A second Bryan man is headed to prison for a murder in November 2022 where there was an exchange of gunfire during an attempted armed robbery. The Brazos County district attorney’s office says 26 year old Preston Thurmon testified that he and his accomplice took guns into a house and there was gunfire as they were attempting to steal money. The DA’s news release says a jury took less than 20 minutes to find Thurmon guilty. Then the jury sentenced Thurmon to 65 years. Another jury in July 2025 convicted 24 year old Armando Mejia and he was sentenced to 22 years and ordered to pay a fine of $5,900 dollars. News release from the Brazos County district attorney’s office about the Preston Thurmon trial: Preston Thurmon, 26, was sentenced to 65 years in prison on Friday, May 8 by a Brazos County Jury. The same jury convicted Thurmon of murder on Thursday, May 7 following less than 20 minutes of deliberation. On November 30, 2022, Thurmon and his co-defendant, Armando Mejia, went to a home on Cavitt Ave in Bryan around 10:00 in the morning to steal drugs and money. While holding the victim, Da-vid Lopez, at gunpoint and demanding property, the two were confronted by the victim’s brother, who shot Mejia in the leg. Both Thurmon and Mejia returned fire after shooting the victim one time in the chest. They fled the scene and left the area in Thurmon’s vehicle. Detectives with the Bryan Police Department were able to track the defendants’ movements with surveillance camera footage in the area of the murder, including video of both Thurmon and Mejia in the convenience store near the murder an hour prior. In that video, detectives were able to identify an image on Thurmon’s sweatshirt by looking through social media. On January 11, 2023, officers executed a search warrant at Thurmon’s home, where they found the sweat-shirt Thurmon wore at the time of the murder. They also collected Thurmon’s phone, which contained evidence linking him to the crime. Thurmon was taken into custody on that day. During an interview with detectives, as well as on the stand during his trial, Thurmon confessed to going to the home with Mejia in order to commit robbery of a person living there. He also admitted that both he and Mejia took guns to the house as part of the robbery and that the victim was shot while they were attempting to get money from him and get away. Statement from assistant Brazos County district attorneys Kara Comte and Caleb Beacham: “The defendant took a human life over money and marijuana, and this sentence reflects the devastating and irreversible impact of that decision. This level of violence in Brazos County will not be tolerated.”