City of Palestine: planned water outage for Monday

PALESTINE – City of Palestine: planned water outage for MondayOur news partners at KETK report the City of Palestine has announced that there will be a planned water outage from 6 p.m. on Monday to 4 a.m. on Tuesday. The residents in the following areas will be under the temporary outage:
N. Sycamore St. from Spring St. to Erwin St.
Crawford St. from Houston St. to John St.
W. Oak St. from N. Sycamore St. to Queen St.
Magnolia St. from W. Crawford St. to Main St.
Any questions can be directed to the City of Palestine Public Works Department by calling 903-731-8423.

TxDOT: 15 bridges in East Texas slated for repairs

TxDOT: 15 bridges in East Texas slated for repairsEAST TEXAS — The Atlanta District of the Texas Department of Transportation (TxDOT) announced repairs for 15 bridges in East Texas will get underway in the coming months, according to our news partners at KETK. “We will be making repairs to the concrete decking, replacing bearing pads, and cleaning joints,” said TxDOT Mount Pleasant Area Engineer Wendy Starkes. The work is expected to start in December and will take about 22 months. Titus, Morris and Bowie Counties are all slated for repair projects.“Bridges scheduled for this work are on Interstate 30 in Titus, Morris, and Bowie counties and on State Loop 151 in Texarkana.” Continue reading TxDOT: 15 bridges in East Texas slated for repairs

19-year-old arrested after Longview fatal shooting

LONGVIEW – 19-year-old arrested after Longview fatal shootingThe Longview Police Department said that a 19-year-old was arrested on Saturday after a fatal shooting on Baylor Drive, according to our news partners at KETK. Longview PD said that officers responded to reports of a shooting in the 1300 block of Baylor Drive at around 12:40 a.m. on Saturday. When they arrived at the scene they reportedly found the body of Robert Rayson, 25 of Longview, who had died from the shooting. A statement from Longview PD reported that the shooting occurred after an altercation started inside a home on Baylor Drive. Everyone at the scene of the shooting was interviewed and Longview PD said those interviews led to the arrest of Deleontre Mitchell, 19 of Longview. Mitchelll has been arrested for murder and was taken to the Gregg County Jail, according to Longview PD.

Zavalla man returned from Arkansas after January murder

LUFKIN – Our news partners at KETK report Angelina County Sheriff Tom Selman said a man charged for a Zavalla-area murder in January was brought to the Angelina County Jail from Arkansas on Saturday.

Jeremy Wayne Gladden, 41 of Zavalla, was being held in Arkansas since he was arrested in connection to the murder in January. Sheriff Selman said Gladden allegedly fought his extradition to Texas but was eventually picked up and returned to Lufkin on a Governor’s warrant.

Gladden has been charged with murder after Lawrence Jason Wise was found dead from a suspected gunshot wound inside of a shed near his home ten miles southeast of Zavalla in January. Officials at the time said that Gladden was arrested in Arkansas by the Johnson County Sheriff’s Office for unlawful use of a vehicle.

Wise’s white Chevrolet S-10 was reportedly found at the home of one of Gladden’s relatives near Coal Hill, Arkansas.

Sheriff Selman said that Gladden is being held in the Angelina County Jail after he was indicted for murder by an Angelina County Grand Jury on May 17. Gladden will appear in the Angelina County District court for the first time on Monday.

Trump’s return to Butler marked by heightened security and reflective supporters

Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images

(BUTLER, Pa.) -- Former President Donald Trump is set to return to the site of his first assassination attempt in Butler, Pennsylvania, for a rally marked by enhanced security measures around the fairground as supporters call Saturday's rally a healing moment.

With security at the forefront of people's minds, officials have taken extra precautions to keep Trump and his supporters safe in the wake of enhanced threats. Semi-trailers have formed a perimeter around the fairgrounds so nobody outside can see in, a contrast to the summer's rally where spectators had a clear vantage point inside from outside the rally perimeter.

Additionally, the unmanned building that Thomas Matthew Crooks was able to scale and get a clear shot at Trump is now barely visible, with semi-trailers and a tall riser placed in between. Multiple counter snipers are making themselves very visible on the roof of every surrounding building.

Saturday's rally is expected to feature extensive programming focused on remembering the events of July 13, as well as honoring the resiliency of the Butler community before the former president takes the stage to finish his speech from the summer.

The campaign is also dedicating several moments throughout the program to Corey Comperatore, the rallygoer who was killed while shielding his family. His firefighter uniform is in the stands of where he was sitting in July in memory of him.

Several first responders spoke ahead of Trump, including the doctor who was attending Trump's rally and attempted to save Comperatore's life along with Sally Sherry, an ER nurse who helped treat Trump.

"The man that we all see on TV with the strong personality, who sometimes doesn't mince words, or who is seen as a wealthy, powerful businessman, was not the man that I stood beside that evening. What I saw was a man that in the aftermath of one of the most terrifying experiences of his life, showed resiliency," Sherry said.

"He showed strength and courage. He showed that his family was at the forefront. He was a husband, a father and a grandfather. He was compassionate and grateful," she continued.

Many of the rally attendees ABC News spoke with on Saturday said they were here in July, clearly remembering the moment shots rang out in the midst of Trump's speech nearly three months ago.

They said the violence and tragedy that took place here on July 13 did not discourage them from coming back, instead the experience reinforced their support for Trump.

"There's an electricity that's here in this crowd," said Barry Murray, 29, of Butler, Pennsylvania, who was at the July rally with his girlfriend. "I think a word that could describe it is, altogether, is just strength – strength and unity. I think one of the main goals of being the leader of a nation like America is to be able to unite people, not divide people."

Brooke Goshen of Beaver, Pennsylvania – a mother of four – attended the July rally with two of her teenage kids and came back to Butler Farm Show with one of them.

"I knew that the security presence was gonna be upgraded a lot this time, so we decided to give it a shot and come back to this historic rally," Goshen told ABC News about her decision to come back. She also said she was excited to see Elon Musk.

Dave Nacey of Apollo, Pennsylvania, wasn't at the July Butler rally but decided to attend today's rally because he felt the need to show more support today.

"I feel that the support needs to be there 100% from everybody," Nacey said.

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Texas gets $5.7 billion in federal funding for infrastructure

AUSTIN – Texas Public Radio reports that Texas is getting more than $5.6 billion from the Department of Transportation for infrastructure projects across the state. The Biden-Harris administration announced the funding on Tuesday as part of the 2021 Bipartisan Infrastructure Law. It’s the fourth year of funding under the law, which funds improvements for highways, bridges and air quality improvement programs. A spokesperson for the Texas Department of Transportation told KERA the money hasn’t been allocated to specific projects yet, but the largest share, about $3 billion, will go to the National Highway Performance Programs. There’s also more than $115 million for bridges and more than $201 million for air quality improvements. About $86 million goes to building electric vehicle infrastructure. TXDoT added that the money can go to federally eligible projects identified in its annual Unified Transportation Program over the next four years.

How Michael Oher’s feel-good story turned into ‘Blind Side’ battle

Grant Halverson/Getty Images

(NEW YORK) -- It was a story tailor-made for Hollywood: A wealthy white family takes in a Black teenager, guiding his football career from a high school standout to Ole Miss to the NFL. However, years later now Michael Oher claims he was blindsided by the movie that so many of us know and love, underscoring the importance of his perspective for a balanced narrative.

The Tuohy family and Michael Oher's inspiring story was a book by acclaimed author Michael Lewis and then a blockbuster movie — "The Blind Side."

The movie premiered in 2009 and reportedly earned $300 million at the box office. Sandra Bullock won an Oscar for portraying Leigh Ann Tuohy, a strong and determined character not to be underestimated.

Audiences embraced the movie's message of racial harmony, but now the retired NFL star, who is a Super Bowl champion offensive tackle, is questioning everything he thought was true.

"The movie is something that will shadow Michael Oher for life because people think they know his story," Michael Sokolove, a New York Times journalist and author who interviewed and spent time with Oher, said. "But that's not actually Michael Oher."

In a surprising turn, Oher is now suing the family that took him in.

An "IMPACT x Nightline" episode, now available to stream on Hulu, unpacks how such a feel-good story ended up mired in contentious litigation and looks at how everything went so wrong.

In his lawsuit, Oher alleges that Sean and Leigh Anne Tuohy saw him as a "gullible young man whose athletic talent could be exploited for their own benefit," and that the Tuohys claimed he was their adopted son when, in reality, he wasn't.

"What happened is that he entered a conservatorship with the Tuohys, which is wildly different than an adoption," ESPN reporter Kelley Carter said.

Oher and his attorneys filed a 15-page petition against the Tuohys, alleging that they and their children have made millions of dollars off Oher's name and story while Michael Oher has made comparatively little.

The petition also accuses the Tuohys of negotiating a movie deal where they would reap millions while Oher and others received nothing.

Oher seeks a full accounting of the money earned from using his story and unspecified damages.

Oher said he did not wish to respond when ABC News reached out to him for comment.

The lawyers for the Tuohys stated that each family member, including Oher, made an equal amount of money from the film.

In court filings, the Tuohys submitted an accounting statement showing they made full payments to Oher for his equal share. The amount was a little over $138,000, one-fifth of the money they say they all made from the movie.

The Tuohy family is claiming that Oher is trying to extort them. Text messages they say are between them and the former NFL star allegedly show Oher demanding they pay him millions, writing in a text, "If something isn't resolved this Friday, I'm going to go ahead and tell the world how my supposed-to-be parents robbed me. That's the deadline."

"Whether we agree with how he sees it, I think it's understandable that someone would feel differently as a 38-year-old adult than they would as an 18-year-old or even a 26-year-old in the midst of trying to stay in the NFL," Sokolove said.

The Tuohys filing states that the term "adopted" was always used in its colloquial sense and was never intended as a legal term of art.

"This is a sad day," Steve Farese Sr., lawyer for the Tuohy Family, said. "It's devastating to the family. And we hope that it doesn't have a chilling effect on others who want to help needy individuals."

The Touhys declined to comment to ABC News, but in an interview with The Daily Memphian last year, Sean Tuohy said lawyers advised them that they couldn't adopt Oher since he was over the age of 18. However, it is legal to adopt an adult in Tennessee.

Attorneys for the Tuohys say Oher always knew he was in a conservatorship.

"Fact of the matter is, he wrote a book in 2011," Randall Fishman, attorney for the Tuohy family, said. "And in 2011, he acknowledged in that book, on three separate occasions in that book, that he -- that there was, in fact, a conservatorship."

In the book "I Beat the Odds," Oher explains that the term "adoptive parents" pretty much means the same thing as "legal guardians," but the laws were written to consider his age. He didn't care about the terminology which was explained to him that way by the Tuohys; he was just happy that no one could argue that they weren't legally what they already knew was real: a family.

"Ultimately, Michael Oher did win a victory, maybe just a moral victory, in getting the Tuohys to pull down any mention that Michael Oher is their adopted son and to stop saying that going forward," ABC News legal contributor Brian Buckmire said.

Just last year, at Oher's request, the probate court judge dissolved the nearly 20-year conservatorship. The Tuohy family also agreed to remove all mentions of Oher's supposed adoption from their websites, and not to mention adoption in public speeches.

"People don't know anything about me," Oher told ABC News' Deborah Roberts in a 2009 interview. "I mean, you might see something on TV and think you know, but you gotta get to know me as a person. But you'll never know a person by watching a movie or reading a book."

Now, as the legal case wends its way through the court system, Oher is moving on to the next season of his life. Since 2022, Oher has been the president of the Oher Foundation, a nonprofit set up to empower economically disadvantaged kids through high school scholarships.

In an interview last year with "Good Morning America," Oher said, "I shouldn’t be a miracle. And no kid -- we shouldn’t be miracles. We should have opportunities and resources to live a normal, young adult, child life and grow up and be successful."

ABC News' Kevin Rochford, Kelley Robinson, Claire Pedersen and Jaclyn Skurie contributed to this report.

Copyright © 2024, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Former New York Gov. David Paterson, stepson assaulted on Manhattan street

NYPD

(NEW YORK) -- New York City police are searching for five suspects wanted in a "gang assault" on former New York Gov. David Paterson and his 20-year-old stepson on Manhattan's Upper East Side, according to officials.

The attack, which unfolded around 8:35 p.m. Friday by 96th Street and 2nd Avenue, began as a "verbal altercation" between the suspects and the 70-year-old former governor and his stepson, the NYPD said.

The suspects had had "a previous interaction" with the stepson, Paterson's spokesperson told ABC New York station WABC, noting that the attack took place near the victims' home.

The suspects hit the victims in the face and body, police said.

Paterson and his stepson managed fight off the attackers, the spokesperson said, and the suspects fled on foot, according to police.

Paterson and his stepson were both taken to the hospital in stable condition, police said, and they've since been released, the spokesperson said.

Paterson, a Democrat, served as governor of New York from 2008 to 2010. Paterson was New York's first African American governor and the nation's first legally blind governor.

Paterson and his wife "are thankful for the quick response time from the police and the outpouring of support they have received," Paterson's spokesperson said, adding, "The Governor's only request is that people refrain from attempting to use an unfortunate act of violence for their own personal or political gain."

"Governor Paterson's main concern today is Kodai Senga and the New York Mets, but we will provide any additional updates as necessary," the spokesperson added.

The NYPD asks anyone with information to call the Crime Stoppers Hotline at 1-800-577-TIPS or submit information online at crimestoppers.nypdonline.org.

Copyright © 2024, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Former Capitol Police officer wants to end the falsehoods about Jan. 6

Samuel Corum/Getty Images

(WASHINGTON) -- A United States Capitol Police Officer, who defended the Capitol during the attack on Jan. 6, 2021, vividly recounts the events of that day, describing it as a profoundly devastating experience for himself, his fellow officers and the nation as a whole.

Former Capitol Police Officer Winston Pingeon spoke with ABC News about the trauma of Jan. 6.

"It's hard to relive and talk about moments like this," Pingeon said. "I had that moment right there that I might die right here on the steps of the U.S. Capitol."

Pingeon and his team, dressed in full riot gear, rushed to the Capitol's west front that day, the site of some of the most brutal violence against police officers that day.

"I remember hearing radio calls of officers yelling for help that the line had been breached," Pingeon said. "They sounded panicked and like they really needed help. So, in my mind, that was one of the first indicators, 'hey, maybe this is not just a normal protest.'"

Pingeon recalls his team being outnumbered and says he was punched in the face by rioters who had descended on the Capitol that day to protest the certification of the 2020 presidential election results, fueled by false claims about election fraud spread by Former President Donald Trump.

"I was knocked on my back," Pingeon said. "My helmet came down and felt like someone was on top of me and I couldn't see anything. And I remember just thinking, I have to protect my gun, because they stole my baton."

Pingeon wasn't injured as severely as other officers, but he has invisible scars that may never fully heal.

He returned to work shortly after the riot and served in the Capitol Police for another nine more months as the memory of Jan. 6 became politicized. He has since left law enforcement.

"Right after Jan. 6, it seemed like everybody was on the same page," Pingeon said. "This is not OK. Then very quickly the narrative shifted. And that was really difficult to see."

Approximately 140 Capitol Police officers were injured by rioters, making it one of the most violent days for law enforcement in recent U.S. history.

Four officers who responded to the Capitol attack have since died by suicide.

Capitol Police Officer Brian Sicknick died after suffering multiple strokes hours after he was pepper sprayed by rioters. The Washington DC medical examiner ruled he died of natural causes, but said his experience on Jan. 6 played a role in his condition.

Despite the deaths and injuries to officers, a months-long investigation by ABC News found conservative figures, including Trump, have begun to downplay the violence on Jan. 6, painting that day as a largely peaceful protest and recasting imprisoned rioters as “hostages.”

Derrick Evans, a former West Virginia House of Delegates and congressional candidate who served three months in federal prison for charges related to Jan. 6, repeated many of those false claims in an interview with ABC News.

"Do I think that anyone should be fighting police officers? No, I do not," Evans said. "I think it's wrong to do that. The police officers are the ones that really started the whole violence over there."

Winston Pingeon reacted strongly.

“That’s not true,” he said when ABC News played video of Evans’ comments for the former Capitol Police officer. “We were there protecting. We were there to hold a line. We're not pushing back unless we're pushed on first. So its completely ridiculous.”

Multiple accused rioters from Jan. 6 have claimed they were incited to violence by police, but none have been successful in court.

Evans was convicted of trespassing at the Capitol and attempting to obstruct the certification of the 2020 election, a charge the Supreme Court has recently found was applied in an overly broad manner to Jan. 6 criminal cases.

“I don't even think [Jan. 6] is really worth remembering. It's been blown out of proportion by the media,” he said.

Meantime, the former president and his allies have made rewriting the history of Jan. 6 a centerpiece of his campaign, often saying a large number of capitol rioters deserve to be pardoned.

“If they’re innocent, I would pardon them,” Trump told ABC’s Rachel Scott during a panel at the National Association of Black Journalists (NABJ) Convention.

A pardon is exactly what Capitol rioter Rachel Powell told ABC News she's waiting for behind bars.

"If Trump gets that, he's promising that he will pardon us, if he gets in and they don't steal the next election," Powell said.

Powell called ABC News from federal prison, where she is currently serving a more than four-year sentence for her actions on Jan. 6.

Several of Powell's fellow Jan. 6 inmates feel the same, she told ABC News. Powell sent ABC News a photo, taken inside of her correctional facility, showing her and three other Jan. 6 inmates smiling, with the words "Trump 2024" written in marker on top.

"I would want to know why they did what they did, and I'd be curious to know if they have remorse today. I think that's what I would want to know," Pingeon said. "Because loyalty to one man, to alter your life negatively, to go to prison for years. I mean, I would ask them: Was it worth it?"

Copyright © 2024, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Harris dunks on Trump, Vance at Flint rally with an assist from Magic Johnson

Scott Olson/Getty Images

(FLINT, Mich.) -- Vice President Kamala Harris dunked on former President Donald Trump and his running mate, Sen. JD Vance, particularly on the auto industry at her rally Friday night, with an assist from NBA star and Michigan native, Magic Johnson.

"When it came to building the cars of the future, Donald Trump sat on the sidelines and let China dominate and then he talks down to American workers, saying 'we can't compete with Chinese workers,'" Harris said. "And make no mistake, Donald Trump is no friend of labor."

Harris' attacks focused on what she said was her rival's unkept promises on manufacturing and putting Michigan auto jobs at risk something her campaign attacked Trump on the same topic in a digital ad launched last month.

The vice president also highlighted comments that Vance made earlier this week about whether the Trump administration would honor a $500 million grant going to General Motors to convert a Lansing plant to make electric vehicles.

"So, two days ago, Donald Trump's running mate suggested that if Trump wins, he might let the Grand River assembly plant in Lansing close down, the same plant that our administration helped save earlier this year, along with 650 union jobs," Harris said. "Michigan, we together fought hard for those jobs, and you deserve a president who won't put them at risk."

Asked by the Detroit Free Press on Wednesday whether Trump would honor or cancel the Biden administration grant, Vance didn't give a direct answer.

"First of all, the $500 million grant came along with some really ridiculous strings and no protections for American jobs not getting shipped to foreign countries because a lot of not just the cars themselves, but the battery components, the minerals, this stuff is all produced in China, and so when we write massive checks on American taxpayer expense to these companies, a lot of times what we're doing is selling American middle class jobs to the Communist Chinese, and we ought to be doing exactly the opposite," Vance told the Detroit Free Press.

"We ought to be rebuilding the American middle class and investing in our own workers, not shipping our tax dollars off to electric vehicles made in China," Vance added.

In Michigan, Trump is running a new ad targeting auto workers, accusing Harris of wanting to "end all gas powered cars" and force Americans to drive electric vehicles. Harris shot back Friday night.

"Let us be clear: Contrary to what my opponent is suggesting, I will never tell you what kind of car you have to drive," Harris said. "But here's what I will do, I will invest in communities like Flint."

Johnson, who is from Lansing and went to Michigan State, spoke in the program ahead of Harris, and praised her as "strong," "smart" and "passionate."

"Nobody's going to outwork her. She's committed to you as the people United States, the people of Michigan. She's committed to you," Johnson said. "She's going to be a president for everybody. And one thing she's going to do is finally unite us, bring us together, that other party is trying to tear us down."

But the five-time NBA Finals champion took time to directly address Black men, a demographic whose support for Democrats has softened.

"There's a lot of Black men in here. I don't mean to not talk to other people, but this is important," Johnson said. "Our Black men, we've got to get them out to vote, that's number one."

"Kamala's opponent promised a lot of things last time to the Black community that he did not deliver on," Johnson added. "And we gotta make sure Black men understand that. So, that's why I'm here: To make sure I help Black men understand, first, get out and vote, and then vote for the next president of the United States Kamala Harris."

Johnson also called on America to take inspiration from Mexico, which swore in its first woman president on Tuesday.

Earlier Friday, ahead of the Flint rally, Harris stopped by a firehouse in Redford Township, right outside Detroit, where she labeled Trump "an existential threat" to labor.

"Donald Trump's track record is a disaster for working people, and he's trying to gaslight people all over our country, but we know the facts and we know the truth: He is an existential threat to America's labor movement," Harris claimed.

In a short statement Thursday, Edward Kelly, the president of the firefighters' union, announced his board voted not to endorse a candidate for president -- following the Teamsters' lead.

"This decision, which we took very seriously, is the best way to preserve and strengthen our unity," Kelly said.

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Parole program CHNV recipients will need to find alternative benefits, or leave the country: DHS

Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images

(WASHINGTON) -- The Biden administration is saying those whose parole is expiring from the Cubans, Haitians, Nicaraguans and Venezuelans (CHNV) program will need to seek another immigration benefits and if they don't find one, depart the country.

CHNV was implemented by the Biden administration with the intention to reduce irregular migration of Cubans, Haitians, Nicaraguans and Venezuelans, and to allow qualifying individuals to lawfully enter the United States in a safe and orderly manner on a case-by-case basis for urgent humanitarian reasons or significant public benefit.

The program was briefly paused for fraud concerns but has been reimplemented with better safeguards.

These processes were set up as temporary in nature, a source told ABC News, to allow the beneficiaries to work and provide them the time and opportunity to pursue avenues for immigration benefits or humanitarian relief if eligible such as, for example, asylum or Temporary Protected Status (TPS).

"As initially stated in the Federal Register notices, a grant of parole under these processes was for a temporary period of up to two years," a Department of Homeland Security spokesperson told ABC News. "This two-year period was intended to enable individuals to seek humanitarian relief or other immigration benefits for which they may be eligible, and to work and contribute to the United States."

The Department said those who do not have pending immigration benefits or who have not been granted an immigration benefit during their two-year parole period will need to depart the United States before the expiration of their authorized parole period or may be placed in removal proceedings after the period of parole expires.

CHNV parolees may be eligible to apply for humanitarian relief or certain immigration benefits with USCIS, the Department said.

DHS points to the CHNV process as an example of a southwest border encounter reducer.

ABC's Armando Garcia contributed to this report.

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Wanted East Texas woman, passenger arrested

POLK COUNTY – Wanted East Texas woman, passenger arrestedOur news partners at KETK report that a wanted East Texas woman and her passenger were arrested after deputies discovered methamphetamine during a traffic stop, the Polk County Sheriff’s Office said. According to the sheriff’s office, deputies saw a vehicle travelling in the Blanchard area commit a traffic violation on Sept. 26 and decided to conduct a traffic stop. “During the stop, officers discovered probable cause to search the vehicle, leading to the seizure of methamphetamine,” PCSO said. The sheriff’s office said the driver, identified as 37-year-old Marlena Anne Toomey, of Livingston, gave deputies a “government document” with false information. Continue reading Wanted East Texas woman, passenger arrested

Some North Texas gun stores sold many guns later used in crimes

DALLAS – The Dallas Morning News reports that gun tracing not only is a way to help identify and capture those who purchase guns illegally, it also is used to identify and alert gun sellers. U.S. gun stores and other licensed dealers associated with a high number of crime gun traces are notified of this by the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives under a special regulatory program. The “Demand Letter 2? notice is sent to dealers that had 25 or more crime guns traced to them the previous calendar year that were used in a crime within 3 years of original purchase, a concept called “time-to-crime.” Such dealers are then required to periodically supply ATF with additional information. The notice doesn’t necessarily mean the dealer did anything improper. It’s intended to add extra layers of scrutiny to licensed gun sellers that are being targeted by criminals.

Several North Texas gun stores received the notices in 2023, including large chains and independent stores, according to a batch of ATF notices released to USA Today. One such store is WEG’s Guns in Farmers Branch. A Houston man bought a .50-caliber rifle at WEG’s in 2022 with more than $8,600 in cash, court records show. Mexican authorities recovered it more than three months later in Matamoros, Mexico. The buyer pleaded guilty to a charge related to gun straw purchasing and was sentenced in September to time served in a North Texas court, court records show. WEG’s website says it’s a family-run business. Store representatives did not respond to a request for comment. Some dealers say handling a high volume of gun sales naturally leads to more traces. Indeed, national chain stores were among the dealers that received notices in 2023 of crime guns traced to them from Mexico, including at least two Bass Pro Shops stores in North Texas, according to the ATF information obtained by USA Today.

Animal welfare advocates will plead with Texas lawmakers

McALLEN (AP) — The phone calls at Yaqui Animal Rescue were non-stop. On the other end of the phone were requests to help with abandoned puppies or pick up stray dogs roaming the streets. The Rio Grande Valley ranch used to temporarily house and care for animals was getting hourly requests by email and social media, too.

The pleas even reached the personal Instagram account of Rebecca Chavez, Yaqui’s development director. She estimates she’s tagged daily in at least five social media posts about dogs that are dumped in the middle of nowhere.

It became too much. In early September, the rescue’s staff announced on social media that the rescue would be — for the first time in 11 years — closed for intake until further notice.

“We don’t have enough staff to take on the demand,” Chavez said. “Mentally and emotionally, it’s taking a toll on us.”

The decision was made in an effort to get a handle on the “crisis-level overcrowding” of more than 250 animals at the rescue, they wrote in the social media post.

Animal shelters across Texas are — and have been — overcrowded, say advocates, who are urging the public to help by fostering or adopting these animals.

Supreme Court to weigh a Texas death row case after halting execution
The more pressing challenge is convincing pet owners to spay and neuter their pets, animal welfare advocates said.

Chavez said that local governments could be doing more to invest in low-cost spay and neuter services, especially in places like the Valley, home to many low-income communities.

To that end, Chavez and other animal advocates across the state will take the issue to Austin when lawmakers reconvene for the next legislative session in 2025.

The Texas Humane Legislation Network, a network of leaders of animal rights groups across the state, are eyeing changes to current state regulations that would allow cities to regulate the sale of puppies and make it easier for shelters and nonprofits to access money to help cover the costs of spay and neuter services, hoping to slow the growing number of stray animals in the state.

“The No. 1 issue in Texas is clearly shelter overpopulation and, quite frankly, overpopulation of dogs throughout our state,” said Shelby Bobosky, executive director of the humane legislation network. “It doesn’t matter if you’re in an urban or rural area, it’s just happening everywhere.”

Financial assistance
When Bonnie Hill and her husband moved out of Dallas onto a Kaufman County ranch in the early 2000s, the couple was surprised to learn their new home was not completely vacated.

The previous owner had left behind a golden retriever with eight puppies that the Hills were not prepared to care for. They immediately contacted the previous owner who, conveniently, had just moved down the street.

But unable or unwilling to take on the responsibility of the dogs, the previous owner took the pups and shot them.

“I was just shocked,” Hill said about finding out what had happened to the dogs. “I was, of course, hysterical.”

That was just how they handled things there, the owner had told her. There were no shelters or veterinarians, so that was their only option.

That norm was unacceptable to Hill.

She contacted the SPCA of Texas, an animal welfare agency in North Texas, with the intent to start her own shelter, but was convinced that focusing on providing low-cost spay and neuter services was more vital to their cause of minimizing the stray animal population.

The couple opened a clinic in Kaufman County in 2004 and, soon after, officials from other counties began asking for help with their own animal population. She added a transport program that would pick up animals from those areas and bring them to their clinic for surgeries.

Today, the organization — the Spay Neuter Network — has four clinics across the state along with a mobile clinic. They also mobilize five vehicles every day that travel to low-income areas as part of their transport program. The goal is to make a dent in Texas’ ballooning stray animal population.

While there is no official count of the stray animal population for Texas, an estimated 568,325 cats and dogs entered shelters in 2023, according to Best Friends Animal Society, an animal welfare nonprofit based in Utah. The group also estimates that 82,681 cats and dogs were killed in Texas that year, more than in any other state.

The Spay Neuter Network does more than 30,000 surgeries every year, according to Hill, and reported $2.8 million in service expenses for 2022.

However, the cost they charged for the surgery did not cover the cost of performing it, so organizations like the Spay Neuter Network rely on grants to make the service more accessible. Grants and contributions made up 23% of their total revenue.

Years ago, the Spay Neuter Network used to apply for money through the Animal Friendly Program, a state grant offered by the Texas Department of State Health Services that is paid for by the sale of specialty license plates. The money raised is then made available to organizations through a competitive application process.

At one point, the network received nearly $500,000 through the program, but over the years, the reimbursement process became more difficult for them. Instead of covering the $50 flat rate their clinics charged per surgery, the state wanted them to calculate the exact cost per surgery, down to how many staff members worked on it and the exact time it took to perform each one.

Vinnie Lopez, surgical technician, cleans and disinfects a puppy from an animal rescue organization in preparation to be neutered at the Spay Neuter Network clinic in Crandall. Credit: Desiree Rios for The Texas Tribune

“It was just really hard,” Hill said. “We all just said that it just doesn’t work for us. We can’t do it. There’s easier money to be found elsewhere.”

The Animal Friendly Program has awarded more than $6 million for low-cost spay and neuter services since 2002. Grants are awarded every two years and in recent years, annual total funding available has ranged from $160,000 to $200,000, according to a department spokesperson.

How much is given to each applicant is at the discretion of the department and ranges from $6,000 to $30,000 per contractor annually. If funding allows, contracts are renewed for an additional one-year term.

The health department awarded more than $165,000 in grants to 11 different organizations in Texas for 2023.

In Canton, Kathy Stonaker, an ambassador for the humane legislation network, wants more organizations to access those funds. She runs a Facebook page called Van Zandt County Pet Project that shares information about dogs needing to be adopted and encourages the public to spay and neuter their pets.

She hoped to educate nearby shelters and rescues on how to navigate the application process for the Animal Friendly program but was not able to get through it.

“It’s about the worst thing I’ve ever seen,” Stonaker said.

The process requires applicants to complete forms, questionnaires, exhibits, and provide requested information outlined by the agency. It is a process that is standard for all of the health department’s grant applications.

Stonaker argues the process is too difficult for small shelters.

“A shelter or a rescue would have to pay for the help to get this,” she said.

Ending puppy sales
The humane legislation network also wants to win back some control to local governments that was lost in 2023 through House Bill 2127, or the Texas Regulatory Consistency Act.

The law, known by its opponents as the “Death Star” bill, prevents cities and counties from passing local ordinances that go further than what’s allowed under state law. State Republican lawmakers approved the legislation after many of the state’s largest cities, often run by Democrats, approved local policies they deemed too progressive and a threat to the state’s pro-friendly business climate.

One of the less discussed provisions bars cities from adopting ordinances that would ban or restrict the retail sale of animals.

Since the passage of the law, 10 puppy stores have sprung up throughout the state, bringing the total number of stores close to 40. Animal welfare advocates believe these private puppy stores make the situation worse because the dogs sold there are brought in from other states and are not spayed or neutered.

The humane legislation network aims to require that pet stores only sell healthy animals from shelters and rescues.

A handful of cities in Texas, including Dallas and Houston, adopted similar “humane pet store” ordinances in 2022 that were grandfathered into the bill.

“We truly need a statewide law to help these communities keep the puppy mill pipeline out of Texas,” Bobosky said. “It’s just adding to the crisis.”

Heeding the call
Chavez, the Rio Grande Valley animal advocate, thinks her neighbors must believe she has magical powers for how often they call upon her to attend to abandoned or distressed animals.

Sure, she has dropped everything to drive 30 minutes to the middle of nowhere to find an injured animal. And yes, she has sheltered animals in her own garage at her own expense.

She’s not special, she said, just willing to be inconvenienced. Yet, the emotional toll is getting worse.

She got into this line of work to save animals but when the rescue can’t do that due to a lack of space or resources, the assumption that the animals will eventually die without their help begins to wear on the staff.

For their own mental health and to ease the strain on their resources, Chavez said they needed to temporarily close intakes. The move, she said, would allow them to focus on the animals they currently have in their care and try to find them permanent homes to create more space.

While the rescue does what it can to better handle the situation, Chavez wants county and city officials to invest into mobile low-cost spay and neuter clinics.

“They’re reproducing at a rate that we cannot keep up with,” Chavez said. “I don’t even want to say we’re stretched too thin, because stretching too thin means that we’re able to handle it and we’re not. We can’t do it.”

Police seeking mother of 2-year-old girl who died from suspected fentanyl exposure

Douglas Sacha/Getty Images/STOCK

(PORTLAND, Ore.) -- Police in Portland, Oregon, said they're seeking the mother of a 2-year-old girl who died from a suspected fentanyl exposure last month, and who is also wanted for "several violent crimes."

Police said they have been unable to locate Mary Jacobo, 26, for over three weeks since the death of her toddler. The girl went into cardiac arrest on Sept. 12 and was transported from her home by ambulance to a local hospital, where she died, police said.

The cause and manner of death have not yet been confirmed, but "based on evidence discovered at the child’s home, and conversations with hospital staff, fentanyl is believed to be a contributing factor," the Portland Police Bureau said in a press release.

The name of the deceased girl was not released by police.

Following the girl's death, police said they were looking to speak with Jacobo, whom they said left the home "as this incident was initially unfolding."

Jacobo has not been located in the weeks since, despite "significant investigatory efforts," police said Friday.

Since the death of her child, Jacobo is suspected of having committed an armed carjacking and other unspecified crimes, police said.

Jacobo also has multiple warrants for her arrest, police said. However, police are not sharing details on the charges in the warrants because Jacobo isn't yet in custody and the cases may be confidential, Portland Police Sgt. Kevin Allen told ABC News.

Police asked for the public's assistance in locating Jacobo, warning that she is considered armed and dangerous.

Police described Jacobo as 5 feet, 5 inches tall and 135 pounds, with hazel eyes. She has brown hair that may have been recently dyed blonde, police said. She also has tattoos on the front of her neck, her chest and on her left hand.

Anyone with information on Jacobo's whereabouts is urged to call 911, police said.

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