Houston billionaire Tilman Fertitta may become the next ambassador to Italy

HOUSTON – The Houston Chronicle reports that Tilman Fertitta, local billionaire and owner of the Houston Rockets, may be the next U.S. ambassador to Italy, CBS News reported Tuesday night. A spokesperson for Fertitta was unable to confirm the move, and CBS News said the Trump transition team declined to comment on the potential nomination. “Billionaire Tilman Fertitta, CEO of hospitality group Landry’s, Inc. and the owner of the NBA’s Houston Rockets, is Trump’s pick for U.S. ambassador to Italy, people familiar with the decision told CBS News,” the article read. A headline in that article noted that Fertitta was a “possible pick” for the post.

Fertitta, who owns Landry’s Inc. and is the chairman of the University of Houston Board of Regents, has long been a major political donor to Republican candidates. While the 67-year-old restaurateur has also contributed to Democratic candidates, the vast majority of his recent donations were made to Republicans, according to Open Secrets. Last month, Fertitta joined President-elect Donald Trump and Elon Musk in South Texas to watch SpaceX’s sixth flight test of its Starship rocket. Fertitta is also chairman of the University of Houston system board of regents. Reached tonight, UH President Renu Khator said an ambassadorship would be “very” prestigious for UH. “I think it would be a huge honor for the university. I would be very happy for him.” Asked if this would prevent him from continuing as board of regents chairman, Khator said, “I hope not. I don’t think so.” The news of his potential nomination came just after the Houston Business Journal reported Tuesday that Fertitta had expressed interest in purchasing the New Orleans Saints.

TDCJ behind on paying employees overtime

AUSTIN – KXAN reports the Texas Department of Criminal Justice (TDCJ) is behind on paying employees overtime pay, KXAN confirmed on Monday. One former employee said he’s been waiting around six months for hundreds of dollars he was never paid. The former employee, who wishes to remain anonymous, said he worked for TDCJ on and off for eight years. “[I feel] just used and taken for granted,” the former employee told Reporter Jala Washington. After quitting in October, the former employee said he grew frustrated with working conditions and pay issues. “My pay has been messed up several times, but this time, I’ve been waiting since May,” the former employee said. “They claim they’re short-handed and can’t get caught up.” A TDCJ spokesperson told KXAN all standard paychecks are being paid on time each month but said there’s a new time clock system that sometimes requires timesheets to be manually adjusted, leading to delays in additional pay.

According to TDCJ, it processes payroll for 31,000 employees across the state. The spokesperson said they’re now looking into how many employees are still owed money and how much the agency owes them. There’s no clear timeline on how long it’ll take to pay employees their additional pay still owed. KXAN spoke with Civil Rights Attorney Austin Kaplan about legal circumstances surrounding businesses not paying employees on time. “The short answer is this is not legal,” Kaplan said. “But the challenge that these workers face is there are significant loopholes in Texas law that make it super hard to recover.” Kaplan said Texas has two wage laws, but that they lack specifics. “There’s not that much clarity in terms of when you have to be paid by,” Kaplan said. “[In this situation with TDCJ employees], private attorneys can’t really get involved, because there’s no private cause of action that we can bring against a state agency in Texas.” Kaplan said employees would need to get the United States Department of Labor involved, which does offer free legal services. “It’s just that they’ve got to take the case, and it can take a while,” Kaplan said. Kaplan said there would be more protections for employees, if they were in a union, with a contract that TDCJ could not legally breach. “I’m really just expecting to take it as a loss,” the former TDCJ employee said. TDCJ said it is working on adding more staff to help with manual time adjustments that are contributing to pay delays.

Woman steals nearly 50-thousand dollars worth of pipe

Woman steals nearly 50-thousand dollars worth of pipeWINNSBORO – An East Texas woman is accused of stealing pieces of pipe valued at about $49,000 from her husband’s business partners, arrest documents said. Kattie Steele is facing charges after material was reportedly stolen from her husband’s drilling company and was placed behind bars on Monday. According to the arrest affidavit, the drilling company filed bankruptcy and business partners were in the process of dividing the property when 107 pieces of pipe went unaccounted.

According to our news partner KETK, a witness said they saw Steele’s vehicle leaving 4690 Hwy 37 pulling a trailer with the pipes, and informed one of the owners. The witness said Steele later called them claiming they had paid for the pipes, but the arrest documents say the victim provided investigators a receipt for the property. Continue reading Woman steals nearly 50-thousand dollars worth of pipe

Mountain lion collides with Longview patrol car

Mountain lion collides with Longview patrol carLONGVIEW – Our news partner KETK reports that a mountain lion collided with a Longview police patrol vehicle around 3 a.m. on Tuesday in the 3800 block of Loop 281.
According to the Longview Police Department, an officer was patrolling when his vehicle hit the mountain lion.

“Due to the extent of its injuries, the animal was put down at the scene,” the police department said. “A Texas Parks & Wildlife biologist and game warden were contacted.”

Texas Parks and Wildlife said mountain lions are also called cougars and in Texas are found “throughout the Trans-Pecos, as well as the brushlands of south Texas and portions of the Hill Country.”
Although the animal was hit in the city, TPWD said they are generally found in remote mountains or hilly areas that have cover. Mountain lions are usually active in the mornings and nights. The police department said the game warden took the animals carcass.

Texas agency to ask for $300 million to fix “significant neglect” in Medicaid enrollment system

AUSTIN (AP) – In Texas, health advocates often find themselves playing defense to encourage leaders to preserve the state’s relatively frugal public service offerings while also pushing for more.

That’s why a $300 million ask to lawmakers next year from the state’s notoriously tight-lipped social services agency — the Texas Health and Human Services Commission — to improve the agency’s complicated Medicaid application process has thrilled the state’s nonprofit policy groups.

If granted, it could mean more than 1,000 new workers and millions spent upgrading a decades-old computer system to make it easier for Texans to apply for Medicaid health insurance for adults and children, food stamps and other programs.

This move could allow vulnerable Texans to be enrolled in these critical programs in weeks rather than the months they’re experiencing now.

“That very much stands out for us,” said Peter Clark, spokesperson for Texans Care For Children, which advocates on behalf of Texas children and families and has put improvements to the state’s Medicaid eligibility system at the top of its list for state lawmakers when the Legislature convenes in January.

The agency-initiated request is a response to the incredible backlog of applications for Medicaid and food stamps after the federal unwinding of a pandemic-era policy that suspended the need for periodic renewal of benefits. Hundreds of thousands of Texans lost their Medicaid coverage because they didn’t get their renewal applications filed quick enough or they were procedurally removed from the program because of paperwork issues.

In its legislative appropriations request, the agency notes that federal rules require food stamp applications be reviewed within 30 days and Medicaid applicants within 45 days. Since 2019, that has not been the case.

As of Nov. 22, the wait time for a Medicaid application for an adult or child to be processed was 71 days and 131,869 applications were waiting to be completed. As of Dec. 5, the wait time was slightly improved at 59 days.

“The TIERS eligibility system has suffered significant neglect due to the exceptional demands of” the COVID-19 pandemic, the agency’s request to the Legislature states. “Fully funding this request provides the level of resourcing needed to keep up with routine demands, and allows (state tech workers) to address the backlog of modification requests targeting timeliness mandates and client experience.”

Each year, there are as many as 50,000 maintenance service requests for the enrollment system filed by staff members.

The legislative request document calls for at least 1,772 new positions, but agency officials have provided specifics on what else they would spend the rest of the $300 million. If the state approves the $300 million, it could receive an additional $100 million in funding, including from the federal government.

In the last year, the health agency employed more than 2,100 eligibility workers to help reduce the backlogs, reporting that more than 96% of eligibility workers are filled.

As a result of those efforts, the agency has eliminated the food stamp applications backlog last month, HHSC spokesperson Jennifer Ruffcorn said.
Why do Medicaid applications take so long?

When a Texan applies for Medicaid health insurance or food stamps, they can do so through the agency’s Texas Benefits website or the agency’s Your Texas Benefits app.

But miles away, a state worker has to take that applicant’s information and manually input all the data into an unforgiving 20-year-old computer system with the most bureaucratic of names: the Texas Integrated Eligibility Redesign System, or TIERS.

To say it’s a time-consuming process is an understatement.

“You remember The Oregon Trail, it’s like that,” said Diana Forester, director of health policy for Texans Care For Children, referring to the static, 1985 video game played via keyboard prompts.

When it was introduced as a pilot in 2003, TIERS was hailed as a system that would create cost savings. But from the start, there were snafus that forced the state to change contractors and pour an additional $56 million to fix some of the problems in 2006. An audit the following year found TIERS “cumbersome to use.”

Last year, the system’s flaws were made even more apparent for low-income Texans — children, the disabled and elderly — when Texas abruptly kicked more Medicaid recipients off the program faster than any other state after keeping them on continuously through the pandemic.

Forester, who worked for the state health agency for six years before becoming a health policy advocate in 2022, said using TIERS can be so tedious that workers must repeatedly type the same information in different places of what can be a 30-page Medicaid application for it to be successfully submitted.

The slow process is by design, said Anne Dunkelberg, who retired as health policy director for progressive policy group Every Texan earlier this year.

“Texas has many decades of making enrollment and renewal difficult,” she said.

The system forces caretakers to block out hours if not days to push an application into the system after gathering the required documents.

“It requires eternal vigilance,” Dunkelberg said. “We had some pretty bad statistics coming out of COVID. The time is ripe to upgrade some of the things to prevent losing so many eligible people, mostly kids, into the program.”
What applying for help looks like on the ground

As the deputy coordinator of Mercedes-based Texas RioGrande Legal Aid’s public benefits group, Bernadette Segura and her team help Texans, often Spanish-speaking, apply for Medicaid and food stamps.

“The delays are shorter, but there are still delays,” Segura said last week. “It’s taking (state health agency staff) forever to make decisions.”

Anyone applying for either benefits must prove they are either citizens or lawfully living in the United States by submitting birth certificates and verification of income, rent, utility bills and school enrollment for children who are old enough to attend.

Segura often hears from clients who have to resubmit documents multiple times because the state has said it hasn’t received them.

One client, a single father, waited more than a year after applying to receive food stamps, and it took an administrative appeal to do so, she said.

To apply for benefits requires a lot of patience, Segura said.

“You have to have a fully charged phone and a lot of time to stay on hold,” she said. It also requires a certain amount of tech savvy. If a Texas resident applies online from their phone, they have to know how to enlarge small print and know how to scan their documents into the application.

While they wait, many rely on local food banks, many of which also assist their customers with applying for food stamps.

Another impediment, Segura noted, is the fact that Medicaid and food stamp applications come in only Spanish and English. For those qualifying non-English speakers from the Middle East, Asia and Africa who need assistance, the language barrier can act as a strong deterrent, she said.

“There’s confusion based on an applicants’ level of English,” Segura said, who added she’d like to see applications available in Arabic, Chinese and Vietnamese. “There’s a need all the time for language translation.”

Forester, with Texans Care For Children, said the system can also pepper an applicant incessantly with confusing notifications. “It’s not user-friendly for an applicant,” she said. Go to any community center helping applicants and you’ll see “lines of families with a stack of notifications. Some contradict each other,” she said,

Applicants get overwhelmed and they can’t find out what the status of their applications is by logging in, she said.

“We don’t need more people,” Forester said. “We need better tech.”

Teacher accused of inappropriate relationship with a student

Teacher accused of inappropriate relationship with a studentHENDERSON – A High School teacher is behind bars accused of having an inappropriate relationship with a student, the district said. According to Henderson ISD officials and our news partner, KETK, authorities informed them on Tuesday that one of their teachers, whose identity is not being released at this time, had been arrested after a police investigation.The police department’s investigation came from a report that claimed the high school teacher was having an inappropriate relationship with a student, whose age and identity was not released.

District officials said the teacher was placed on paid administrative leave and they are cooperating with law enforcement. HISD said they remain “committed to the safety and security” of their students.

Who is Tony Buzbee, the lawyer suing Jay-Z as part of civil cases against Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs?

HOUSTON (AP) — High-profile legal battles are nothing new for Texas attorney Tony Buzbee, with his latest being a lawsuit he’s filed against Jay-Z, accusing the iconic rapper as well as Sean “Diddy” Combs of sexually assaulting a minor at an awards show after-party in 2000.

The lawsuit against Jay-Z is part of a series of civil cases the Houston-based Buzbee has filed against Combs, who remains jailed in New York as he awaits trial on federal charges that he coerced and abused women for years.

In his legal career, Buzbee has represented a variety of clients. He helped acquit Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton at his impeachment trial in the Texas Senate last year. He represented more than two dozen women who accused Cleveland Browns quarterback Deshaun Watson of sexual misconduct and assault. Buzbee has also made a couple of unsuccessful runs at elected office, including a bid to be Houston’s mayor.

His critics say he’s full of bluster and bombast. Jay-Z said the lawsuit against him is part of an extortion attempt. Buzbee’s law firm has said he’s worked to amplify the voices of the marginalized and to “pursue justice against powerful figures.”

“We’re a society where we typically don’t believe the accuser. We blame the victim and by proxy we blame her lawyers,” Buzbee said during a March 2021 news conference.

Here’s what to know about Buzbee, his involvement in the lawsuits against Combs and what other cases he’s handled.

Who is Tony Buzbee?

Buzbee is a well-known name in Texas courtrooms who has won billions of dollars in settlements for his clients.

He grew up in northeast Texas, the son of a butcher and a high school cafeteria worker. After graduating from Texas A&M University, he served in the U.S. Marine Corps. Buzbee later went to law school and founded his own firm.

His style is “characterized by his aggressive legal tactics, his ability to command media attention and his knack for turning complex legal battles into public narratives that resonate with juries and the public alike,” according to his law firm’s website.

What is Buzbee’s involvement in the legal case against Combs?

Buzbee has said his firm is representing more than 150 people, both men and women, who allege sexual abuse and exploitation at the hands of Combs.

Buzbee’s firm, which has set up a 1-800 number for accusers, has filed a wave of suits against the hip-hop mogul. Buzbee’s lawsuits allege that many of the people he represents were abused at parties in New York, California and Florida where individuals were given drinks that were laced with drugs.

Combs’ lawyers have dismissed Buzbee’s lawsuits as “shameless publicity stunts, designed to extract payments from celebrities who fear having lies spread about them, just as lies have been spread about Mr. Combs.”

On Sunday, Jay-Z issued a statement in which he accused Buzbee of trying to blackmail him by getting him to agree to a legal settlement over allegations he and Combs raped a woman when she was 13 years old.

“I have no idea how you have come to be such a deplorable human Mr. Buzbee, but I promise you I have seen your kind many times over,” Jay-Z said in his statement. “You claim to be a marine? Marines are known for their valor, you have neither honor nor dignity.”

Buzbee said in a Sunday Facebook post he “won’t be bullied or intimidated.”

“Sunlight is the best disinfectant and I am quite certain the sun is coming,” Buzbee said.

What other cases has Buzbee handled?

In 2009, his firm won a $100 million settlement for 10 workers who were sicked by a chemical release at a refinery in suburban Houston.

Buzbee has also represented politicians, including Paxton and former Texas Gov. Rick Perry in an abuse-of-power case.

In 2013, he settled lawsuits for 10 teenagers who had accused eccentric Texas millionaire Stanley Marsh 3 of paying them for sexual acts.

Buzbee has also settled lawsuits that he filed on behalf of 25 women who had accused Watson, when he was with the Houston Texans, of exposing himself, touching them with his genitals or kissing them against their will during massage appointments.

“I’ve handled some of the largest cases in this state,” Buzbee said during the 2021 news conference.

San Diego sheriff defies new policy to limit cooperation with immigration officials

SAN DIEGO (AP) — The sheriff of the nation’s fifth-largest county on Tuesday defied a new policy to limit cooperation with federal immigration authorities, setting up a showdown over a new obstacle to President-elect Donald Trump’s mass deportation plans.

Earlier Tuesday, San Diego County supervisors voted to prohibit its sheriff’s department from working with U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement on the federal agency’s enforcement of civil immigration laws, including those that allow for deportations. California law generally prohibits cooperation but makes exceptions for those convicted of certain violent crimes.

“We will not allow our local resources to be used for actions that separate families, harm community trust, or divert critical local resources away from addressing our most pressing challenges,” said Nora Vargas, who joined two other Democrats on the board of supervisors to approve the policy.

Shortly after, Sheriff Kelly Martinez said the board does not set set policy for the sheriff, who, like the supervisors, is an elected official. She said she wouldn’t honor the new policy.

“Current state law strikes the right balance between limiting local law enforcement’s cooperation with immigration authorities, ensuring public safety, and building community trust,” said Martinez, whose office is nonpartisan but has identified as Democrat.

San Diego County, with 3.3 million residents and its location on the U.S. border with Mexico, is one of the more prominent local governments to ramp up protections for people in the country illegally. At the same time, some states and counties are gearing up to support Trump’s deportation efforts.

ICE has limited resources to carry out the mass deportations that Trump wants. For that reason, it will rely heavily on sheriffs to notify it of people in their custody and hold them temporarily, if asked, to allow federal officials time to arrest them on immigration charges.

Trump’s border czar, Tom Homan, has singled out San Diego as a place where the incoming administration’s plans are complicated by “sanctuary” laws, a loose term for state and local governments that restrict cooperation with federal immigration authorities. He said Sunday on Fox News Channel that that laws denying ICE access to county jails “put the community at risk.” In contrast to San Diego, Homan plans to meet with New York City Mayor Eric Adams, a Democrat who has expressed interest in collaborating.

The policy brings San Diego in line with seven other counties in California, including Los Angeles, the nation’s largest, which recently adopted a policy that goes beyond state law, Vargas said.

Jim Desmond, the lone dissenter, said it will protect people convicted of violent crimes, recounting the shooting death of 32-year-old Kate Steinle in San Francisco in 2015 and other high-profile attacks committed by people in the country illegally.

“These tragedies are preventable but sanctuary laws allow them to happen by allowing illegal criminals back into our communities instead of into the hands of ICE, said Desmond, a Republican.

Vargas said “a loophole” in state law that allows sheriffs to work with ICE under limited circumstances for people convicted of violent crimes had resulted in the county transferring 100 to 200 people a year to immigration authorities. ICE will now need a judge’s order to get help from the county.

Before the vote, Martinez, who has largely avoided discussing immigration policies, took issue with Vargas’ use of “loophole” to describe state law. She noted California’s Democratic governor, Gavin Newsom, has blocked efforts to further restrict cooperation with ICE.

What happens next with Alex Jones’ Infowars? No certainty yet after sale to The Onion is rejected

The Onion’s rejected purchase of Infowars in an auction bid supported by families of the Sandy Hook Elementary shooting dealt them a new setback Wednesday and clouded the future of Alex Jones’ conspiracy theory platform, which will remain in his control for at least the near future.

What’s next for Infowars and the Sandy Hook families’ long-sought efforts to hold Jones accountable over calling one of the deadliest school shootings in U.S. history a hoax was unclear, after a federal judge in Houston late Tuesday rejected The Onion’s winning bid for the site. The only other bidder was a company aligned with Jones.

U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Christopher Lopez in Houston said he did not want another auction but offered no roadmap over how to proceed. One possibility includes ultimately allowing Sandy Hook families — who comprise most of Jones’ creditors — to return to state courts in Connecticut and Texas to collect on the nearly $1.5 billion in defamation and emotional distress lawsuit judgments that Jones was ordered to pay them.

“Our hope is that when this process ends, and it will end, and it will end sooner rather than later, is that all assets that Alex Jones has available are paid to the families, and that includes Infowars, and that as a result of that process Alex Jones is deprived of the ownership and control of the platform that he’s used to hurt so many people,” Christopher Mattei, an attorney for the Sandy Hook families, said Wednesday.

The families, meanwhile, were preparing to mark the 12th anniversary of the Dec. 14 shooting.
Why was The Onion bid rejected?

The sale of Infowars is part of Jones’ personal bankruptcy case, which he filed in late 2022 after he was ordered to pay the $1.5 billion. Jones was sued for repeatedly saying on his show that the 2012 massacre of 20 first graders and six educators was staged by crisis actors to spur more gun control.

He has since conceded that the shooting did happen.

Lopez said there was a lack of transparency in the bidding process and too much confusion about The Onion’s bid, and he expressed concern that the amount of money offered was too low.

The Onion’s parent company, Global Tetrahedron, submitted a $1.75 million cash offer with plans to kick Jones out and relaunch Infowars in January as a parody. The bid also included a deal with many of the Sandy Hook families for them to forgo $750,000 of their auction proceeds and give it to other creditors.

The other bidder was First United American Companies, which runs a website in Jones’ name that sells nutritional supplements and planned to let Jones stay on the Infowars platforms. It offered $3.5 million in cash and later, with Jones, alleged fraud and collusion in the bidding process. Lopez rejected those allegations.

Christopher Murray, the trustee who oversaw the auction, said he picked The Onion and its deal with the Sandy Hook families because it would have provided more money to Jones’ other creditors.
What happens next?

Lopez directed Murray to come up with a new plan to move forward. Murray and representatives of The Onion did not immediately return messages seeking comment.

The judge said there was a possibility there could be a trial in 2025 to settle Jones’ bankruptcy and that Murray could try to sell the equity in Infowars’ parent company.

The judge said he wanted to hear back from Murray and others involved in the bankruptcy within 30 days on a plan.

On the social media platform X, Jones called the judge’s ruling a “Major Victory For Freedom Of The Press & Due Process.”

Jeff Anapolsky, an adjunct professor at the University of Houston Law Center and the managing director and founder of Anapolsky Advisors, a financial consulting firm, said he was not surprised Lopez rejected the sale. He was not involved in the case but said he has appeared before Lopez and described him as a fair judge.

Anapolsky believes the sale of the Infowars assets will ultimately take place and be approved.

“So that’s up to Mr. Murray now, the trustee, to go do something to make everybody feel like everybody had their say and understand the transparency of the process,” Anapolsky said.
Sandy Hook families to mark shooting anniversary

The decision came during a solemn week for relatives of victims of the Sandy Hook shooting in Newtown, Connecticut. The 12th anniversary is Saturday, and some of the victims’ relatives were traveling to Washington, D.C., to attend an annual vigil for victims of gun violence. The families usually mark the anniversary out of the public eye.

Many of the families have said their lawsuits against Jones bought back the unbearable pain of losing their loved ones, as well as the trauma of being harassed and threatened by believers of Jones’ hoax conspiracy. Relatives said they have been confronted in public by hoax believers and received death and rape threats.

The families have not received any money from Jones since winning the trials.

___

Associated Press writer Juan A. Lozano in Houston contributed to this report.

Search continues for second person following armed robbery in Nacogdoches

Search continues for second person following armed robbery in NacogdochesNACOGDOCHES — One person is in custody and another still on the run following a Monday afternoon armed robbery in Nacogdoches according to our news partner KETK.

According to the Nacogdoches Police Department, on Monday at around 2:33 p.m. officials responded to a 911 call from a gas station employee in the 3200 block of North St. The employee said the store was robbed by an armed man who had taken an unknown amount of money and merchandise before leaving the scene. Authorities conducted a search for a second person driving a blue car connected to the robbery. Police later located the car and the occupant, Isaiah Hartsfield, 22 of Nacogdoches, in the 200 block of E. Lakewood St. and developed a probable cause linking them to the crime.

Hartsfield has since been arrested for aggravated robbery and is being held at the Nacogdoches County Jail. Continue reading Search continues for second person following armed robbery in Nacogdoches

More than 400 fentanyl pills seized in Longview

More than 400 fentanyl pills seized in LongviewLONGVIEW – A 35-year-old man and a 20-year-old woman were arrested after authorities found hundreds of pills containing fentanyl on Tuesday in a Longview home. According to our news partner KETK, the Longview Police Department, the Gregg County Organized Drug Enforcement Unit and Longview SWAT conducted a search on a home in the 900 block of Doyle Street.

The police department said around 440 counterfeit Percocet fentanyl pills, two stolen handguns and a rifle were found during the search. Desmond Simmons, 35 of Longview, and Baylin Harris, 20 of Ore City, were arrested and booked into the Gregg County Jail. Continue reading More than 400 fentanyl pills seized in Longview

Lindale boil water notice rescinded

Lindale boil water notice rescindedLINDALE — (UPDATE) – The City of Lindale is rescinding the boil water notice for the customers on Pine Dr from 17386 Pine Dr to 17679 Pine Dr. Due to a water main break, the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality  required the City of Lindale public water system to notify residents on Pine Dr from 17386 Pine Dr to 17679 Pine Dr to boil their water prior to consumption (e.g., washing hands/face, brushing teeth, drinking, etc). Rusk Rural Water Supply also issued a boil water notice due to a Tuesday main line leak. Continue reading Lindale boil water notice rescinded

NTSB report on Wings Over Dallas tragedy

DALLAS – The Dallas Morning News reports that poor planning and inadequate communication led to the deaths of six people in a 2022 midair plane collision, the National Transportation Safety Board announced Monday. The report caps two years of investigation by federal authorities into the incident, which has also spawned several pending civil lawsuits from relatives of the victims who died in the fiery collision in the skies over southern Dallas. The crash occurred when two Word War II-era planes were completing a repositioning turn during the Wings Over Dallas airshow, killing the five people aboard a Boeing bomber and the sole occupant of a Bell fighter. No one on the ground or in any of the six other aircraft involved in the show was hurt during the incident. The city owns and operates Dallas Executive Airport, located just off of U.S. Highway 67 in southern Dallas, where the airshow was operating from when the incident occurred. A city spokesperson declined to comment about the report Monday night.

When federal investigators modeled the flight paths and conducted a visibility simulation study, they determined the pilots involved had a limited ability to see and avoid the crash, according to a news release. The investigators concluded the absence of an aircraft separation plan at the pre-briefing contributed to the crash, as well as a lack of administrative planning to address other “predictable risks.” In the absence of that plan, investigators found the 2022 show relied on the air boss’ real-time directives to avoid overlaps in flight paths. An air boss is the primary operations and safety official at an airshow who functions like a parade marshal, ensuring each of the planes involved is carefully positioned both on the runways and in the air. In interviews, some crewmembers of the other performing planes said they were confused by the air boss’ long stream of instructions. The release said terms are not standardized across the air show industry to avoid this type of confusion. The news release did note that while a plan to “ensure vertical or lateral separation” of the planes was not discussed at the briefing, one was not required by regulations at the time. The final report summary included multiple recommendations for policy changes to air show operations, including recurring air boss evaluations by the Federal Aviation Administration, standardized terms for air boss directives to performing pilots and safety risk assessments for each performance. Since the crash, the annual air show has not returned to Dallas. The group that hosted it, the Commemorative Air Force, has continued to host annual Veterans Day events in other locations with more of a festival atmosphere.