2 Texas cheerleaders shot after getting into wrong car in parking lot

Police said a man opened fire at four cheerleaders after their practice.

Two Texas cheerleaders were shot after one of them said they had mistakenly got into the wrong car in a parking lot after practice, authorities said.

One of the victims was treated and released at the scene Tuesday morning and the second cheerleader was helicoptered to a hospital in critical condition, according to Elgin police.

Pedro Tello Rodriguez Jr., 25, has been charged with deadly conduct, a third-degree felony, police said. Rodriguez allegedly fled the scene after the shooting and was arrested at his home, according to court documents.

Heather Roth, a cheerleader with the Woodlands Elite Cheer Co., said on Instagram Live that she and three other cheerleaders had finished practice when they went to a carpool lot just after midnight Tuesday.

Roth said she got out of her friend's car and opened the door to a car she thought was her own, but a man was in the passenger seat. She said she got out of the car and back into her friend's car.

When the man approached their vehicle, Roth said she rolled down the window to apologize, and the man started shooting.

Elgin is about 25 miles east of Austin.

One of the injured cheerleaders, Payton Washington, has been accepted to Baylor University and was set to join its acrobatics and tumbling team this fall.

On Thursday, Washington was in stable condition in the intensive care unit, according to Fee Mulkey, Baylor's acrobatics and tumbling coach.

"She’s making great strides already," Mulkey said in a statement released by the university.

Mulkey, who visited Washington in the hospital, said, "She looks great all things considered. She is making good progress, even in a short period of time. She seemed to be doing well, but there’s still a long way to go."

"Payton is a strong young lady; if you know her, you know that about her. I have no doubt she's going to get through this," Mulkey added. "She's an amazing athlete but a better human, and that's why she's a part of our Baylor family. My prayers are with Payton and her teammates that were involved in last night's tragic event, I know mental wounds also leave scars."