Man charged with fajita theft appears in court

BROWNSVILLE — A former Cameron County juvenile detention center employee accused of stealing $1.2 million worth of fajitas waived his right to a jury trial Monday and is expected to plead guilty in two weeks.

Gilberto Escamilla, 53, appeared in front of Associate Judge Louis Sorrola in 107th state District Court where his attorney, Gustavo Elizondo, made the announcement.

The Cameron County District Attorney’s Office Special Investigations Unit arrested Escamilla last year after a driver from Labatt Food Service in Harlingen called the detention center’s kitchen to let employees know their 800-pound delivery of fajitas had arrived.

Minor inmates at the Darrel B. Hester Juvenile Detention Center are not served fajitas and when investigators searched Escamilla’s home, they found packages of fajitas in his refrigerator.

During the Monday hearing, Cameron County Assistant District Attorney Peter Gilman asked Sorrola to order GPS monitoring for Escamilla until the plea agreement hearing.

“This is a time where he is starting the plea process,” Gilman said, explaining that Escamilla is charged with a first-degree felony for theft of the fajitas, which totaled around $1,251,578.

Escamilla stands accused of using county funds to purchase the fajitas over a span of nine years.

Elizondo told Sorrola that Escamilla is not a flight risk and has showed up to all of his hearings.

“My client has been forthright and open,” Elizondo said. “There’s no indication of a flight-risk.”

Escamilla told Sorrola his wife does live in Mexico but explained he doesn’t have a passport and was denied one when he applied. The last time he was in Mexico was June or July of last year, Escamilla said.

Authorities arrested Escamilla last October.

Sorrola, however, ruled that because the charge is a first-degree felony involving a large amount of money and because of Brownsville’s proximity to Mexico, that Escamilla must wear the GPS ankle monitor.

“If we were in Kansas, I wouldn’t worry so much,” Sorrola said. “But we’re not in Kansas.”

Escamilla is scheduled to appear before visiting Judge J. Manuel Banales on April 23 at 9 a.m. to present the plea papers.

Banales was appointed to oversee the proceedings after 107th state District Judge Benjamin Euresti Jr., recused himself, as he is one of the judges who oversees the detention center, Escamilla’s former employer.