Trump meets with Jocelyn Nungaray family as illegal migrant murder suspect complains he won't get fair shake

Defense attorney says negative press would 'likely' result in 'undue prejudice' during trial

Texas officials, crime victims advocates call for tougher bail law after murder of Jocelyn Nungaray

The two illegal immigrants charged with the killing of a 12-year-old Houston girl are being held on $10 million bond.

The attorney of one of the illegal migrant suspects charged in the murder of Texas 12-year-old Jocelyn Nungaray has filed for a protective order to ensure that the negative media attention the case has received will not prevent him from his right to fair trial.

Two Venezuelan nationals – 21-year-old Johan Jose Martinez-Rangel and 26-year-old Franklin Jose Peña Ramos – have been charged with capital murder in the death of Nungaray after the 12-year-old was found strangled to death in a Houston creek on June 17.

The two men reportedly crossed illegally into the U.S. earlier this year.

Peña’s attorneys filed a protective order "preventing the parties to this cause, law enforcement officials, the Houston Forensic Science Center, or court personnel from making extrajudicial statements or otherwise disseminating information concerning this cause by any means of public communications."

JOCELYN NUNGARAY WAS SEXUALLY ASSAULTED BEFORE ALLEGED MURDER BY ILLEGAL IMMIGRANTS, FAMILY SAYS

Jocelyn Nungaray murder suspects

Franklin Jose Peña Ramos, left, and Johan Jose Martinez-Rangel have been charged in the killing of Jocelyn Nungaray in Houston on June 16, 2024. (Harris County Jail)

In the protective order filing, reviewed by Fox News Digital, the attorneys argued that media attention was "likely to produce a result of undue prejudice" during Peña’s trial.

"The additional extra-judicial statements to the news media are likely to produce a result of undue prejudice in the community to deprive the Defendant of a fair trial guaranteed by Article I of the Texas Constitution and the Sixth and Fourteenth Amendments to the United States Constitution," the motion said.

The filing argued that Harris County District Attorney Kim Ogg made "made numerous statements about the case that went beyond the statements of the prosecutor during the probable cause hearing."

The documents cited Ogg saying: "[M]make no mistake, this is a horrific crime" and "the immigration system is broken." Peña's attorney argued that these statements would produce prejudice in his trial.

images of Jocelyn Nungaray

Jocelyn Nungaray, 12, was found strangled to death in a Houston creek. (Fox Houston courtesy of the Nungaray family)

In the filing, Peña's attorneys concluded their request by asking for all parties involved in the case to "refrain from making any further extrajudicial statements relating to this cause and to refrain from further dissemination of information, regardless of whether the information was previously disclosed to the public, concerning this cause by way of public communication, and for all other relief just and proper in the case."

JOCELYN NUNGARAY MURDER: TEXAS COUNTY DUBBED 'SANCTUARY FOR CRIMINALS' AS DEM DA TRIES TO SHIFT BLAME

Murder victim Jocelyn Nungaray

Jocelyn Nungaray was killed in North Houston on June 16, 2024. (Getty Images)

Jocelyn Nungaray family speaks out

Nungaray's murder has prompted calls for stronger border enforcement and accountability. 

ILLEGAL IMMIGRANT SUSPECT ACCUSED OF KILLING JOCELYN NUNGARAY WORE ICE ANKLE MONITOR

During Trump's visit to the southern border on Aug. 22, Alexis Nungaray, the mother of the 12-year-old, spoke out about her daughter's murder.

"It’s still very, very early. It’s still very, very raw. It’s still very, very surreal," she said.

Donald Trump

Former President Trump comforts Alexis Nungaray, mother of Jocelyn Nunagaray who was killed by illegal migrants in June, during a visit to the U.S.-Mexico border fence south of Sierra Vista, Arizona, on Aug. 22, 2024. (Rebecca Noble/Getty Images)

Alexis said Peña and Martinez "shouldn't have been released" after they were first detained.

"There was over 300 detention beds that they should have been at (sic) because they were detained, and they were released when they shouldn’t have been released," Alexis said. "One had an ankle monitor, but that didn’t stop anything."

"So now I have to go through the rest of my life with my son always asking for his sister," she said.

Fox News Digital has reached out to the Harris County District Attorney's Office and Peña's attorney for comment.

Sarah Rumpf-Whitten is a breaking news writer for Fox News Digital and Fox Business. 

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Authored by Sarah Rumpf-Whitten via FoxNews August 21st 2024