Who is Nestor Hernandez, the man charged with capital murder in the fatal shootings of two Methodist Hospital employees?

In 2015, Hernandez was given eight years in prison after pleading guilty to aggravated robbery. The 30-year-old was released on parole in October 2021.

DALLAS — Shortly after 11 a.m. on Saturday, Dallas Police offers responded to reports of a shooting at Methodist Hospital in Oak Cliff. 

Upon arrival, police said they found two hospital employees shot and killed near the labor and delivery area on the fourth floor of the hospital. They also said they detained a suspect in the shooting — a man who had been shot and injured by the Methodist Health System police officer that first responded to the scene.

Friends and family of employees at the hospital described a scene in which workers at the hospital were running for cover and hiding from an active shooter after hearing gun shots ring out on the hospital’s fourth floor.

The man law enforcement detained was stabilized and transported to another hospital to be treated for his injuries. 

He was later identified by Dallas Police as 30-year-old Nestor Oswaldo Hernandez.

Who is Nestor Hernandez?

According to his Facebook page, Hernandez attended W.T. White High School in North Dallas of the Dallas Independent School District.

Hernandez appeared in Dallas County courts on multiple charges as a young man — including a 2012 robbery conviction and a 2009 delinquent conduct constituting the felony offense of assault of a public servant — before ultimately accepting a plea deal on an aggravated robbery charge he faced in 2015. 

A first-degree felony, aggravated robbery charges carry sentences of five to 99 years or life in prison, as well as an optional fine not to exceed $10,000. 

Per his plea agreement in the aggravated assault — dated September 15, 2015 — Hernandez was given eight years in prison for pleading guilty to the charges.

In a tweet on Saturday, Dallas Police Department Chief Eddie Garcia called the shooting a “tragedy” and “an abhorrent failure of our criminal justice system.”

According to DPD, Hernandez was out on parole at the time of the shooting on Saturday and wearing an active ankle monitor. 

The Texas Department of Criminal Justice (TDCJ) confirms Hernandez was released on parole on Oct. 20, 2021.

Why was Nestor Hernandez incarcerated?

According to an indictment, Hernandez and an accomplice named Selena Villatoro were arrested on January 17, 2015, on charges of aggravated robbery.

Per the indictment, Hernandez and Villatoro were suspected of approaching a woman as she entered her North Dallas apartment, striking her in the back of the head, pulling her to the ground by her hair, putting their hands around her throat, telling her “Don’t scream or I’ll kill you!” and demanding that she open the door to her apartment.

The indictment further adds that, once they forced their way inside the apartment, the suspects told the victim, “Don’t look at us or we’ll kill you!” before striking her again, demanding property and money and scouring the apartment for valuables. As the suspects “ransacked” the victims apartment, the indictment continues, the victim found a knife on the floor and attempted to defend herself, leading to a struggle over the knife before the victim was struck again and forced into the bathroom, her hands tied together and her eyes covered with tape. 

Per the indictment, the suspects took a cellphone, a car, $3,000 in cash from a school fundraiser and other documents from the victim before leaving the apartment. According to the indictment, Hernandez and Villatoro were arrested in a different part of town later that day on unrelated charges of public intoxication and traffic ticket warrants. The affidavit notes that the suspects were driving the victim’s car at the time of that arrest, and that officers recovered backpacks, cash and other property identified as belonging to the victim, although the suspects maintained all of it belonged to them.

While being interrogated, the indictment says, Villatoro confessed to injecting heroin earlier in the evening. 

Both Hernandez and Villatoro later pleaded guilty to charges of aggravated assault for the January 17, 2015 complaint. According to their plea agreements, Hernandez was given eight years in prison for his plea, and Villatoro was given five years.

Why was Nestor Hernandez at Methodist Hospital on Saturday?

According to TDJC, Hernandez was released on parole for aggravated robbery on October 21, 2021, with a special condition of electronic ankle monitoring.

TDCJ also confirmed that Hernandez was “granted permission to be at the hospital with his significant other during delivery [of her child].”

According to an arrest warrant affidavit obtained by WFAA, Hernandez went to the hospital to visit his girlfriend, who had given birth to their child. 

The warrant stated that Hernandez then began “acting strangely” and accused his girlfriend of cheating on him. The suspect started searching the room to see if anyone else was in there, according to the warrant. Hernandez then pulled out a handgun and hit his girlfriend multiple times in the head with it, the affidavit said.

Per the warrant, Hernandez then started making “ominous” calls and text messages to his family, and told his girlfriend, “We are both going to die today” and “whoever comes in this room is going to die with us.”

The warrant stated that the first victim then entered the room and was fatally shot by Hernandez. According to the warrant, the second victim and a Methodist Hospital police officer were in the hallway and heard the gunshot. The warrant stated that the second victim then looked into the room to see the first victim’s body, and was also fatally shot by Hernandez. 

The officer then took cover and shot Hernandez in the right leg, according to the warrant.

Hernandez was then detained and taken to another hospital for treatment. 

Law enforcement has not yet released Hernandez’s mugshot or the names of the victims. 

This is a developing story. Stay with WFAA for more information as it becomes available.