Prayer Rally Simulcast in Tyler

TYLER — Tyler gets involved in today’s “The Response U.S.A” event, Governor Perry’s prayer rally in Houston. Mayor Barbara Bass has issued a proclamation calling for a day of prayer and fasting, and the event will be simulcast at Green Acres Baptist Church in Tyler. Green Acres Pastor Dr. David Dykes invites everyone to the church’s new Crosswalk Conference Center for the viewing.

Visiting with our news partner KETK, Dykes said America is “a nation in crisis — and it’s not just a debt crisis or a political crisis, it’s really a moral crisis and a spiritual crisis, and prayer is the answer to that.” He adds that Christians don’t always know how to deal with the problems the country is facing, “but every single day, Christians can pray, and that is the one thing, really, that brings Christians together of all different denominational stripes.” The Houston event and the Tyler simulcast happen today from 10 a.m. till 5 p.m. You can contact the church for more information.

Police Chief Said Officers Justified in Shooting

KILGORE — Kilgore police were on the scene for about eight minutes before Monday morning’s fatal shooting of a troubled 19-year-old man who reportedly stabbed two officers and was said to be about to stab again, Kilgore Police Chief Todd Hunter said Thursday. An electronic stun device, which officers never got a chance to use, was found on the ground nearby. In interviews Thursday, Hunter said that while questions have been raised about the officers’ handling of the situation, his early assessment was that it was appropriate.

“A knife is a deadly weapon,” he said. “When an officer finds himself fighting for his life or the life of another, deadly force is the only option. When forced to utilize their weapon, officers are taught to shoot to stop, not kill or wound. When faced with a deadly encounter, our only goal is to stop the threat.”

The Texas Rangers are investigating events that led to the Monday morning shooting of Jamel Freeman, 19, who police said attacked two officers with a knife. Later Monday, the department said the man was mentally unstable and was known to officers.

Grass Fires Plague the Area


EAST TEXAS – Grass fires kept area fire fighters busy Thursday. In Smith County, a large grass fire started around 3:00pm in the 13,000 block of County Road 1141. It started when a farmer was cutting hay and the blade hit a rock that caused sparks. Around a dozen structures were in danger at one time.

In the Winona area, a grass fire was reported around 5:00 yesterday afternoon off County Road 254. A storage building was destroyed before the fire was contained. The cause of the fire remains under investigation.

Nearly ten acres burned in a grass fire on Cherokee Street in Longview. The fire produced thick, black smoke because of several hundred tires that caught fire. No injuries were reported. The cause of the fire has not been determined.

Search Warrant Leads to Arrest


TYLER – A Tyler man has been arrested on a variety of charges after officers executed a narcotics search warrant at 1219 East Locust Street. Taken into custody was Jerry Lewis Barrett, 56. When officers entered the house they found a quantity of crack cocaine, prescription pills, a short-barrel firearm, and evidence of bootlegging. Barrett as booked into the Smith County Jail on charges of possession of a controlled substance in a drug free zone, possession of a prohibited weapon, and bootlegging.

Tyler Police Arrest Naked Man

TYLER — A naked man has been arrested in a Tyler restaurant. It occurred around 4:30 Thursday afternoon at Wendy’s at West Front and Bonner Street. Witnesses tell officers the man entered the restaurant and went into the bathroom. There he stripped down to nothing but his glasses. He is said to have to have told the customers he wanted to have sex with some of the people in the restaurant. He was hospitalized for a mental evaluation.

Stop Signs to Temporarily Replace Three Downtown Signals


TYLER — In anticipation of their total reconstruction, the traffic signals located at the intersections of College and Elm; Bois D’Arc and Elm; and Bois D’Arc and Erwin will temporarily be replaced by all flashing red lights and stop signs beginning today.

The existing signals will be replaced with new pole foundations, poles, electronics and wiring as part of the Downtown Signal Modernization Project. Stop signs for all approaches have been erected on poles and these conditions are expected to continue for approximately three weeks.

Drivers are encouraged to drive safely and use caution while workers are present.

Inmate Testifies in Trial of Warden’s Wife


MAGNUM, OKLA. (AP) — An Oklahoma state prison inmate testified Thursday that he saw a convicted killer get into a van with the wife of a prison warden the day the two disappeared almost 17 years ago. The inmate testified in the trial of Bobbi Parker, 49. She’s accused of helping inmate Randolph Franklin Dial escape the Oklahoma State Reformatory in Granite where Parker’s husband, Randy, was deputy warden.

The 42-year-old inmate’s name was ordered by Greer County District Judge Richard Darby not to be revealed because he fears reprisal for his testimony. The inmate, who is serving a life prison sentence at the Lawton Correctional Facility for first-degree murder, told Assistant District Attorney David Thomas he didn’t want to be involved in the case.

Randy Parker was not in court Thursday because he is a subpoenaed witness, but has attended previous court proceedings.

Prosecutors allege that Parker fell in love with Dial and became his mistress while the two worked together in a prison pottery program in the garage of the Parker home, then helped him escape on Aug. 30, 1994.

The defense has said Parker was kidnapped, beaten and repeatedly raped by Dial and that he held her hostage until they were found living on a chicken farm in Campti, which is in Shelby County, Texas, in 2005.

ETMC Activates Generators to Avert Blackouts


TYLER — East Texas Medical Center is taking measures to combat heat-related high electricity demand. The hospital released the following statement late Thursday afternoon:

“East Texas Medical Center Tyler has voluntarily switched to using generators for some parts of the hospital system to help take a load off of the electrical grids to help the state avoid rolling blackouts due to the high usage (Thursday) of statewide power systems. This action will not compromise any of the hospital’s systems and the hospital is using the generators at our own expense to help East Texas customers avoid blackouts.”

Lindale ISD Just Short of AYP Standard

LINDALE — The Texas Education Agency released Adequate Yearly Progress (AYP) evaluations on Thursday, and despite all Lindale ISD schools meeting the campus standards, the district fell short by the score of just one student. AYP is the federally mandated accountability system required by the No Child Left Behind Act and the Elementary and Secondary Education Act. All public school districts, campuses and the state are evaluated annually for AYP. AYP primarily focuses on the performance of students in grades 3-8 and 10 in the subjects of math and reading/English-language arts on the Texas Assessment of Knowledge and Skills (TAKS). For a campus or district to meet AYP, passing percentages must be met by students in each sub-population: All Students, African-American, Hispanic, White, Economically Disadvantaged, Special Education and Limited English Proficient.

At each Lindale ISD campus, the 2011 AYP standards were met for each sub-population. However, the district missed AYP in the performance of Special Education students in math by one student. Lindale ISD will file an appeal for the district. “We do plan to appeal this AYP evaluation,” Lindale ISD Superintendent Stan Surratt said, “and we are confident that our AYP district rating will change to meet the standard and reflect the great performance of the students of Lindale ISD.” The federal standards were raised this year, requiring a higher percentage of students pass state assessment tests in math and reading/English-language arts.

Good Shepherd Residency Program Accredited


LONGVIEW — The new internal medicine residency program at Good Shepherd Medical Center has been officially approved by the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education (ACGME). This clears the way for the program to admit its first class of residents in July 2012. The three-year residency program is a partnership between Good Shepherd Medical Center (GSMC) and The University of Texas Health Science Center at Tyler (UTHSCT). In March 2010, GSMC announced a partnership with UTHSCT to create the residency program. Since then, the two organizations have worked to put all the program’s various parts together. Now that the program has achieved accreditation, it can begin to recruit residents.

“We are proud to partner with UTHSC on this internal medicine residency program. It will produce expert physicians who are likely to stay in our region and help address the shortage of doctors we face, especially in more rural areas of East Texas,” said Ed Banos, president and chief executive officer of Good Shepherd Health System.

The internal medicine residency program also recently hired a director, Emmanuel Elueze, MD, Ph.D. “We are looking forward to training the next generation of physicians here in East Texas,” said Dr. Elueze, who is a Fellow of the American College of Physicians. “We will provide them with quality education and training, while selling them on the beauty and advantages of East Texas. We want them to stay and become doctors in Gregg County and surrounding areas.”

Internal medicine doctors are specialists in the prevention and treatment of adult diseases. And officials say those who graduate from the residency program are needed. Seven of Northeast Texas’ 23 counties currently have a shortage of health-care providers, according to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. Texas will require an additional 40,000 doctors by 2025 to keep up with the state’s growing population, the state demographer has said.

UTHSCT President Dr. Kirk A. Calhoun praised Longview doctors for their support of the residency program. “This would not be possible without the backing of local internal medicine physicians and the larger medical community. Training resident doctors brings a new dimension to medical practice, as they challenge us to continue our learning,” Dr. Calhoun said.

Following the successful completion of four years of medical school, graduating physicians will enter the internal medicine residency program, which lasts three years. Good Shepherd Medical Center will serve as the primary clinical training site for the program and will work with its sister hospitals and other East Texas hospitals as participating sites. As an ACGME-accredited institution, UT Health Science Center is the program sponsor. In addition, a graduate medical education committee composed of members from both facilities provides oversight.

Water Conservation in Bullard

BULLARD — Due to drought-like conditions, the city of Bullard is implementing stage 2 water conservation notification. According to information from KETK and the city, the following water restrictions are effective immediately:

* Residents having even numbered addresses are permitted to water outside only on Sunday, Tuesday, and Thursday.
* Residents having odd numbered addresses are permitted to water outside only on Saturday, Monday, and Wednesday.
* Outdoor water use of any kind is prohibited on Friday.
* Watering as provided in the above paragraphs is only allowed between the hours of 9 p.m. and 6 a.m.
* Violation of rationing provisions may result in a fine of not less than $100 nor more than $500 as provided by ordinance.

Henderson Alcohol Petition to Be Considered


HENDERSON — The Rusk County Commissioners Court will consider a petition Monday to place a measure legalizing alcohol sales in Henderson on the November ballot. Although the petition is for the City of Henderson, the court must vote to put it on the ballot, according to KETK and the Longview News-Journal. Weldon Gray, treasurer of the Henderson 1st Committee, said that his group has encountered mostly positive reactions to the proposals.

There are two separate proposals. One would allow the sale of beer and wine for off-premise consumption, which would allow grocer and convenience stores to sell beer and wine, but would not permit packaged liquor sales. The second would allow for the sale of mixed beverages in restaurants by food and beverage certificate holders, which would permit restaurants to serve mixed drinks without a private club license. “We haven’t run into any organized opposition to the proposals,” Gray said. “There have been maybe three or four individuals who have expressed their disapproval of the idea, but we’ve mostly had a positive response.”

The purpose of the proposals is to attract more businesses to Henderson, particularly chain restaurants that want to serve mixed drinks without having to apply for private club status, he said. The group will probably start advertising and holding information sessions about the proposals as the election grows nearer, Gray said.

Girl Injured In Pit Bull Attack Released

GILMER — The two-year-old who was flown to Dallas Children’s Hospital Wednesday evening after being attacked by a pit bull has been released from the hospital, Dallas Children’s Hospital spokeswoman Peggy O’Hare said Thursday. Upshur County Sheriff’s deputies were dispatched to Ironwood Road around 4 p.m. Wednesday in connection with a toddler, identified as Alexis Black, who had been injured by a pit bull.

Upshur County spokesman Freddie Fitzgerald said Alexis was transported to East Texas Medical Center in Gilmer, then flown to Dallas Children’s Hospital. O’Hare said she had been treated and released from the hospital this morning. Wednesday evening Fitzgerald said the dog was seized from the Western Upshur County residence and taken to an area veterinary clinic to be quarantined.

Lousiana Men Busted with Pounds of Pot

HARRISON COUNTY — After several days of investigation, officials released information surrounding the arrest of two Louisiana men found pounds of marijuana. The Harrison County K9 unit was called to Interstate 20 around 9:00 Saturday morning after DPS troopers said the occupants, 21-year-old Cory Robinson and 23-year-old Orlando Gipson, refused a search of their vehicle after a routine traffic stop. Officials say the K9 alerted on the vehicle and deputies found 27 pounds of pot hidden in the vehicle in clear trash bags. One of the suspects reportedly told authorities they were transporting the marijuana from Florida to California when they were stopped. Both men were released from jail on $10,000 bond after being charged with having between 5 and 50 pounds of marijuana.

Officers Placed on Paid Leave after Shootings

GREGG COUNTY — Five police officers from two area departments have been placed on paid administrative leave after two fatal shootings this week. On Monday, Kilgore police shot and killed Jamel Freeman, 19, after they said he attacked two officers with a kitchen knife. On Tuesday, Willie B. Green, 56, was shot and killed after authorities said he charged three Gladewater officers with a knife.

Kilgore police said officer Dee Ann Brown and Cpl. David Tucker are on paid administrative leave and added both are out of the hospital. The Gladewater Chief said three officers, whose names will not be released until an investigation is complete, are on paid leave. Both incidents are being investigated by the Texas Rangers and the Gregg County Sheriff’s Office.