LONGVIEW — The Longview Police Department arrested five people during the beginning of a Labor Day weekend crackdown on drunken driving. The department is one of the law enforcement agencies across North Texas that are participating in the “no refusal” initiative that began at 6 p.m. Friday and ends Tuesday. If a DWI suspect refuses to provide a breath or blood sample, officials will get a warrant for a blood sample.
A first-offense DWI can result in a maximum of six months in jail, a $2,000 fine and driver’s license suspension for a year, police said. Arrested Friday night or early Saturday morning were:
Luis Corona, 17, of Longview, who remained jailed Saturday on $1,000 bond, charged with driving while intoxicated.
Terese Hembrough, 47, of Longview, who remained jailed Saturday on $2,500 bond, charged with driving while intoxicated, second offense.
Anthony Ponce, 23, of Longview, who remained jailed Saturday on $2,500 bond, charged with driving while intoxicated, second offense.
Michael Taylor, 51, of Longview, who remained jailed Saturday, charged with driving while intoxicated and with eight outstanding warrants. Bond has not been set.
Teresa Worthington, 40, of Longview, who remained jailed Saturday on $1,000 bond, charged with driving while intoxicated.
According to KETK and the Longview News-Journal, Longview police said 208 wrecks since January were caused by drunken drivers.






TYLER — Texas Tea Partiers, including here in East Texas, are not happy with the National Republican Senatorial Committee — or its chairman, Sen. John Cornyn. According to KETK, Tea Partiers are gathering across Texas outside all of Cornyn’s offices; dozens protested outside his office in Tyler. Cornyn is accused of trying to help incumbent Alaska Senator Lisa Murkowski get elected. Murkowski has conceded the election to Tea Party candidate Joe Miller. One area Tea Partier says, “This is about the fourth time our Sen. Cornyn has gotten involved in trying to assist a ‘rhino’ (‘Republican in Name Only’) Republican to get elected.” Cornyn and the NRSC say they’re weren’t trying to pick their own primary candidate — that it’s all a misunderstanding. They claim the only people who decided this election were the voters of Alaska — “as it should be.”

