More than 14 years after 15-year-old Sierra LaMar vanished while heading to her school bus stop in Morgan Hill, California, on March 16, 2012, a stunning legal twist has upended the case that gripped the Bay Area. Antolin Garcia-Torres, the man convicted in 2017 of kidnapping and first-degree murder in her death, has had his murder conviction overturned by California’s Sixth Appellate District Court.

The ruling, issued on February 27, 2026, found insufficient evidence to support the claims of willful, deliberate, and premeditated murder or specific intent to kill. The court barred prosecutors from pursuing those theories in any retrial. Additionally, the appeals court deemed it prejudicial error to have consolidated the LaMar case with three unrelated attempted kidnapping charges from a 2009 incident in a Safeway parking lot, which unfairly influenced the jury.

Sierra LaMar disappeared without a trace on that fateful morning. She never made it to Ann Sobrato High School, and despite extensive searches across the region, her body has never been recovered. Garcia-Torres, a local resident at the time, was arrested months later after investigators linked him to the disappearance through DNA evidence on items belonging to LaMar and witness accounts placing him in the area. In 2017, a jury convicted him of first-degree murder during the commission of a kidnapping and the unrelated attempted kidnappings, sentencing him to life in prison without parole.

The reversal does not mean immediate freedom for Garcia-Torres, who remains incarcerated at Corcoran State Prison. Prosecutors now face the decision of whether to retry him on lesser charges or alternative theories, such as felony murder during kidnapping. The Santa Clara County District Attorney’s Office has vowed to continue seeking justice, stating they are carefully reviewing the opinion. The Santa Clara County Sheriff’s Office, which led the original investigation, expressed disappointment but reaffirmed its commitment to the case, emphasizing that they will pursue any new leads until Sierra is found and her family receives closure.

Sierra’s family has reacted with profound anger and heartbreak. Her father described the ruling as outrageous, noting the painful irony: “Sierra didn’t get a second chance. This guy is getting a second chance—there’s just no reason for it.” The absence of a body has long haunted the investigation, leaving unanswered questions about what exactly happened to the bright, popular teenager.

This development revives one of Northern California’s most tragic unsolved disappearances, raising questions about evidence handling, trial procedures, and the pursuit of justice when physical remains are never located. As the possibility of a retrial looms, the LaMar family and the community await whether closure will ever come—or if the case will drag on for years more.