. A warrant was issued for her arrest, and she was picked up that night. To be released from Jail, Vielma had to pay a $50,000 surety bond and was required to wear a GPS ankle monitor. She remained free until her May 2017 arrest for tampering with evidence and hindering the apprehension of a known felon. The charges stemmed from hiding her boyfriend, who robbed a Uvalde business in an effort to pay Vielma’s pre-trial release program fees. She remained in jail until her 2018 sentencing hearing. Cook, who was also indicted in August 2013, was not captured until January 2014, following a warrant round-up by the Jasper County Sheriff’s Office, although he was not the target when investigators set out to serve dozens of warrants. Cook was released from the Uvalde County Jail on a personal recognizance bond in September 2017. The pre-trial release was allowed after Cook was diagnosed with an unspecified medical condition that was said to require long-term medical care.12 However, neither defendant would ever see a trial, because in 2018, both Cook and Vielma ultimately accepted plea deals on lesser charges.

Conflicting details about the hours before Davaughn’s death were made public during Vielma’s 2018 sentencing hearing. According to Vielma, Cook babysat Davaughn the day prior to his death, while she worked at a local hair salon. Vielma returned home at noon, at which time Cook left and she and Davaughn watched television together. Vielma told a special investigator with child protective services that she assisted Devaughn as he showered and did not observe any bruising or abrasions on his body. Vielma said she gave Davaughn a pudding cup and juice before going to sleep at 11 p.m. According to Vielma, she discovered her son’s body when she awoke at noon the next day. “The report said he had bruising at different stages and puncture wounds, including one near his penis, but she couldn’t tell me what happened to her son,” said special investigator Melinda Drake when she testified during Vielma’s sentencing hearing. According to Drake, Vielma agreed to take a drug test, and tested positive for marijuana, which she admitted to using twice daily.13

However, Cook alleges a different version of events. Although prosecutors were unable to show a video interview in which Cook said Vielma admitted to killing Davaughn in anger, 38th Judicial District Attorney Daniel Kindred told Davaughn’s father, Dion Rodriguez, what Cook alleged at the conclusion of the hearing. According to Kindred, Cook alleged Vielma, speaking one month after Davaughn’s death, said she was smoking marijuana in her room when the boy asked for lunch. According to Cook, the child was being loud, which aggravated Vielma. She began striking the child but did not mean to kill him. Cook, who said he spent the night with another woman and did not return until early the next morning, said he was not present when the assault took place, but observed Davaughn’s body the next morning upon arrival. Cook said he threw a blanket over the child’s body and left after telling Vielma not to tell law enforcement that he had been at the apartment. Cook pleaded guilty to tampering with evidence and agreed to serve twelve years in prison.14

Dion Rodriguez, the father of the late Davaughn Rodriguez, smiles as he peers at schoolwork his son completed prior to his Dec. 10, 2011 death. A collection of his work was given to Dion Rodriguez by the 38th Judicial District at the conclusion of Davaughn’s mother’s four-day sentencing hearing | Courtesy of Kimberly Rubio

Although Vielma has never gone on record to accuse Cook of wrong-doing, Vielma’s defense attorneys say Cook delivered the fatal blow that fractured Davaughn’s skull and that Vielma’s only crime was failing to protect her son. This was reflected in a plea deal she accepted that downgraded previous charges of capital murder to injury to a child by omission, a first-degree felony punishable by between 5-99 years in prison. The charge means Vielma, in the eyes of the law, admits to intentionally and knowingly, by omission, causing serious bodily injury to Davaughn by striking him with her hands and/or an instrument or failing to prevent the same from occurring.15 Still, Vielma’s defense attorney noted that Cook’s DNA, not Vielma’s, was found on Davaughn’s bloodied shirt and kitchen towel. DNA analyst Robert Benjamin testified that Cook’s DNA can’t be ruled out from a blood sample taken from Davaughn’s shirt. “It is possible Mr. Cook’s DNA is there. You can conclude this is a bloodstain that is a mixture of Cel’ves Cook and Davaughn Rodriguez’s DNA and at least one of their blood,” Benjamin said.16 In addition, Davaughn’s maternal grandmother, Francis Garcia, testified that her grandson had once confided in her that Cook had pushed him. Garcia said she confronted Vielma about the allegation but Vielma said it was a lie.17

In his closing remarks, 38th Judicial District Attorney Daniel Kindred said, “On the Friday before his death, he was a happy healthy boy—until he was released into [Vielma’s] care. Twenty-four hours later he was dead on the kitchen floor… We don’t know how many times he said ‘I’m sorry’ or how many times he said ‘stop.’” When asked if she wanted to address the court, Vielma said, “I am sorry, judge.” “I don’t know what happened that night.”  Vielma was ultimately sentenced to eighteen years in prison. She was also sentenced to five years in prison for two felony charges she received in 2017, one for harboring a fugitive and the other for tampering with evidence. The five-year sentence was ordered to be served concurrently with her punishment for Davaughn’s death. At the conclusion of the hearing, Davaughn’s father, Dion Rodriguez, along with members of his family, expressed displeasure with the sentence. He was not alone. Davaughn’s brutal death served up rare courtroom drama for the small community of Uvalde, but ultimately left residents with more questions than justice.18

  1. Kimberly Rubio, “Davaughn’s Final Hours,” Uvalde Leader-News, May 10, 2018, https://www.uvaldeleadernews.com/articles/davaughns-final-hours/.
  2. Uvalde Police Department, case number 144866, December 11, 2011, 964 W. Main St., Uvalde, Texas, 78801.
  3. Kimberly Rubio, “Davaughn’s Final Hours,” Uvalde Leader-News, May 10, 2018, https://www.uvaldeleadernews.com/articles/davaughns-final-hours/.
  4. Kimberly Rubio, “Family says Vielma was a good mother,” Uvalde Leader-News, May 10, 2018.
  5. Uvalde Police Department, case number 144866, December 11, 2011, 964 W. Main St., Uvalde, Texas, 78801.
  6. Kimberly Rubio, “Davaughn’s Final Hours,” Uvalde Leader-News, May 10, 2018, https://www.uvaldeleadernews.com/articles/davaughns-final-hours/.
  7. Kimberly Rubio, “Family says Vielma was a good mother,” Uvalde Leader-News, May 10, 2018.
  8. Kimberly Rubio, “Davaughn’s Final Hours,” Uvalde Leader-News, May 10, 2018, https://www.uvaldeleadernews.com/articles/davaughns-final-hours/.
  9. Uvalde Police Department, case number 144866, December 11, 2011, 964 W. Main St., Uvalde, Texas, 78801.
  10. Bexar County Medical Examiner’s Office, case number 2011-2267, December 12, 2011, 7337 Louis Pasteur, San Antonio, Texas, 78229-4565, (210)335-4002.
  11. Kimberly Rubio, “Vielma dodges death penalty,” Uvalde Leader-News, March 25, 2018, https://www.uvaldeleadernews.com/articles/vielma-dodges-death-penalty/.
  12. Kimberly Rubio, “Vielma dodges death penalty,” Uvalde Leader-News, March 25, 2018, https://www.uvaldeleadernews.com/articles/vielma-dodges-death-penalty/.
  13. Kimberly Rubio, “Davaughn’s Final Hours,” Uvalde Leader-News, May 10, 2018, https://www.uvaldeleadernews.com/articles/davaughns-final-hours/.
  14. Kimberly Rubio, “Eighteen years,” Uvalde Leader-News, May 13, 2018, https://www.uvaldeleadernews.com/articles/eighteen-years/.
  15. Kimberly Rubio, “Eighteen years,” Uvalde Leader-News, May 13, 2018, https://www.uvaldeleadernews.com/articles/eighteen-years/.
  16. Kimberly Rubio, “Davaughn’s Final Hours,” Uvalde Leader-News, May 10, 2018, https://www.uvaldeleadernews.com/articles/davaughns-final-hours/.
  17. Kimberly Rubio, “Family says Vielma was a good mother,” Uvalde Leader-News, May 10, 2018.
  18. Kimberly Rubio, “Eighteen years,” Uvalde Leader-News, May 13, 2018, https://www.uvaldeleadernews.com/articles/eighteen-years/.

Kimberly Mata-Rubio

Kimberly Mata-Rubio is pursuing a degree in history from St. Mary’s University in San Antonio. She is an award-winning journalist, having earned multiple first- and second-place awards from the regional South Texas Press Association and statewide Texas Press Association. During her career with the Uvalde Leader-News, where she served as a staff writer and later assistant editor, she covered crime, public schools, the court system, and city and county governments in addition to serving on the chamber of commerce board of directors.

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Recent Comments

83 comments

  • Mariah Podwika

    This article was a very well-put exploration into the case of Devaughn Rodriguez. As someone very interested in true crime podcasts and things of that sort, I was drawn to this article as soon as I saw it. The article does an excellent job of keeping the story in a cohesive order despite there being many different accounts of the event. Unfortunately, cases like these are becoming all too common. Hearing each of these similar but yet vastly different stories never fail to break my heart. It’s so easy to be unattached and desensitized to these types of things, but articles like these are a good reminder that they were people too. Their stories deserve to be heard, and they deserve justice for the unthinkable things that happened to them.

  • Claudia Sanchez

    This article is a great dive into the tragic case of Devaughn Rodriguez, an innocent little boy who will never receive true justice and was failed by his own mother. This article does a good job at stating the facts of the case in a linear progression that is easy to understand and follow even though there are multiple moving parts in this story. The very first photo of Devaughn is a heart-wrenching add-on that brings so much emotion to the story. Often it is easy to read about a case and be detached from its events, but Devaughn at the forefront of the story encapsulates that horrid truth that this story is about a once alive and happy little boy.

  • JoAnna Mendez

    Upon reading your article, I first thought it was the story of Gabriel Fernandez, an eight-year-old boy who was also killed by his mother and her boyfriend. However, after reading that this was a completely different case of another little boy who had to go through this, it kind of threw me off guard because of how comen they are becoming. Cases like Davaughs and Gabriels keep popping up, and the result is always the same. It seems as if the only thing these killers are receiving for punishment for killing their kids is a slap on the hand. I do not know much of what has to happen to give a person a certain amount of years for committing a crime, but I do know that there is no way seventeen years plus the five (for a completely different crime) is enough to cover the life of a little boy who hadn’t even started living yet.

  • Lauren Castaneda

    This was a tragic and heartbreaking story for anyone to hear. Hearing about stories like this makes you really wonder about the rest that go untold all throughout the world. Davaughn’s story reminded me of Gabriel Fernandez in the sense that they both lived and experienced such harmful neglect and traumatic experiences in their life. Overall, this article is an important read for people to understand the harsh realities we live in. You articulated the events of this trial in a very informative and descriptive way.

  • Hali Garcia

    What Davaughn went through was truly horrific and he did not get justice. It was heartbreaking to hear how such a young child who had his whole life ahead of them had to suffer. I think it was clear that it was not an accident and that there should have been stricter punishments for both Cook and Vielma. This article was very detailed and I could tell that a lot of effort was put into it.

  • Phylisha Liscano

    Congratulations on the award, this was a very well written article. It’s very heartbreaking that there are lots of people out there who see no wrong in violence towards children. Whether Vielma remembers or not Davaughn died in her care 18 plus 5 years in prison is not enough. The fact that he most likely loved his mom so much and she allowed that to happen to him is very sad. I agree with Dion Rodriguez about having displeasure with the sentence.

  • Carlos Hinojosa

    I remember seeing this on the news when it first happened and I was disgusted then just from the initial summary. This article did a great job of showing the whole picture and all pieces of evidence. I think the mother did it and just tried to put the blame on the boyfriend or they were both involved but the mother just tried to get away with it. Besides that I think it was a great article.

  • Jaedean Leija

    it is clear that Davaughn death was no accident, why did it take hours for his mother to take him to the hospital ? , did his mother just get home and noticed or did she not doing anything to get help after the incident with her or was that her intention? I think her boyfriend or whoever Cook is to her killed Davaughn , whether it was an accident or not I think he did it and Vielma was trying to protect him but then felt the need to take Davaughn to the hospital out of guilt I’m assuming but either way it was to late unfortunately and Davaughn deserved way more than what he got.

  • Perla Ramirez

    This was an upsetting story to read and in the end no justice was served for the poor boy that was brutally killed by who knows. The article was well written and gave insight on how the law is one-sided. It is so sad to hear about a child being hurt with the crime being public knowledge and the law does nothing about it or even make it seem like the father was given justice. This was a really great article. Good job!

  • Uvaldean

    The mother and her boyfriend or ex whatever deserve more time poor devaughn had no chance to a normal childhood and it’s so sad being tortured in the ways that he was

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