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'''Carlos Coy''' (born ], ] in ], ]), better known by his ] '''South Park Mexican''', is an American ], convicted ], and company founder of ]. His stage name is derived from the ] neighborhood in ] where he was raised. | '''Carlos Coy''' (born ], ] in ], ]), better known by his ] '''South Park Mexican''', is an American ], convicted ], and company founder of ]. His stage name is derived from the ] neighborhood in ] where he was raised. | ||
⚫ | ==Early life== | ||
CARLOS COY DEAD AT AGE 38.Carlos Coy also known as (southpark mexican) was killed early morning of sunday by being straggled to death. Inmate Michael hernandez who killed carlos coy says"Carlos derseved it and, wat is done is done" not to much information can be given at this time. | |||
⚫ | Early life | ||
SPM was born to Arturo Coy, a former-] from the ] community in ], and a woman who dropped out of high school to marry. The marriage ended three years after Coy's birth. Coy's sister, Sylvia, described herself as his "mother-sister".<ref name="South Park Monster">Lomax, John Nova. "South Park Monster." '']''. June 6, 2002. . Retrieved on April 24, 2009.</ref> Coy attended various elementary schools, before entering the music magnet program at Welch Middle School. His family moved from southeast Houston to ], and Coy attended ].<ref name="South Park Monster2">Lomax, John Nova. "South Park Monster." '']''. June 6, 2002. . Retrieved on April 24, 2009.</ref> He attended ] until 1987, when he quit school. He was still designated as a first-year high school student at age 17 when he decided to leave high school for good.<ref name="South Park Monster2" /> Coy obtained a ] and enrolled in ] within one year of leaving high school. Coy, aiming for a business ], and later turned to rapping. | SPM was born to Arturo Coy, a former-] from the ] community in ], and a woman who dropped out of high school to marry. The marriage ended three years after Coy's birth. Coy's sister, Sylvia, described herself as his "mother-sister".<ref name="South Park Monster">Lomax, John Nova. "South Park Monster." '']''. June 6, 2002. . Retrieved on April 24, 2009.</ref> Coy attended various elementary schools, before entering the music magnet program at Welch Middle School. His family moved from southeast Houston to ], and Coy attended ].<ref name="South Park Monster2">Lomax, John Nova. "South Park Monster." '']''. June 6, 2002. . Retrieved on April 24, 2009.</ref> He attended ] until 1987, when he quit school. He was still designated as a first-year high school student at age 17 when he decided to leave high school for good.<ref name="South Park Monster2" /> Coy obtained a ] and enrolled in ] within one year of leaving high school. Coy, aiming for a business ], and later turned to rapping. | ||
Revision as of 22:31, 6 July 2009
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Carlos Coy (born November 5, 1971 in Houston, Texas), better known by his stage name South Park Mexican, is an American rapper, convicted child molester, and company founder of Dope House Records. His stage name is derived from the South Park neighborhood in Houston, Texas where he was raised.
Early life
SPM was born to Arturo Coy, a former-Marine from the Falfurrias community in Brooks County, and a woman who dropped out of high school to marry. The marriage ended three years after Coy's birth. Coy's sister, Sylvia, described herself as his "mother-sister". Coy attended various elementary schools, before entering the music magnet program at Welch Middle School. His family moved from southeast Houston to South Park, and Coy attended Woodson Middle School. He attended Milby High School until 1987, when he quit school. He was still designated as a first-year high school student at age 17 when he decided to leave high school for good. Coy obtained a GED and enrolled in San Jacinto Junior College within one year of leaving high school. Coy, aiming for a business associate's degree, and later turned to rapping.
Musical career
In 1995, Coy, along with his brother Arthur, Jr. and good friend Jose Antonio Garza from McAllen, Tx, founded his own record label, Jose came up with the name Dope House Records. He later released his second album, Hustle Town, through his label with distribution in Houston under Southwest Wholesale. In 2000 he signed a joint venture between his label and Universal Music Group which earned him a $500,000 advance and national distribution.
Molestation arrest and incarceration
In 2002 Coy went on trial for performing oral sex on his daughter's nine-year-old friend while she slept at his house one night in September 2001. Many Dopehouse records employees also state that the 9 year old girls father knew Coy from childhood and wanted money. Baby Bash stated that he heard the man claiming that after his daughter had stayed the night, he would sue Carlos Coy for something everyone knows he didn't do. The man of the child even had old friends show up in court to testify against him. There were 7 other accusations of molestation, all of those children were kids of single-parent mothers who had relations with Coy in the past.
A Houston jury convicted Coy of aggravated sexual assault of a child on May 18, 2002. Coy was sentenced to 45 years in prison and ordered to pay a $10,000 fine. Carlos Coy is currently incarcerated within the Texas Department of Criminal Justice system. There are persistent messages from online posters calling for his release.
Discography
- Hillwood (1992)
- Hustle Town (1995)
- Power Moves (1997)
- The 3rd Wish (1999)
- The Purity Album (2000)
- Time Is Money (2000)
- Never Change (2001)
- Reveille Park (2002)
- When Devils Strike (2006)
- The Last Chair Violinist (2008)
References
- ^ Lomax, John Nova. "South Park Monster." Houston Press. June 6, 2002. 1. Retrieved on April 24, 2009.
- ^ Lomax, John Nova. "South Park Monster." Houston Press. June 6, 2002. 2. Retrieved on April 24, 2009.
- ^ Lomax, John Nova. "South Park Monster." Houston Press. June 6, 2002. 3. Retrieved on April 24, 2009.
- Lomax, John Nova. "South Park Monster." Houston Press. June 6, 2002. 4. Retrieved on April 24, 2009.
- Alvarez, Olivia Flores. "Free SPM (oh, and buy his new CD)." Houston Press. October 23, 2006. Retrieved on April 24, 2009.