Three people were sentenced in connection to a West Campus burglary that occurred in September 2025, according to Travis County District Court judgment of conviction documents from the last two months.
APD officers responded to a burglary call in West Campus on Sept. 13 around 11 p.m. on Salado Street, according to the APD news release from September and the arrest affidavits. The stolen items were tracked to a nearby residence, where the officers found meth, equipment to distribute meth and a possible overdose victim, according to the arrest affidavits. Four people were arrested in relation to the incident, according to the arrest affidavits.
Latasha Fletcher, 37, and Calvin Guyton, 32, pled guilty in January to the burglary of a building, a state jail felony, according to court documents. Fletcher was sentenced to 180 days in county jail, and Guyton was sentenced to six months, according to court documents.
Jail time credit, or credit for time served, is the time a person spends in custody before sentencing that can be counted toward their final sentence, according to the Cornell Law School. Fletcher was given 138 days of credit, and Guyton received 115 days of credit, according to the court documents.
James Sailors, 41, pled guilty in December to the manufacturing and delivery of a controlled substance in penalty group one, which includes meth, a state jail felony, according to court documents.
Officers found an “electronic scale, mirror and plastic dish with residue of suspected crystal (meth) and a large bag of new and empty small plastic baggies commonly used to hold and sell narcotics,” in the residence, according to Sailors’ arrest affidavit.
Sailors was sentenced to 180 days in county jail, according to the court documents. Carlos Garcia, the attorney who represented Sailors, said his client received two days of credit for each day in jail, and he was released in December.
The pre-trial hearing for a fourth person arrested in connection with the burglary, Octavius Jackson, is scheduled for Feb. 26, according to the Travis County Odyssey Portal.
Officers were informed of a female who was a possible overdose victim inside the residence while detaining the suspects last year, according to the APD news release.
“Austin-Travis County Emergency Medical Services (ATCEMS) transported her to a nearby hospital,” the news release said. “The female victim made statements saying she had been sexually assaulted and drugged.”
When asked if there was any new information about the female victim, an APD spokesperson wrote in an email that the “APD Sex Crimes Unit is not able to provide information regarding open investigations.” UT community members should remain vigilant and speak up when they see something out of the ordinary, the spokesperson wrote.
“Nobody wants to make preconceived judgement against anyone, but unfortunately that is what people in the criminal community rely on,” the spokesperson wrote.
