EL DORADO COUNTY — The Cuban national accused of beheading a Dallas motel manager last week has a criminal history that stretches into South Lake Tahoe, raising scrutiny over whether El Dorado County authorities once had him in their grasp.
Yordanis Cobos-Martinez, 37, faces a capital murder charge in Texas after police allege he killed the manager of a Dallas motel. His past includes arrests in Florida, Texas, and California. Among them was a 2017 case in South Lake Tahoe, where prosecutors said Cobos-Martinez attempted to drag a woman from her car, assaulted her, and tried to drive away with her inside.
A jury later acquitted him of carjacking but convicted him of false imprisonment, according to court records cited by CBS News. He was placed on probation in August 2023. CBS reports that El Dorado County prosecutors told the I-Team Cobos-Martinez fled while still under supervision, though no public records independently confirm the probation details.
The case has stirred questions about the effectiveness of the system and whether missed opportunities in prior prosecutions allowed a violent offender to resurface in a deadly Texas crime.
“Each time he slipped through, the danger escalated,”
said one law enforcement source familiar with the multi-state record, speaking on background due to the ongoing investigation.
Local officials have not publicly addressed whether El Dorado County courts still hold jurisdiction over any aspect of Cobos-Martinez’s record. The El Dorado County District Attorney’s Office has been asked for clarification on the extent of its involvement in the Tahoe case and probation enforcement.
As the Dallas investigation unfolds, the Tahoe connection underscores a troubling reality: violent offenders with complex, multi-state records often slip between jurisdictions, leaving communities to wonder if tragedy could have been prevented.