Jennifer Ertman and Elizabeth Pena, ages 14 and 15, were walking home from a party, taking a shortcut to make it home by their 11 p.m. curfew on June 24, 1993.
[Ads /]
Sadly, they never made it. Instead, they stumbled on to a gang initiation and they were tortured, assaulted and killed. Their bodies were found four days later.
Six gang members were sentenced. Three were executed, and the rest are still in prison. It was a case that shaped Andy Kahan as the newly-appointed crime victim's advocate for the city. He made a promise to their families.
"We can't go back and change what happened to your family, but we can change for others who come along, and we'll leave a lasting legacy for your daughters that will last for eternity," Kahan said.
25 years after the murders of Jennifer Ertman and Elizabeth Pena
Brutal murder of two teens rocked Houston 25 years ago
Because of their deaths, the state allows victim impact statements and Randy Ertman was the first to do it when he confronted the six convicted killers in court, all of them sentenced to death.
[Ads /]
"Look at me. Look, you're not even an animal," Ertman uttered in court.
The Ertmans and Penas also witnessed the executions of three of their daughters' killers. The case forced a change in state police.
"I miss them and I love them, and they'll never be forgotten and I'll try to keep their memories alive as best as I can," friend Christina Almarez said.
Family and friends gathered at the park this weekend to pay tribute to a pair of lives lost and the impact they had on criminal justice policy.
Consider that their case wasn't known by the names of their killers, but their names, and that those who loved them will tell you is as it should be.
Follow Deborah Wrigley on Facebook and Twitter.