A Harris County jury convicted Erik Fardell Arceneaux of murder on July 3, 2026, nearly eight years after his girlfriend Maria Rodriguez vanished in 2018 [1]. The case reached trial as a no-body homicide prosecution, a category of case in which the state bears the burden of proving death and criminal agency without recovered remains [1]. Prosecutors constructed their case entirely on digital evidence, presenting no physical body and no crime scene in the conventional sense [1].
At trial, the state relied on digital records to establish that Rodriguez had been killed and that Arceneaux was responsible [1]. The jury deliberated fewer than three hours before returning a guilty verdict on the single murder count [1]. Rodriguez's remains have not been found [1].
Sentencing was scheduled for July 7, 2026, four days after the verdict [1]. The applicable punishment range for murder under Texas law includes confinement in the Texas Department of Criminal Justice for a term of five to ninety-nine years or life, with an optional fine. No sentencing outcome has been reported in the available sources.
No post-trial motions or appellate filings appear in the available sources as of the verdict date. The case drew regional attention as an example of prosecutors securing a homicide conviction through circumstantial and digital evidence alone, without the physical evidence that juries in murder cases have historically expected [1].