South Park Mexican
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
South Park Mexican | |
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Background information | |
Birth name | Carlos Coy |
Also known as | South Park Mexican, SPM |
Born | October 5, 1970 |
Origin | Houston, Texas, U.S. |
Genre(s) | Hip hop |
Occupation(s) | Rapper, G.R.O. - Gangs R Out Founder. |
Instrument(s) | Vocals, Producer |
Years active | 1990s – present |
Label(s) | Dope House Records |
Associated acts | Baby Bash, Coast, Grimm, Juan Gotti, Low G, Lucky Luciano, Powda, Quota, Rasheed |
Website | DopeHouseRecords.com |
Carlos Coy (born October 5, 1970 in Houston, Texas), better known by his stage name South Park Mexican, is a rapper and convicted pedophile. His stage name derives from the South Park neighborhood in which he was raised.
Contents |
Early life
Coy was born to Arturo Coy, an ex-Marine from the Falfurrias community in Brooks County, and a woman who dropped out of high school to marry her spouse. The marriage disintegrated three years after Coy's birth. Coy's sister, Sylvia, described herself as his "mother-sister" [1]. 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 [2]. At 13 he began smoking marijuana and drinking alcohol. He attended Milby High School until 1987, when he was expelled for assaulting a female student. Coy attended an alternative school after his expulsion. He was still designated as a first-year high school student at age 17 when he decided to leave high school for good [2]. 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, failed all five of his classes. Coy worked at a chemical plant but found the rashes affecting his sensitive skin and the six United States dollars per hour wage to be unacceptable. Coy started dealing crack cocaine [2].
Musical career
In 1995, Coy, along with his brother Arthur, Jr., founded his own record label, Dope House Records [3]. 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.[3] [4] In total he has released nine albums.
Paternity tests
In July 2001, 20-year-old Jill Odom filed a lawsuit to force Coy to take a paternity test and legally declare him the father of her son, Jordan Dominique Odom [4] [5]. Odom, from Pasadena, was 14 years old at the time of the child's birth, and alleged that the then-21 year old Coy was aware that she was in seventh grade.[4][5]. This incident would later be used against Coy in his molestation charge of a separate girl [6]. The settlement forced Coy to pay $28,000 for back child support, $2,000 for Odom's prenatal and birth expenses, and $1,500 to a university fund. In addition, Coy had to pay $900 monthly child support, as Odom held primary custody of the child [4].
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. Claims that Coy had engaged in sexual activities with other underage girls, a total of 17 excluding his accuser, quickly arose after his September 25, 2001 arrest.[5][7]
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.[1] Carlos Coy is currently incarcerated within the Texas Department of Criminal Justice. In October 2006, Dope House Records released the still-incarcerated South Park Mexican's ninth CD entitled When Devils Strike.[8].
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)
- Eddie Deville & SPM- Dope Still Sells Itself (2006)
- When Devils Strike (2006)
- The Last Chair Violinist (2008)
References
- ^ a b Houston Press - "South Park Monster" Page 1
- ^ a b c Houston Press - "South Park Monster" Page 2
- ^ a b Houston Press - "South Park Monster" Page 3
- ^ a b c d Houston Press - "South Park Monster" Page 4
- ^ a b c Houston Press - "Free SPM (oh, and buy his new CD)"
- ^ Houston Press - "South Park Monster" Page 7
- ^ Daily Times - "Rapper Carlos Coy jailed 45 years for rape"
- ^ "Los FAQ - Featured on DopeHouseRecords.com