Culture Rapper 'Tay-K 47' sentenced to 80 years for 2017 killing of San Antonio man

Rapper 'Tay-K 47' sentenced to 80 years for 2017 killing of San Antonio man​

Taymor McIntyre had already been convicted in the 2016 killing of a 23-year-old North Texas man.
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Author: David Lynch (KENS 5), Meredith Haas, Associated Press
Published: 10:04 PM CDT April 15, 2025
Updated: 11:14 PM CDT April 15, 2025

SAN ANTONIO — The California-born rapper who goes by "Tay-K 47" was sentenced to 80 years in prison for the murder of a young San Antonio man in 2017, the culmination of a trial that began two weeks ago.
187th District Court Judge Stephanie Boyd announced the jury's sentence for 24-year-old Taymor McIntyre just before 10 p.m. Tuesday, after hours of testimony rounding out the punishment phase of the trial—much of which focused on how McIntyre's turbulent childhood should or shouldn't play a role in the amount of time he was to serve behind bars.

"I do realize that while this is a lot of time, you’re still alive. You can still better yourself," Boyd said, addressing McIntyre directly. "But the complainant in this case is deceased, and you need to internalize that the complainant in this case is deceased. You’re going to have to make changes.”

He was originally charged with capital murder charge after authorities said he shot and killed 23-year-old Mark Anthony Saldivar in a San Antonio Chick-Fil-A parking lot in April 2017. He faced life in prison with the possibility of parole before a jury instead opted for a lesser charge of murder after deliberating on Monday.

Prosecutors said that McIntyre shot Saldivar after the rapper tried to rob him. Authorities said McIntyre had picked up Saldivar, who was a photographer, in a car after asking him to take photos of the rapper for a new song.

McIntyre was just 16 when he pulled the trigger.

McIntyre’s attorneys had criticized the police investigation of the shooting, alleging the case relied too much on self-serving statements from witnesses in the car when the shooting happened.

“Taymor McIntyre is not guilty of capital murder, murder, or manslaughter, and the reason for that is very simple,” John Hunter, one of McIntyre’s attorneys, told jurors during closing arguments last week. “You have to do it right. You have to do the work. And this case clearly demonstrates the work wasn’t done.”

In the early stages of this month's trial, state prosecutors argued Saldivar was beaten, shot, and left for dead after McIntyre and some friends picked him up for a photo shoot. McIntyre's attorneys, meanwhile, claimed the state's argument was based off assumptions and guesswork, saying that witnesses had "vested interests."

On Tuesday, the defense argued how much tie McIntyre should spend in prison. A forensic and neural psychologist utilized by the defense as a fact witness testified to his mental abilities, noting McIntyre came from generational trauma including drug abuse, violence and prostitution. He and his siblings were apparently in and out of foster care and placed in abusive environments.

The psychologist also mentioned how young McIntyre was at the time of the crime, noting his frontal lobe wasn't fully formed.

Then the defendant's sister took the stand, where she testified that she and her younger brother were pulled from their homes and placed in the foster system because their mother was addicted to drugs. But, she testified, they were abused by their foster mother both physically and mentally.

"We wanted her to love us, but she was always disappointed in us and we'd be accused for things we didn't even do," she said.

Boyd referenced that history when speaking to McIntyre on Tuesday night.

"From what I can tell, his mother wasn’t a good parent to him. His father wasn’t a good parent to him. Child Protective Services was not good, and if you believe the testimony, I don’t know why Child Protective Services would place children back with a father who put the children’s mother in a hospital," she said.

McIntyre was previously convicted for killing 21-year-old Ethan Walker during a 2016 home invasion in Tarrant County, a crime for which he received a 55-year prison sentence. Boyd determined the sentences would run concurrently and that McIntyre would be forbidden from contact with Saldivar's family other than for legal matters.

A representative for Saldivar's family read a victim impact statement on behalf of his mother after the sentencing was read, saying the victim's "dreams, ambitions, aspirations and goals (were) taken from him by you."
 
He was originally charged with capital murder charge after authorities said he shot and killed 23-year-old Mark Anthony Saldivar in a San Antonio Chick-Fil-A parking lot in April 2017.
It doesn't matter why this fight happened. Killing sometime in a Chick-Fil-A parking lot is the quintessential nigger moment.
 
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tk47.webplee.webp

He won.
 
Common sense told me this was not referring to Lil Tay but I let myself believe it was true for just a little bit
 
I looked over his Wikipedia article, this dude is a fucking creep. It's not like "hood days caught up with him, blasted J'Vontius on MLK Jr. Street", it's
- tried to rob a house of one of his druggie associates at 16, ends in guy's friend getting shot (this is back in summer 2016)
- despite being felony murder if he was just two years older, is sentenced to house arrest waiting for a hearing
- cuts his ankle monitor (now spring 2017)
- kills a second person while trying to rob a Chick-fil-A on the run
- also attacks and robs an old man during this time
- releases music during this time
- recaptured
- friends go up the river for the crimes in 2016
- goes to jail as bail is now completely revoked
- sentenced to 55 years in prison in 2019
- 80 years for the second murder means he's NEVER getting out, even on parole

Personally, I think this warrants bringing "Old Sparky" back out of retirement (which, when tested about ten years ago still works perfectly fine).
 
This whole article is crazy lol. Is it like a common thing for a public defender to use the "frontal lobe not yet fully formed" defense when the guy is committing multiple, unrelated murders and robberies? The judge is either a complete psycho or the funniest troll ever for that speech.
 
Is it like a common thing for a public defender to use the "frontal lobe not yet fully formed" defense when the guy is committing multiple, unrelated murders and robberies?
Well the PD can't just come straight out and say "niggers, amirite?" Even though that's how our fucking justice system acts anyway ... it seems like having black skin softens up all possible punishments you could ever suffer for a crime.
 
"I do realize that while this is a lot of time, you’re still alive. You can still better yourself," Boyd said, addressing McIntyre directly. "But the complainant in this case is deceased, and you need to internalize that the complainant in this case is deceased. You’re going to have to make changes.”
>How would you have felt if you were the one who’s deceased?
>What do you mean? I’m not deceased.
> Yes, but if you were, how would you have felt?
>Why are you saying that I’m deceased? I just told you that I’m not.
> Imagine that you were, though. How would you have felt?
>I don't understand the question.
 
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Well the PD can't just come straight out and say "niggers, amirite?" Even though that's how our fucking justice system acts anyway ... it seems like having black skin softens up all possible punishments you could ever suffer for a crime.
I have only seen that defense used for people who commit one psychotic act. it makes no sense to use this for someone who is already convicted of another murder lol. The PD can and should use whatever wacky defense they can to defend their client, even if he is a murderous nigger. I don't understand why you are pissy about the justice system in this case though. The bizarre speech by the judge notwithstanding, he is effectively serving a life sentence.
 
I don't understand why you are pissy about the justice system in this case though.
It took far too long, far too much money and involved far too much theatrics by too many people to reach this outcome. It's wasteful, and it gave itself thousands of opportunities to derail itself and turn this nigger loose on a technicality.

I suppose that's more a general complaint about the justice system though.
 
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