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  • A new brunch cafe brings more mimosas to west Fort Worth

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    A new breakfast-cafe-with-cocktails is open in west Fort Worth, offering omelets, sandwiches and the now-ubiquitous avocado toast.

    Top of the Morning Brunch House brings breakfast diners back to the West 7th neighborhood, where street parking is easy in mornings and where there’s always a demand for another bloody mary or Woodford bourbon cappuccino.

    The new restaurant, 2948 Crockett St., comes with a pedigree. It’s owned by former Yolk executive Nick Roditis. He came from Chicago, known for restautants like Rodity’s, a Greek landmark owned by a different family in a Greek-American neighborhood..

    Top of the Morning joins a neighborhood already served by some of Fort Worth’s leading brunch restaurants, including Cafe Modern; a Tavern spinoff named Little Tavern; Vickery Cafe; and the Colorado-based Snooze chain.

    Top of the Morning replaced Mash’D. It’s part of the newest generation of Artisan Circle shops, along with the new Henry McCarty’s Irish Pub.

    The breakfasts are “elevated” from diner fare, well worth a stop weekdays or weekends.

    Lemon ricotta pancakes come with blueberry syrup, berries and toasted almonds. Chicken and waffles flip the script, offering a generous serving of fried chicken atop mini-waffles.

    If you like churros, Top of the Morning has pancakes topped with churros and syrup. The cinnamon rolls are as big as the plate.

    To share, Top of the Morning offers thick-cut bacon with bourbon-maple sauce, or deviled eggs with smoked brisket and jalapeños.

    Sides include rosemary or garlic-parmesan fingerling potatoes, cheddar grits and biscuits with honey butter. The six kinds of bread include sourdough, jalapeño-cheddar and gluten-free.

    A simple lunch menu offers salads, a chicken-pear sandwich with Gouda, a brisket sandwich with poblanos and a grilled cheese with avocado and tomato.

    Prices are reasonable for this kind of stepped-up cafe: $13-$18 for most plates.

    Top of the Morning is open for breakfast and lunch daily; 682-250-2215, tombrunchhouse.com.

    Lemon ricotta pancakes with blueberry drizzle at Top Of The Morning.
    Lemon ricotta pancakes with blueberry drizzle at Top Of The Morning. Bud Kennedy bud@star-telegram.com

    The dining room at Top of the Morning, a new breakfast-lunch cafe in Fort Worth.
    The dining room at Top of the Morning, a new breakfast-lunch cafe in Fort Worth. Bud Kennedy bud@star-telegram.com

    Top Of The Morning is new in Artisan Circle, Fort Worth.
    Top Of The Morning is new in Artisan Circle, Fort Worth. Bud Kennedy bud@star-telegram.com

    Bud Kennedy’s Eats Beat

    Fort Worth Star-Telegram

    Bud Kennedy is celebrating his 40th year writing about restaurants in the Fort Worth Star-Telegram. He has written the “Eats Beat” dining column in print since 1985 and online since 1992 — that’s more than 3,000 columns about Texas cafes, barbecue, burgers and where to eat.
    Support my work with a digital subscription

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    Bud Kennedy

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  • 20 restaurants in one? Robot delivery? It’s coming to Fort Worth area

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    Wonder, a new take-out restaurant and delivery kitchen offering dishes from more than 20 restaurants, some by nationally known chefs, will open in Fort Worth and Southlake, according to state filings.

    New York-based Wonder will open at 2600 W. Seventh St. in Montgomery Plaza and at 2055 W. Southlake Blvd. in Southlake Marketplace near the Keller border, according to applications filed with the Texas Department of Licensing and Regulation.

    Both locations are between 3,000 and 4,000 square feet, according to the applications. The Fort Worth location was a former Pei Wei.

    Wonder also owns the Grubhub delivery service. Some locations deliver using robot carts from Austin-based Avride.

    A former chain Asian restaurant in Montgomery Plaza will be converted to a take-out and food hall with food from more than 20 different restaurants, according to a state application.
    A former chain Asian restaurant in Montgomery Plaza will be converted to a take-out and food hall with food from more than 20 different restaurants, according to a state application. Bud Kennedy bud@star-telegram.com

    The locations offer dishes from more than 20 different restaurants at once, packed for takeout or delivery, according to a recent company profile in NJBIZ.

    It was founded in 2021 by former Walmart executive and diapers.com founder Marc Lore. Wonder is centered around smartphone ordering and an automated kitchen.

    This week, Wonder bought Blue Ribbon Fried Chicken, a chef-founded restaurant from New York. Other Wonder offerings include takeout dishes from chefs José Andrés, Bobby Flay or Marcus Samuelsson, plus Tomball, Texas-based Tejas Barbecue & Chocolate.

    The company has more than 120 locations in the northeast U.S.

    The Business Insider news website visited a Wonder in Washington, D.C., and found an impersonal counter with tablets for customers to place orders.

    A takeout dinner of a steak and a chicken sandwich was ready in 10 minutes, but Business Insider described it as “unremarkable.”

    The Fort Worth location is listed as opening in June, according to the application. although that date is not definite. The Southlake location is listed as opening in August.

    This story was originally published February 18, 2026 at 4:35 AM.

    Bud Kennedy’s Eats Beat

    Fort Worth Star-Telegram

    Bud Kennedy is celebrating his 40th year writing about restaurants in the Fort Worth Star-Telegram. He has written the “Eats Beat” dining column in print since 1985 and online since 1992 — that’s more than 3,000 columns about Texas cafes, barbecue, burgers and where to eat.
    Support my work with a digital subscription

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    Bud Kennedy

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  • 6 skiers swept up in California avalanche rescued; 9 unaccounted for near Tahoe

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    Authorities announced late Tuesday night that six people who survived a backcountry avalanche had been rescued, though the search remained for nine others who had been swept up in the slide near Truckee.

    Search and rescue teams worked through a record-breaking storm after the slide was reported about 11:30 a.m. near Castle Peak in Nevada County. The severity of injuries for those who had been plucked out of the snow varied, and two people were taken to a hospital, according to a 10:45 p.m. update from the Nevada County Sheriff’s Office.

    “Due to extreme weather conditions, it took several hours for rescue personnel to safely reach the skiers and transport them to safety where they were medically evaluated by Truckee Fire,” the statement said.

    The Moonshine Ink, a Tahoe-area newspaper, first reported the authorities successfully reached the six people and hauled them to safety.

    Nevada County Sheriff's Office personnel work from a mobile command center at the site of an avalanche near Truckee as teams worked Tuesday, Feb. 17, 2026, to rescue people from the slide at happened near Castle Peak. Late Tuesday, authorities said six people had been plucked from the snow, two of which were hospitalized. Nine people remain unaccounted for.
    Nevada County Sheriff’s Office personnel work from a mobile command center at the site of an avalanche near Truckee as teams worked Tuesday, Feb. 17, 2026, to rescue people from the slide at happened near Castle Peak. Late Tuesday, authorities said six people had been plucked from the snow, two of which were hospitalized. Nine people remain unaccounted for. Nevada County Sheriff’s Office

    After more than 12 hours, the search for the remaining victims was continuing Tuesday night. The Sheriff’s Office also revised the total number of people still missing from the slide to nine, one less than rescuers’ initial report.

    “That number has been updated to reflect 15 people who actually went on the trip,” the Sheriff’s Office said.

    A news conference on the rescue and continued search efforts was expected to take place at 11 a.m. Wednesday in Grass Valley.

    Nevada County sheriff’s officials initially said “several” skiers were reported missing after the avalanche Tuesday morning in the Sierra Nevada’s Castle Peak area, north of Soda Springs and northwest of Truckee. The Nevada County Sheriff’s Office, the sheriff’s search and rescue team and other agencies responded around 11:30 a.m.

    The reported avalanche came amid a powerful winter storm that has dumped multiple feet of snow in the mountains and prompted warnings of high avalanche danger in the Lake Tahoe backcountry into Wednesday. A backcountry avalanche warning for the greater Lake Tahoe area is in place until at least 5 a.m. Wednesday, according to the Sierra Avalanche Center.

    The National Weather Service has a winter storm warning in place through 10 p.m. Thursday for the entire Sierra Nevada range, warning that elevations above 3,500 feet could get 4 to 8 feet of snow by the end of the storm.

    Gov. Gavin Newsom’s office in a statement Tuesday evening said Newsom has been briefed on the incident.

    “The state is coordinating an all-hands search and rescue effort with local partners and deploying resources to support the active response,” the Governor’s Office wrote.

    The Sheriff’s Office planned a news conference Wednesday morning to provide an update.

    According to a database of avalanche fatalities from around the country compiled by the Colorado Avalanche Information Center, if the 10 missing people are not found alive, it will be the deadliest avalanche in state history and among the deadliest nationwide.

    The deadliest California avalanche appears to have occurred in 1982 at Alpine Meadows Ski Resort, when seven people were killed, according to the database.

    Backcountry skiing popular near avalanche site

    The terrain around Castle Peak is one of the Tahoe area’s more popular zones for backcountry skiers of varying abilities and experience. Skiers can access both low-angled terrain that is considered safer during increased avalanche risks, and also steep slopes.

    But under the avalanche conditions highlighted by the Sierra Avalanche Center on Tuesday, skiing or traveling across any backcountry terrain carried significant risk. Even if a skier is on a slope that is not steep enough to give way to an avalanche itself, avalanches can start on higher, steeper terrain and come down onto the skier.

    The Castle Peak area is also home to the Peter Grubb Hut, a historic hut built in the late 1930s. It was not immediately clear whether the group caught in the avalanche Tuesday was using one of the huts.

    Ski guide company shares statement

    Ski guiding company Blackbird Mountain Guides issued a statement on its website Tuesday evening saying a group of clients and guides had been traveling out of the Frog Lake huts when they were caught in the avalanche.

    “A total of 12 clients and four guides had been staying at the Frog Lake huts since February 15,” the statement read. “The group was in the process of returning to the trailhead at the conclusion of a three-day trip when the incident occurred.”

    The Truckee-based company’s leadership was working with the Nevada County Sheriff’s Office and was also in touch with the emergency contacts of both guides and clients, according to the statement.

    Blackbird’s statement did not explicitly say a Blackbird Mountain Guides trip was involved in the avalanche, or whether the incident may have involved more than one guiding company. But the firm noted that Blackbird “is in direct contact with the emergency contacts of the affected clients and guides.”

    A voicemail seeking comment from the company, left Tuesday afternoon before Blackbird Mountain Guides published its statement, was not returned.

    The Castle Peak area is home to several backcountry cabins used by guide companies and private parties for overnight trips where people ski multiple days and stay in the huts. The Frog Lake huts are made up of three lodging huts with sleeping quarters, plus a communal hut with a kitchen, fireplace and gathering area, according to the website for the Truckee Donner Land Trust, which runs the facilities.

    Blackbird’s website displays an option to book tours for groups of up to eight clients at a time at the Frog Lake huts.

    Sunday, the day the group had apparently gone into the backcountry huts, was a picturesque day in the mountains, with blue skies and warm temperatures throughout the day. The first of a series of winter storms, which had been broadcast by forecasters for days prior to the weekend, began to hit the area early Monday. Snow accumulated rapidly and steadily throughout the day Monday, and authorities closed Interstate 80, which crosses Donner Pass near the Castle Peak area, to traffic several times that day as wind and snow created whiteout conditions.

    The storm continued to intensify on Tuesday, some Tahoe Area ski resorts announced closures throughout the day due to wind and snow intensity. The website OpenSnow, which provides detailed winter weather forecasts for skiers, reported Tuesday evening that as much as 2 feet of snow had fallen in some places by 6 p.m.

    Such heavy and rapidly accumulating snowfall was likely to drive a natural avalanche cycle, the Sierra Avalanche Center reported, when snow slides could start without a human trigger.

    Castle Peak saw earlier fatal avalanche this season

    The Castle Peak area had already experienced one deadly avalanche this winter.

    On Jan. 5, a 42-year-old snowmobiler from Bend, Oregon, was killed after triggering a wind slab avalanche on the backside of Castle Peak, according to the Colorado Avalanche Information Center and previous Bee reporting.

    The man was riding with a group of experienced snowmobilers when he was buried in the slide. His companions located him using avalanche beacons and began CPR, assisted by an off-duty Truckee Fire medic who happened upon the scene, authorities said.

    The man, identified as Chris Scott Thomason, did not survive.

    Authorities said the five riders were equipped with appropriate backcountry safety gear, including beacons, and that two members of the group were local to the area. Two members of the party were CPR certified.

    That incident followed a series of winter storms that dropped several feet of snow across the Sierra and elevated avalanche danger in the region — conditions similar to those in place Tuesday.

    Authorities in Placer County on Tuesday also reported the death of a 53-year-old skier involved in an accident Sunday morning on an advanced run at Northstar California Resort in Truckee. That incident involved two skiers and came before the brunt of this week’s winter storm.

    Also Tuesday, rescuers in El Dorado County were looking for two people who were stranded in the storm along Morman Emigrant Trail, 45 miles from the avalanche site in an unrelated search. Authorities from Amador County who were assisting in the search said crews used tracked vehicles to navigate the extreme weather. Authorities received unconfirmed information that the two adults had been stranded since Monday afternoon.

    This story was originally published February 18, 2026 at 1:04 AM.

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    Ishani Desai

    The Sacramento Bee

    Ishani Desai is a government watchdog reporter for The Sacramento Bee. She previously covered crime and courts for The Bakersfield Californian.

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  • University of Texas to vote on how race, gender can be discussed in classrooms

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    Cars travel on Cooper Street through the heart of the UTA's where enrollment is up 28 percent over 5 years ago.

    Cars travel on Cooper Street through the heart of the UTA’s where enrollment is up 28 percent over 5 years ago.

    FortWorth

    The University of Texas System Board of Regents will meet Wednesday during its quarterly meeting to discuss a policy that will decide how universities are allowed to teach “controversial topics” like race, gender and LGBTQ areas of study.

    The University of Texas System, which includes University of Texas at Arlington and UT Dallas, decided to vote on guidance on teaching such topics after the Texas A&M University System Board of Regents passed a similar ordinance late last year. Professors at A&M are now required to have their course syllabuses reviewed by department heads.

    Several A&M syllabuses have been rejected for including course content related to race and gender theory, the Star-Telegram previously reported. One professor’s syllabus was rejected for including readings from Plato. Another had his class canceled just days before the spring semester for failing to submit his syllabus for review.

    According to the UT Board of Regents meeting agenda, university leaders believe the guidance will “foster classroom cultures of trust in which all students feel free to voice their questions and beliefs, especially when those perspectives might conflict with those of the instructor or other students.” The guidance would also prohibit professors from including course material that is not considered “relevant” to the course.

    “In the classroom, instructors must be careful stewards of their pedagogical responsibilities and classroom authorities and must endeavor to create a classroom culture of trust,” the ordinance reads. “Instructors must not attempt to coerce, indoctrinate, harass, or belittle students, especially in addressing controversial subjects and areas where people of good faith can hold differing convictions.”

    If the ordinance on guidance passes Wednesday, UT System professors will be prohibited from teaching undisclosed material that is not clearly relevant and grounded in the topic of that course. If a course does include controversial and contested issues, professors must maintain a balanced approach and discussion. University leadership would be responsible for determining what is considered relevant.

    Like Texas A&M, UT system schools would review syllabuses during a curriculum review period and make a determination on when controversial material is necessary. Texas A&M’s new similar policy has caused friction between the university and a number of faculty members.

    Graduate professor Leonard Bright, who said his class was canceled just days before its first session at the start of the current spring semester, said the school’s claim he did not follow necessary course review requirements was false. Bright also wrote in an X post that his colleagues and students found out about the school’s decision to cancel his class before he did.

    “The message was clear: Be very afraid no one can save you from being censored at Texas A&M,” Bright wrote on X.

    Bright is also the president of A&M’s chapter of the American Association of University Professors, a group that protects faculty’s academic freedom. Bright has loudly shared his concerns about A&M’s course review process since it was passed, including a statement after another A&M professor was told to remove class readings last month.

    Texas A&M announced last month it was ending its women’s and gender studies department after currently enrolled students complete their degree. The university wrote in a statement at the time that six courses were being canceled because of the “controversial topics” guidance.

    On Tuesday, the American Association of University Professors wrote in a news release that it urges the UT System Board of Regents “in the strongest terms” to reject the proposed guidance.

    “The policy restricts the freedom of instructors to respond to student questions on past and current events, bring new breakthroughs and innovations into the course, and challenge the students to think about what could happen in the future,” AAUP wrote in the release. “In order for students to have the freedom to learn, instructors need the freedom to teach.”

    This story was originally published February 17, 2026 at 8:52 PM.

    Samuel O’Neal

    Fort Worth Star-Telegram

    Samuel O’Neal is a local news reporter at the Fort Worth Star-Telegram covering higher education and local news in Fort Worth. He joined the team in December 2025 after previously working as a staff writer at the Philadelphia Inquirer. He graduated from Temple University, where he served as the Editor-in-Chief of the school’s student paper, The Temple News.

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  • Euless woman sentenced to life after 2024 motel murder of her boyfriend

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    Get breaking news alerts at star-telegram.com/newsletters.

    Get breaking news alerts at star-telegram.com/newsletters.

    Star-Telegram illustration/Ricky Moon photo

    A Tarrant County jury convicted a woman and sentenced her to life in prison this week in the 2024 murder of her boyfriend, Tarrant County district attorney Phil Sorrells said on Tuesday.

    Bridget Leitao, 45, shot and killed Jorge Lara Pulido, 40, after an argument on May 27, 2024, the Star-Telegram initially reported. The two were driving to a grocery store when they began to argue about Pulido’s absence earlier in the day.

    Pulido turned the vehicle around and returned to a motel in the 100 block of Airport Freeway in Euless where the couple were staying.

    When they arrived, Leitao shot Pulido once in the chest, and he died at the scene, Euless police said.

    Related Stories from Fort Worth Star-Telegram

    Lillie Davidson

    Fort Worth Star-Telegram

    Lillie Davidson is a breaking news reporter for the Fort Worth Star-Telegram. She graduated from TCU in 2025 with a bachelor’s degree in journalism, is fluent in Spanish, and can complete a crossword in five minutes.

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  • Bids due March 11 for project addressing erosion near levee wall in Wilkes-Barre | Dallas Post

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    Bids are due March 11 for a project addressing erosion inching toward part of the Wyoming Valley Levee wall in Wilkes-Barre, officials said during Tuesday’s Luzerne County Flood Protection Authority meeting.

    The site near the intersection of Riverside Drive and Academy Street, adjacent to the Black Diamond railroad bridge, was stable for decades but started to slough in recent months, the authority has said. On slopes, slough is soil, rock, and debris that has moved downhill, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture.

    The fix will replace dirt with large stone rip-rap to restore stability to the bank.

    Authority Board member Jay Delaney, who is Wilkes-Barre’s fire chief, questioned why the cost estimate has doubled from an original projection of $375,000 in December to $800,000.

    Laura Holbrook, who was promoted to authority executive director last month, said the solution design and other information were not available last year when the original estimate was furnished, noting that a $500,000 cost projection had also been cited in the past.

    Holbrook told the board the project scope also increased because scouring holes in the Susquehanna River must be filled in the vicinity of the project site to ensure the repairs remain stable.

    The solution also involves “very large rocks,” and contractor access to the site will be more challenging because it is surrounded by the flood wall, she said.

    Delaney asked whether the board would vote on a contract award at its next meeting on March 17.

    Holbrook said the authority will have a “firm grasp” of the cost based on the bids, and that information will be presented to the board on March 17.

    Delaney also verified the authority will be vigilant in following an emergency action plan outlining procedures that will be taken if the Susquehanna rises before the project is completed.

    Holbrook said she is closely monitoring the site because it is a “critical point.” Two emergency plans were developed to address the area both before and during construction, if necessary, she said.

    The project posting through PennBid said the flood control system’s supporting embankment has “sloughed into the Susquehanna River, causing a potential for accelerated loss of the embankment during a high water event.”

    Work includes construction of a rock berm of approximately 350 feet along the toe, excavation of loose slope soil, grading of the slope, and placement of specified material for the embankment and rip-rap bedding.

    Levee path

    The authority board also approved a support resolution seeking a $2.89 million Pennsylvania Department of Transportation Multimodal Transportation Fund Program grant for the “levee trail resurfacing and connector project.”

    If awarded, Holbrook said the lion’s share of the grant would complete a pedestrian and bike trail filling a gap between the Kingston and Forty Fort levee reaches.

    Forty Fort had spearheaded the project to eliminate the need for borough residents to cross busy streets when jogging, biking, and walking to the popular levee trail in Kingston, according to prior reporting.

    Vice Chairman William Hardwick emphasized the authority could not operate and maintain the connector path because it is not part of the flood control system. Holbrook said another entity to handle those responsibilities would have to be identified if the grant is awarded.

    Approximately $400,000 of the grant would be used to repair cracks in the paved path atop the levee, Holbrook said.

    The authority last seal-coated and repaired cracks in the levee road in 2018.

    While heavily used for recreation, the road was added as part of the levee-raising project for vehicles to access the flood control system for maintenance and flood monitoring without causing ruts and other damage.

    Cracks collectively totaling more than 1,000 linear feet have been flagged for the project, Holbrook said.

    Instead of the past approach of filling cracks, the authority intends to cut out and repave impacted sections so they do not slowly return, Holbrook said.

    Reach Jennifer Learn-Andes at 570-991-6388 or on Twitter @TLJenLearnAndes.

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    Dallas Post

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  • Timetable still unclear to seek Luzerne County rail purchase offers | Dallas Post

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    Luzerne County’s Redevelopment Authority still has no definitive timetable on when it will seek purchase offers to buy or lease its rail line.

    The authority board approved a $20,000 contract in December with Trenton, N.J.-based Strauss & Associates/Planners to document county rail line assets and help prepare the public request for proposals.

    On Tuesday, the authority agreed to increase the contract cap to $40,000 and authorized a $19,952.45 payment to the consultant for work performed to date.

    Authority Board Chairman Scott Linde said the consultant’s ongoing work identifying all authority holdings is “absolutely necessary.”

    “If we don’t have a clear title, nobody is going to bid on it,” Linde said.

    Authority Executive Director Margaret Thomas said Strauss is expected to complete its work in three to four weeks.

    An entity must also be retained to determine a valuation figure once all holdings are identified, authority members said.

    Linde said the pace is slow, but proceeding with a request-for-proposals before verifying all assets could “do a lot more damage.”

    Although initially resistant to private ownership of its rail line, the authority’s board members decided that offers should be considered, but only through a public process open to all interested entities.

    Reading & Northern Railroad Chairman and CEO Andy M. Muller Jr. made an unsolicited $10 million offer to purchase the county line in October, stating he would increase freight service and introduce passenger train excursions from Wilkes-Barre to Pittston.

    County Council litigation

    Meanwhile, discovery continues in the litigation County Council filed against the authority in July.

    Letters show the county wants the authority to turn over the railroad so it can be sold to recoup $3.28 million loaned to the authority for the rail line. While the delinquent loan was cited as a reason for the county litigation, it appears to be part of a broader effort to privatize the track, with the hope of adding passenger rail excursions while expanding commercial use.

    Other business

    In other business on Tuesday, the authority voted to keep Linde as chairman and Stephen Phillips as vice chair. The remaining board member officers: John Pekarovsky, secretary/treasurer, and Erik Laskosky, assistant secretary/treasurer.

    Newly appointed Kelly Mulhern, the remaining board member, will serve as the authority board representative on the county’s Blighted Property Review Committee.

    Some County Council members are trying to revive that committee after more than six years of inactivity. The committee had planned to allow municipalities to submit applications to certify properties as blighted, opening the door for potential further action.

    Reach Jennifer Learn-Andes at 570-991-6388 or on Twitter @TLJenLearnAndes.

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    Dallas Post

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  • Court tells east Fort Worth motel owner to curb drug use, prostitution

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    The outside of the Eco Motel on East Lancaster Avenue in Fort Worth on Thursday, Oct. 16, 2025.

    The outside of the Eco Motel on East Lancaster Avenue in Fort Worth on Thursday, Oct. 16, 2025.

    ctorres@star-telegram.com

    A Tarrant County judge issued a temporary injunction requiring the owner of an East Lancaster Avenue motel to take steps to curb crime, including drug sales, drug use and prostitution that has plagued the property.

    On Feb. 12, Judge Ken Curry, a visiting judge presiding over the 236th District Court, ordered property owner Shetal Patel and his company RMP Hospitality, LLC, to beef up security at the Eco Motel, 3201 E. Lancaster Ave., after two nearby residents sued, alleging Patel’s motel was a common nuisance in the neighborhood.

    The temporary injunction will remain in effect until mid-May, when a trial is expected to settle Eco Motel’s long-term fate.

    Patel did not respond to a voice message requesting comment.

    The injunction filing said the plaintiffs would “likely be successful on the merits as to their causes of action against the Defendants.” The filing went on to say the plaintiffs demonstrated that criminal activity indeed takes place at the Eco Motel, and that the motel’s owners are aware of and tolerate that activity.

    Under the injunction, the Eco Motel’s owners must employ an armed security guard on the premises from noon until 2 a.m. each day, install security cameras and additional lighting and add a fence around the property’s perimeter with a gate to control access.

    🟥Election 2026🟦

    Among other requirements, the owners will have to post signs in each room displaying a hotline number for victims of human trafficking and contact information for the Texas Department of Public Safety, and they must stop renting rooms by the hour. Eco Motel employees will be subject to criminal background checks, and no one who is a registered sex offender or who has been convicted of certain felonies within the past five years will be permitted to work there.

    During the duration of the temporary injunction, the Eco Motel will be subject to inspection by the city to check for compliance.

    Patel and his company were ordered to pay a $10,000 bond. If they fail to abide by the terms of the injunction, they face a fine of up to $10,000 and possible jail time. The court could also order the utilities be cut off to the property and revoke the certificate of occupancy, among other things, if nuisance abatement requirements aren’t met.

    Court records cited 96 calls to police regarding the Eco Motel between April 26, 2025, and June 17, 2025. Fort Worth police have nearly 800 pages of offense/investigative and arrests reports related to the property going back to 2015, according to court documents.

    The Eco Motel is also one of four properties targeted by stiffer Fort Worth Code Compliance enforcement efforts.

    The two plaintiffs suing the Eco Motel’s owners are doing so anonymously and are represented by attorneys from the Dallas office of Troutman Pepper Locke and Dallas attorney Edward Brookins, who is working on behalf of the faith-based nonprofit Act for Justice that helps citizens bring lawsuits against alleged nuisance properties. The attorneys on the case are working pro bono.

    Matt Adams

    Fort Worth Star-Telegram

    Matt Adams is a news reporter covering Fort Worth, Tarrant County and surrounding areas. He previously wrote about aviation and travel and enjoys a good weekend road trip. Matt joined the Star-Telegram in January 2025.

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  • Cardboard coffins, rotting garbage, end of surgeries: Images of Cuba’s humanitarian crisis

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    People walk past garbage discarded on a street in Havana on February 4, 2026.

    People walk past garbage discarded on a street in Havana on February 4, 2026.

    AFP via Getty Images

    In Velasco, a town in the eastern Cuban province of Holguín, a man was buried in a cardboard box, his body carted on a wheelbarrow to the cemetery because of a lack of both of wooden coffins and fuel.

    In the capital city of Holguín, residents are cooking with wood and coal outside their homes, on sidewalks and empty streets.

    In Guantánamo, a local radio station announced that bread distributed through ration cards will now be baked in wood-fired ovens and that the government will sell residents coal for cooking.

    And all over Havana, neighborhoods are covered in rotting garbage piles that haven’t been picked up for months.

    The images have made it to social media and independent news outlets, highlighting the severity of the impact the Trump administration’s shutoff of oil shipments to the island — and the government’s resistance to any change — on average Cubans.

    A man cooks food on a pot on a wood fire during a blackout in the Poey neighborhood of Havana on January 28, 2026.
    A man cooks food on a pot on a wood fire during a blackout in the Poey neighborhood of Havana on January 28, 2026. YAMIL LAGE AFP via Getty Images

    The prices of food and gas have skyrocketed seemingly overnight: a package of chicken now costs a month’s salary, 5,000 pesos, and a liter of gasoline up to 3,800. Two thirds of the country was without electricity at peak demand last week, and daily electricity cuts averaged more than 20 hours in many provinces.

    Cubans were already facing extreme poverty, widespread shortages and daily blackouts when President Donald Trump cut the country’s oil supply from Venezuela and Mexico in a push to open negotiations that could lead to political and economic changes in the communist-run island.

    On Saturday, Secretary of State Marco Rubio urged Cuban authorities to make economic reforms as a way out of the impasse. On Sunday, Trump confirmed negotiations were ongoing and again urged Cuban leaders to make a deal.

    “Cuba is, right now, a failed nation,” he said. “We’re talking to Cuba right now. I have Marco Rubio talking to Cuba right now, and they should absolutely make a deal because it’s really a humanitarian threat.”

    Asked if he would consider a military operation like the one to capture Venezuela’s strongman Nicolás Maduro last month, Trump said he didn’t want to answer.

    “Why would I answer that?” he added. “If I was, it wouldn’t be a very tough operation, as you can figure, but I don’t think that’ll be necessary.”

    But despite the increasing external and internal pressure to reform the island’s hardline Marxist economy, Cuban leaders have vowed to resist and have passed another round of severe austerity measures for the population to endure while denying that the country is about to collapse.

    “I believe that the Cuban regime right now is in the classic phase of denial,” said Sebastian Arcos, the interim director of Florida International University’s Cuba Research Institute, in a recent event discussing the situation on the island. “They cannot accept that the strategic situation has changed and that things are different, and they’re not going back to what they used to be. This is the first stage of grief.”

    Meanwhile, the situation on the island is deteriorating quickly.

    A man rides past an abandoned car in Havana on February 4, 2026.
    A man rides past an abandoned car in Havana on February 4, 2026. YAMIL LAGE AFP via Getty Images

    At the FIU event, Jorge Piñón, who heads the University of Texas’ Latin America and Caribbean Energy Program, said Cuba’s oil reserves might dry up in a matter of weeks.

    “Cuba’s electric power sector is totally collapsed,” he said. “If by March you don’t see an oil cargo ship on the horizon coming either into Havana or Cienfuegos, they will have reached ‘zero.’”

    Already, cargo transports, trains and buses connecting the provinces, as well as public transportation services in Havana and other cities, have been reduced to a minimum. Private business owners are complaining that they can’t get their imported supplies delivered from ports.

    As the country’s crisis worsened in recent years, residents in Havana had to walk and live on streets covered by mounds of garbage because authorities said there was not enough fuel for pickups — but also because the government did not buy enough trash containers, or paid enough to the trash-collection employees, and because most garbage trucks were out of service, Cuba’s own state media reported earlier this month.

    Now, the current energy crisis has made the situation so much worse that residents, sickened by the stench and the flies, have started burning the garbage, covering parts of Havana with unhealthy blankets of smoke, Cuban independent news outlet 14ymedio reported.

    The fuel shortage has had a devastating impact on tourism too, one of the country’s key sources of revenue. After Cuba reported running out of jet fuel, several international airlines suspended flights to the island. Many workers in the tourism industry have been told not to go to work in hotels in Cuba’s keys, Varadero, Guardalavaca and other tourist destinations, and tourists have been moved to other facilities, as the government and the Cuban military, which owns many of Cuba’s hotels, moved to shut many of them down.

    What makes the population so vulnerable at this time is that the country was already at its worst economically since the early days of the revolution, and a humanitarian crisis was unfolding. Cubans were dying because of diseases linked to poor sanitary conditions and lack of medications, were going without electricity most of the day and were struggling to find affordable food. Some experts say it’s the worst crisis since the end of the independence wars from Spain in the 19th century, which left the country in ruins.

    The economic crisis, a deep economic contraction that has lasted years, has largely resulted from the failure of the socialist economic model, a hard-currency-hungry military stashing billions of dollars in its accounts, and years of Cuban leaders dragging their feet on urgently needed economic reforms. The COVID-19 pandemic and the tightening of U.S. sanctions under the first Trump administration also played a part.

    That Cuban leaders are willing “to drown an entire people in the name of an ideology proves they are fanatics,” said a source in communication with Cuban officials who asked for anonymity to discuss the interactions. “Every day that passes, they sink deeper into a hole,” the person said, noting that the country’s economy is practically paralyzed. “The damage from zero tourism is enormous.”

    TOPSHOT - A woman checks her cellphone during a blackout in the Luyanó neighborhood of Havana on January 28, 2026.
    TOPSHOT – A woman checks her cellphone during a blackout in the Luyanó neighborhood of Havana on January 28, 2026. YAMIL LAGE AFP via Getty Images

    Two Miami Herald sources in communication with Cuban officials said they have given little private indication they are willing to negotiate substantial changes on how they run the country, despite public U.S. offers of dialogue. The sources said they were left with the impression that there are no current negotiations between the two governments, in line with what Cuban officials have publicly said.

    Their intransigence has proved unpopular. Even voices close to the government are publicly calling for change—if not for a democratic transition.

    “Reform and overcome the crisis, or not reform and collapse — that is the Cuban dilemma,” reads the title of a piece penned by Carlos Alzugaray, a retired Cuban diplomat who lives on the island and has for years push for the Cuban government to adopt a Chinese-style, market-oriented economic model. Alzugaray criticized Cuba’s handpicked leader, Miguel Díaz-Canel, for not announcing major reforms at a recent press conference in which he instead called for more sacrifice.

    “The demand for reforms, primarily economic but also political, is a natural consequence of the times we live in,” Alzugaray wrote in the pro-government blog La Joven Cuba. “This is especially true when we see on the national television news that our leaders, with a few exceptions, continue to repeat past formulas and refuse not only to change, but also to acknowledge the numerous mistakes they have clearly made.”

    While Cuban leaders dig in, their choices about what to preserve and what to cut speak to the government’s immediate priorities: securing its survival.

    In the much-criticized television appearance, Diaz-Canel said that the defense of the country was paramount and announced military exercises every Saturday. Images shared by the Revolutionary Armed Forces Ministry show troop movements and displays of Soviet-era helicopters, tanks, surface-to-air missile systems and armored vehicles—an expensive and futile show of force, given the overwhelming superiority of the U.S. military.

    In the meantime, all scheduled surgeries have been cancelled across the country because, as the minister of health put it, operations “demand electricity.”

    “Surgical activity levels usually require more beds for therapy, additional observation beds,” the minister, José Ángel Portal Miranda, said on Cuban television earlier this week, adding that the plan is to reduce the hospitals’ staff and patients’ hospital stays.

    He ominously cited the “experience we had with COVID” as a model to follow. At the time, and under his watch, the country’s health system all but collapsed, and the number of deaths from the combined effects of the virus, the suspension of surgeries and the lack of medication is estimated at 55,204, the highest in Latin America.

    A man buys charcoal on a road in Havana on February 6, 2026. Across Cuba, families are scrambling to cope with relentless blackouts and shortages worsening under economic pressure from President Donald Trump.
    A man buys charcoal on a road in Havana on February 6, 2026. Across Cuba, families are scrambling to cope with relentless blackouts and shortages worsening under economic pressure from President Donald Trump. ADALBERTO ROQUE AFP via Getty Images

    Despite assurances by Portal Miranda that transportation for patients needing dialysis would not be affected, Norge Ernesto Díaz Blak, an activist who delivers aid sent by his social media followers to those in need in Holguín, said several such patients in that province have reached out to him for help after they said authorities told them they would no longer offer transportation to get the treatment.

    Hunger is likely to spread, too, as Díaz-Canel warned that the government was preparing for a scenario in which food could not be delivered, and people would have to live on locally produced food.

    “Here in Havana, we will eat junk, garbage… we will drink a lot of sewer water and eat a lot of rubble,” replied in a video Lumey Guzmán, a Cuban social-media content creator.

    Debate grows in Miami

    Cuban Americans in Miami who have been helping their relatives on the island by paying for medicines, food and other necessities to be delivered to them in the country will see their options shrink fast too. Miami-based companies that deliver food in Cuba, such as Cubamax, Supermarket 23 and Katapulk, have suspended home deliveries.

    Aware of the acute situation, the State Department recently announced it will send another $6 million in assistance to people in eastern Cuba who were hit hard by Hurricane Melissa last year. Rubio also said Saturday the U.S. was willing to continue expanding the delivery of aid to the Cuban people through the Catholic Church, though “that’s not a long-term solution to the problems on the island,” he added.

    But Cuban American representatives in Congress from Miami and local politicians and activists want the Trump administration to take more drastic measures in what they say would amount to a final nudge to speed up the collapse of the Cuban government.

    “The communist regime is on its knees. This is not the time to blink,” U.S. Rep. Carlos Gimenez said in an editorial published on Fox News. “It’s time to finish the job — by enforcing the law, applying maximum pressure and standing proudly on the side of freedom.”

    Gimenez asked the Trump administration to halt flights and money remittances to Cuba and recently wrote to Delta Air Lines and American Airlines, urging them to stop flying to the island. Gimenez, along with U.S. Reps. Mario Diaz-Balart and María Elvira Salazar, wrote to the departments of the Treasury and Commerce to ask for a review of all licenses to U.S. companies doing business with Cuba.

    But Joe Garcia, a Democratic former congressman from Miami, said that stance could backfire as Cuban Americans begin worrying about their relatives on the island. Cuban Americans have left hundreds of comments on social media—and a similar amount of crying emojis— lamenting that U.S.-based online grocery stores have halted food deliveries to the island.

    What the Miami members of Congress propose, he added, “would increase the pain suffered by the Cuban people, the suffering of those least able to withstand the ineffectiveness and inefficiency of the Cuban government.”

    Cuba’s diplomats have been promoting on social media criticism comparing Trump’s policy towards Cuba to that of Israel in Gaza, in what some Cuba observers see as a strategy to blame the humanitarian crisis entirely on the United States and create a public-opinion crisis that would put pressure on the administration. Progressive International, a far-left organization, is organizing a flotilla with humanitarian aid to Cuba, mimicking tactics employed by activists reacting to the war in Gaza.

    The problem is that Trump might not be moved by such a strategy, one of the sources in touch with Cuban officials said, noting the president kept supporting Israel despite accusations it was committing genocide against the Palestinians in Gaza.

    Meanwhile, expectations that change is coming to the island are so high that last week rumors of an impending official announcement from the Cuban government spread like wildfire through social media.

    It turned out to be misinformation peddled by various influencers, including some from Miami.

    This story was originally published February 17, 2026 at 11:38 AM.

    Nora Gámez Torres

    el Nuevo Herald

    Nora Gámez Torres is the Cuba/U.S.-Latin American policy reporter for el Nuevo Herald and the Miami Herald. She studied journalism and media and communications in Havana and London. She holds a Ph.D. in sociology from City, University of London. Her work has won awards by the Florida Society of News Editors and the Society for Professional Journalists.//Nora Gámez Torres estudió periodismo y comunicación en La Habana y Londres. Tiene un doctorado en sociología y desde el 2014 cubre temas cubanos para el Nuevo Herald y el Miami Herald. También reporta sobre la política de Estados Unidos hacia América Latina. Su trabajo ha sido reconocido con premios de Florida Society of News Editors y Society for Profesional Journalists.

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    Nora Gámez Torres

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  • VOTE: Boys’ Basketball Player of the Week. Which athlete had the best game?

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    Mansfield Timberview guard Jonathan Williams (2) turns the corner on Mansfield Summit guard Mason Williams (0) during the first half of a UIL boys basketball game at Mansfield Timberview High School in Arlington, Texas, Tuesday Feb. 10, 2026.

    Mansfield Timberview guard Jonathan Williams (2) turns the corner on Mansfield Summit guard Mason Williams (0) during the first half of a UIL boys basketball game at Mansfield Timberview High School in Arlington, Texas, Tuesday Feb. 10, 2026.

    Special to the Star-Telegram

    As the regular season draws to a close, plenty of Fort Worth-area boys basketball teams are making a push for the playoffs.

    Which athlete the best game? You tell us. Cast your vote for the Star-Telegram Boys’ Basketball Player of the Week.

    Voting will end at 11 a.m. Friday.

    See a strong performance from the final week of the regular season? Send a nomination for next week’s player of the week poll with a stat line to high school sports editor Charles Baggarly (cbaggarly@star-telegram.com).

    Nominations will be accepted until 11:00 p.m. Sunday, Feb. 22.

    Charles Baggarly

    Fort Worth Star-Telegram

    Charles Baggarly is a high school sports editor and reporter for the Fort Worth Star Telegram. He graduated from TCU in 2023 with a bachelor’s degree in journalism and served as TCU 360’s sports editor. Connect with Charles on Twitter or via email.

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    Charles Baggarly

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  • Indiana’s Fernando Mendoza is clear: He’d be thrilled to be a Las Vegas Raider

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    This is not the next James Bond. Indiana University quarterback Fernando Mendoza was in Ft. Worth on Monday night to accept the 2025 Davey O’ Brien award.

    This is not the next James Bond. Indiana University quarterback Fernando Mendoza was in Ft. Worth on Monday night to accept the 2025 Davey O’ Brien award.

    Fort Worth Star-Telegram

    The most charming and endearing player in college football, who routinely praises God and boasts an endearing LinkedIn profile, could soon be headed to Sin City, a place that celebrates, “What happens in Vegas, Stays in Vegas.”

    Indiana University quarterback Fernando Mendoza is, at least right now, the projected No. 1 pick in the 2026 NFL Draft, owned by the Las Vegas Raiders. The place where coaching and playing careers go to die.

    “I’d be blessed to play for the Raiders. I’d be blessed to play for any NFL team that drafts me,” Mendoza said Monday afternoon. “I’d be ecstatic. I know I’ll probably shed a tear to just because it’s such a full circle moment; my whole goal, even the goal of transferring to Indiana, was to make the NFL. It wasn’t to be a great college player. It was to try to develop and be an NFL quarterback one day.”

    That day is coming.

    Rather than create any potential thought that he’d rather not play for the Raiders with some vague generalities, the Heisman Trophy winner and college football’s top choir boy made it clear he just wants to play in the NFL, whether that’s with the Raiders, Jets, Cardinals, et al.

    Mendoza was in Fort Worth on Monday night to accept the Davey O’ Brien trophy, given annually to the nation’s top college quarterback. He chatted with the Fort Worth Star-Telegram and Associated Press before the ceremony, and confirmed that his personality is not scripted.

    Fernando Mendoza is no longer off social media

    Other than a YouTube and LinkedIn account, Mendoza did his best to stay away from TikTok, Instagram, X, or the rest of the social media apps that waste our lives during the season. Now that the season is over, he’s smart enough to recognize the opportunity that comes when you lead Indiana University to the national title in football.

    He has 1 million Instagram followers.

    Had he been on any of those apps during the 2025 season, he would have been floored by the national reaction to his post game interviews that are so bubbly, upbeat, positive, effervescent that they don’t seem possible. Or, at worst, more like an act.

    One of Mendoza’s tasks during the pre-draft process is to convince NFL teams this is not shtick.

    There’s a lot of narratives, and I’m very blessed at the narratives where, “Hey, this guy’s a great guy, and he’s God-fearing, and he’s very team oriented,’ and those are messages I always try to convey,” he said. “That’s just who I am. There’s authenticity, especially sometimes the post-game interviews that I show my passion and willingness for my teammates and for the program that comes out; people may think, ‘Maybe it’s not real.’

    “Or, some people think, ‘Wow, this is what true authenticity looks like.’ And I would just try to be my authentic self. I believe that people can sniff out fake.”

    When he was on the stage after IU defeated Miami to win the national title, he made a calculated decision that was decidedly not the Fernando Mendoza we had seen throughout the entire year. During the post-game interview on TV, he dropped the ‘F’ word. He knew what he was doing.

    “Instead of ‘flipping’ I said (that word) because, contrary to public opinion, it’s not like I never curse,” he said. “I’m a man. I fall into sin. I don’t try to curse. It’s not nice, especially with television. And it’s a habit that I try to take off. But I’ve cursed before. So I try to show my true self in that aspect.

    “My true self is not, not cursing, but I also try to show people that I’m relatable, and I could be a normal person.”

    If this is an all act, give the man an Academy Award, too.

    Fernando Mendoza’s legacy is secure and far from complete

    Mendoza could never play another down of football, and he had a career most never do. He’s earned his degree from the University of California. He won the Heisman Trophy, Davey O’ Brien Award, Maxwell Award, and led IU to a national title.

    Is it enough?

    “Yes, and no,” he said. “I’m highly blessed and highly favored that God’s put me in this position; as a two-star recruit who literally signed a blank piece of paper because there’s no scholarship for Ivy Leagues, and it’s going to go to the bank to take out a $320,000 loan and put myself in a student debt to just go play football at Yale. That’s how much I love football.

    “Last minute, the 11th hour, Cal came calling, which is just a great blessing. So with that, yes, I would be happy. However, now I’m always driving for more. The college is great., but that part’s behind me and there’s going to be parts to reflect on that.

    “I feel like I’ve been satisfied with my college career. However, now I’m on to the NFL career, (it) requires new skills; it’s a grown man’s league. That’s what I want to play against.”

    He will here shortly, and whatever team drafts him — the Raiders, Jets, Cardinals or anyone else — believe it when he says he’s excited. It’s not an act.

    Mac Engel

    Fort Worth Star-Telegram

    Mac Engel is an award-winning columnist who has covered sports since the dawn of man; Cowboys, TCU, Stars, Rangers, Mavericks, etc. Olympics. Movies. Concerts. Books. He combines dry wit with 1st-person reporting to complement an annoying personality.
    Support my work with a digital subscription

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    Mac Engel

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  • After ACL tear, Arlington Martin wrestler returns to win second state title

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    Arlington Martin wrestler Camille Rainey competes at the UIL Texas high school wrestling state tournament in Cypress, Texas, on Saturday, Feb. 14, 2026.

    Arlington Martin wrestler Camille Rainey competes at the UIL Texas high school wrestling state tournament in Cypress, Texas, on Saturday, Feb. 14, 2026.

    Special to the Star-Telegram

    Arlington Martin’s Camille Rainey capped her career with back-to-back UIL Texas state wrestling championships — after missing the 2025 season with an injury.

    The senior from Arlington Martin won the Class 6A 130-pound final on Saturday night with a 9-2 win against Avery Fitzgerald from Rockwall.

    Rainey missed the 2025 state tournament while recovering from knee surgery, but was a UIL state champion in 2024.

    She is now the third Arlington Martin girls wrestler to win multiple titles, following Jessica Crane and Samara Chavez.

    Across Arlington ISD, Angela Martinez from Arlington Bowie, Brenda Mallot from Arlington Sam Houston and Amanda Athon and Asia Ray from Arlington High are the only other girls’ wrestlers who have achieved that feat.

    Arlington Martin wrestler Camille Rainey grabs ahold of her opponent at the UIL Texas high school wrestling state tournament in Cypress, Texas, on Saturday, Feb. 14, 2026.
    Arlington Martin wrestler Camille Rainey grabs ahold of her opponent at the UIL Texas high school wrestling state tournament in Cypress, Texas, on Saturday, Feb. 14, 2026. Cody Thorn Special to the Star-Telegram

    “She really worked her butt off,” Arlington Martin coach Patrick Dunn said of Rainey. “She got down and she was having rough times and her knees were hurting, and she’d be in practice in tears sometimes. But, she’s really a warrior, man. She just kept pushing through. She knew what she wanted to do.”

    Rainey finished this year with a 32-3 mark, winning 18 of her final 19 matches.

    She pinned two foes and then won two other matches at state by decision. Her quarterfinal match was the closest of the event.

    Rainey was down 3-1 after the second period, facing Elliott Strange from The Woodlands.

    Strange was a third-place finisher at 126 pounds and involved in one of two quarterfinal matchups of former medalists.

    Rainey took advantage of her pace in the third period and forced two stalling calls against Strange. The latter, with 44 seconds left, gave her the 4-3 lead.

    Arlington Martin wrestler Camille Rainey fights for positioning at the UIL Texas high school wrestling state tournament in Cypress, Texas, on Saturday, Feb. 14, 2026.
    Arlington Martin wrestler Camille Rainey fights for positioning at the UIL Texas high school wrestling state tournament in Cypress, Texas, on Saturday, Feb. 14, 2026. Cody Thorn Special to the Star-Telegram

    The senior ended up facing Fitzgerald for the third time this season in the finals.

    The two previous meetings came in tournaments. At the Texas Women’s Classic in Lewiville on Dec. 13, Rainey beat Fitzgerald, 11-3, in the semifinals . The weekend prior, at the Rumble at the Rock in Rockwall, she pinned her in another semifinal match.

    The third matchup was set up thanks to Fitzgerald pulling an upset and beating Katy’s Haley Pitts, who was 33-1 and the No. 1 overall seed in the bracket.

    Rainey bucked the proverbial, saying it’s hard to beat someone three times in a year.

    “I felt a little bit of pressure before the finals, but it wasn’t too much because I’ve already taken losses during the season,” Rainey said. “I’ve learned from them and went out knowing that I could do it.”

    Suffering a setback

    As a sophomore, Rainey posted a 30-1 mark and won the 138-pound championship. In that finals match, she posted an 8-5 win against Anna Vogt of The Woodlands College Park, who was a defending state champion.

    She followed up by winning the Texas USA Wrestling State Freestyle and Greco championships. The June before her junior season, she went to the Women’s National Duals to represent Texas. She went a perfect 7-0 in Greco and was 5-2 in freestyle.

    Her final big meet of the summer was the 2024 US Marine Corps Junior and 16U Wrestling Nationals in Fargo, North Dakota.

    In the blood round, where a win would guarantee All-American status, she got hurt. She got caught in a single leg and was hopping around to try to escape the grasp.

    Her knee buckled and she fell to the mat.

    She had torn her ACL and her chance to repeat as a UIL champion in 2025 went by the wayside.

    The work to get back

    Rainey spent all of last season rehabbing the injured right knee. She became another coach for the Warriors, helping out her teammates by talking with them and encouraging them.

    She said the rehab process was lonely, working on improving the knee every day she should. She wanted to get back to normal, but it didn’t come easy.

    She still loved the environment of being around wrestling tournaments and duals, but Dunn knew she missed being on the mat.

    The time away helped her with her own wrestling. She was able to watch matches instead of wrestling, her teammates’ matches, or pulling up videos of high-level wrestling.

    “It’s a lot different watching the matches because you can see a lot more and learn a lot,” she said.

    Dunn praised her unselfishness during what was a tough time. He said the key was not to rush her back. Could she have pushed it and maybe gotten a few matches in before districts last year? Perhaps.

    But Dunn said the key was not pushing the pace too much since she had her senior year left and hopes to wrestle in college. Her brother Ryan is a freshman at Central College in Pella, Iowa. He made it down for the finals on Saturday to watch his sister win her second title.

    “We’re not worried about two state titles or three state titles,” Dunn said. “It was about getting better every day and that’s what we really talked about. Are you better when you left than when you showed up? I told her that you’re competing against yourself in rehab, just like you would compete against your opponent in wrestling. She’s so competitive, and she took it to heart.”

    He added, “You know, a lot of times in today’s society, you’ve got these me, me, me kids. If I’m not wrestling, I’m not going to practice. She never missed a practice. She was a leader of the girls, even though she wasn’t wrestling.”

    Rainey admits the mental toll of the injury was tougher than the actual injury.

    She said a key to her success was leaning on her faith during the tough times.

    “It was rough being on the sidelines watching everyone accomplish everything you can’t get,” she said. “I think it was good I got injured. The year prior, I won the state, and I was losing motivation. Getting injured really pushed me to have something to prove.”

    The comeback

    A little more than a year after her ACL tear, Rainey returned to the mat wrestling for the Lone Star Mat Club at the Mid-Summer Mat Bash July 25-26 in Coppell.

    She went 5-1 overall, but the one loss was the one that stuck with her.

    Rainey said she was rushing things, and it caused her to get frustrated with herself in matches.

    In her mind, she was still the 2024 state champion who had lost only once.

    In reality, she was the 2024 state champion who lost one match and had a surgically rebuilt leg that was getting used to wrestling again.

    Rainey had success throughout the season, winning at a pace closer to her 2023-2024 season.

    “That’s a major injury; your knees are so important in wrestling,” Dunn said. “There are so many different angles. You’ve got to be able to block that out and be confident in the rehab and training you’ve done. I think it did take her a while at first to get over it. She was worried about it, which I understand. But, I would say over the last two or three months, maybe it hurt her, but she wasn’t worried about it tearing again.”

    Arlington Martin wrestler Camille Rainey stands alongside competitors at the UIL Texas high school wrestling state tournament in Cypress, Texas, on Saturday, Feb. 14, 2026.
    Arlington Martin wrestler Camille Rainey stands alongside competitors at the UIL Texas high school wrestling state tournament in Cypress, Texas, on Saturday, Feb. 14, 2026. Cody Thorn Special to the Star-Telegram

    She made the finals in each of the tournaments she competed in. Rainey lost in the finals twice: at the Texas Women’s Classic and Reece’s Warriors Invitational, Arlington Martin’s home tournament.

    Both times, she lost to Keller Central’s Echo Cranor. First by a 6-3 loss in overtime in Arlington and then by a pin in Lewisville, the match after beating Fitzgerald.

    The only other loss came on Jan. 22 against Melissa, falling to Malia Griffin, a defending state champion and now, after this weekend, a two-time state champion.

    Rainey took first at the District 3-6A tournament and then at the Region 1-6A meet the possibility was there for facing Cranor for a third time.

    The rematch happened and Rainey won by a 14-5 major decision.

    “She just watched a lot of film on Echo, and we figured out what she did,” Dunn said. “When Camille got in the room, she worked on it and she felt confident. She put a game plan together and she executed it. I think after she did that, she was very confident heading to state.”

    One last match

    Rainey’s journey to the finals to face Fitzgerald again was a tough one.

    Of the 16-woman bracket, six wrestlers were all-state in 2025 or 2024.

    To put that in context, none of the other 13 brackets had more than four returning medalists in any class.

    This year, the UIL adopted a new format for the finals, drawing a weight class to start with. Instead of traditionally starting at 100 pounds and working up to 235 pounds, this year’s matches started at 140 pounds. Rainey’s match was the penultimate one of the tournament, at 13th out of 14. Typically, 130 pounds would be the fifth match.

    Before the start of the finals, she did what she usually does. She went to the side of the mat and, on a bended knee, prayed.

    “I put my faith in God, and it really helped me,” she said. “I’d pray before my matches; not pray to win, but pray to not get hurt and be thankful for the opportunity to wrestle again.”

    Her headgear provided a place for her to share her faith. She has three crosses, to signify God is greater than the ups and down and Roman 8:18. The latter says “The pain that you’re feeling can’t compare to the joy that’s coming.”

    The joy would come 6 minutes after her name was announced over the speakers for the 6A finals.

    Rainey got a takedown early in the first period, but Fitzgerald got out of it and pulled within 3-2 on the reversal.

    In the final 10 seconds of the second period, Rainey got three nearfall points with two seconds left on the clock to extend her lead to 6-2.

    A mere 13 seconds into the third, she got a takedown and extended the lead to 9-2 to claim a title in a tough weight bracket.

    “I think once I got over the mental barrier of the injury and believing in myself, I realized I was back,” Rainey said. “I was probably even better than I was in 2024.”

    Arlington Martin wrestler Camille Rainey shakes an opponent's hand at the UIL Texas high school wrestling state tournament in Cypress, Texas, on Saturday, Feb. 14, 2026.
    Arlington Martin wrestler Camille Rainey shakes an opponent’s hand at the UIL Texas high school wrestling state tournament in Cypress, Texas, on Saturday, Feb. 14, 2026. Cody Thorn Special to the Star-Telegram

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    Cody Thorn

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  • Girls HS Basketball Playoff Fast Break: UIL bi-district and TAPPS area

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    Fort Worth Chisholm Trail’s Kennedy Brooks (3) goes up in front of Grapevine’s Selah Stull (5), Adia Stull (14) and Ella Kamara (7) in a UIL girls Class 5A Division II bi-district game on Monday, February 16, 2026 at Thomas Coliseum in Haltom City, Texas. Grapevine defeated Chisholm Trail 56-47.

    Fort Worth Chisholm Trail’s Kennedy Brooks (3) goes up in front of Grapevine’s Selah Stull (5), Adia Stull (14) and Ella Kamara (7) in a UIL girls Class 5A Division II bi-district game on Monday, February 16, 2026 at Thomas Coliseum in Haltom City, Texas. Grapevine defeated Chisholm Trail 56-47.

    Eagle Mountain Saginaw ISD/Courtesy to the Star-Telegram

    Welcome to The Fast Break, girls playoff edition. A Star-Telegram series featuring the top Fort Worth-area high school basketball news, performances and results from the UIL bi-district and TAPPS area rounds.

    Grapevine rallies to advance over Chisholm Trail

    Fort Worth Chisholm Trail jumped out to an early lead, but Grapevine rallied with a superb night from the free throw line to defeat the Rangers 56-47 in a Class 5A Division II bi-district game on Monday at Thomas Coliseum in Haltom City.

    Grapevine (20-12) moves on to the area round and will face Everman (23-14) which defeated Fort Worth Wyatt 69-14.

    Chisholm Trail (20-13) went on a 9-0 run to start the game behind Jada Hill who scored 6 of her game-high 17 points in the first quarter. Grapevine trailed 12-3 to start the second quarter, but chipped away at the lead until CT’s Jayci Butler (12 points) hit a long three at the buzzer to give the Rangers a 19-13 lead at the intermission.

    Fort Worth Chisholm Trail’s Jayci Butler reacts after making a three pointer at the halftime buzzer against Grapevine in a UIL girls Class 5A Division II bi-district game on Monday, February 16, 2026 at Thomas Coliseum in Haltom City, Texas. Grapevine defeated Chisholm Trail 56-47.
    Fort Worth Chisholm Trail’s Jayci Butler reacts after making a three pointer at the halftime buzzer against Grapevine in a UIL girls Class 5A Division II bi-district game on Monday, February 16, 2026 at Thomas Coliseum in Haltom City, Texas. Grapevine defeated Chisholm Trail 56-47. Khampha Bouaphanh Eagle Mountain Saginaw ISD/Courtesy to the Star-Telegram

    A big third quarter by Grapevine, especially by Victoria Carnevali, saw the Mustangs finally take their first lead. Carnevali hit back-to-back threes, the first to tie the game at 27 and the second to give Grapevine its first lead at 30-27 with 1:59 left in the third.

    Grapevine would never trail again as the Mustangs out scored Chisholm Trail 43-27 in the second half and hit 14 of 16 free throws in the final 3:29 of the game. Grapevine was 25 of 29 from the line on the night with Myleigh Gomez (11 points) hitting 9 of 9 from the stripe including 8 of 8 in the fourth quarter.

    Carnevali finished with 16 points for the Mustangs with Selah Stull adding 10 points. Jayden Boyd scored 9 points, but was a fiend on the boards pulling down 13 rebounds.

    The Grapevine Mustangs pose with hardware after defeating Fort Worth Chisholm Trail in a UIL girls Class 5A Division II bi-district game on Monday, February 16, 2026 at Thomas Coliseum in Haltom City, Texas.
    The Grapevine Mustangs pose with hardware after defeating Fort Worth Chisholm Trail in a UIL girls Class 5A Division II bi-district game on Monday, February 16, 2026 at Thomas Coliseum in Haltom City, Texas. Darren Lauber Fort Worth Star-Telegram

    No. 5 Argyle storms past Saginaw

    Argyle, No. 5 in the state in Class 5A according to the Texas Association of Basketball Coaches, used a smothering defense to subdue Saginaw 88-22 in a Class 5A Division II bi-district game on Monday at Thomas Coliseum in Haltom City.

    Argyle (29-5) moves on to the area round and will face Mansfield Summit (23-10), a 100-13 winner over Fort Worth South Hills, later this week. Saginaw’s season ends at 16-16.

    Argyle had all but one player on its roster score points and saw 4 finish in double-digit scoring. Wrigley Green led the way with 16 points (2 threes) and 8 rebounds.

    Aoife Journagan had 14 points (2 threes), Emma King finished with 13 and Lexi Ehrhardt chipped in 10 for the Eagles. Brooklyn Monroe led Saginaw with 13 points including 2 threes.

    Joshua runs away from Paschal in 5A DI

    Joshua got 16 points from Elexee Ray and turned up the defensive pressure another notch in the second half as the Owls downed Fort Worth Paschal 62-29 in a Class 5A Division I bi-district clash on Monday.

    Joshua (34-4) will next face No. 14 Aledo (25-7) after the Bearcats defeated Colleyville Heritage 48-21. Paschal’s season ends one win short of 20 at 19-14.

    Hadley Soto added 12 points and Chloe Griswell chipped in 10 for the Owls. Victoria Hultgren led Paschal with 10 points and Audrina Bowers had 8 for the Panthers.

    Aledo thumps Colleyville Heritage, Joshua next

    Tiara Butler dropped in 13 points to lead Aledo to a 48-21 win over Colleyville Heritage in a Class 5A Division I bi-district playoff on Monday.

    Aledo (25-7), No. 14 in Class 5A according to the TABC, will meet Joshua (34-4) in a showdown on Thursday at Godley High School. The start time has yet to be determined.

    Elizabeth Griffin and Brooklyn Dempsey contributed 9 points each for the Lady Cats with Jaylee Owens chipping in 8. Colleyville Heritage’s season ends at 15-17.

    Everman’s balanced attack too much for Wyatt

    Everman got 15 points from Carsyn Smith and 12 more from Makhiya Dangerfield as the Bulldogs bowled over Fort Worth Wyatt 69-14 in a Class 5A Division II bi-district tilt on Monday.

    Everman (23-14) will meet Grapevine (20-12) in the area round on Thursday at a site and time to be determined. Jahzeriah Esters and Sa’riyah Fields had 9 points each for the Bulldogs with Harli Clark adding 8 and Madison Walker tossing in 7.

    The Chaparrals season comes to a close with a record of 15-12.

    South Grand Prairie smothers Richardson to move on

    South Grand Prairie got 19 points from Janae Johnson to lead the Warriors to a 41-26 drubbing of Richardson in a Class 6A Division I bi-district game on Monday.

    SGP (22-12) moves on and will face Flower Mound (25-8) in the area round at 6:30 p.m. on Friday at Coppell High School. Flower Mound downed No. 15 Plano East 50-44 on Monday.

    Richardson’s season comes to an end at 10-20.

    Top-ranked Decatur rolls over Carter-Riverside

    Decatur, the TABC’s No. 1 ranked team in the state in Class 4A, got the playoffs rolling with a 109-13 win over Fort Worth Carter-Riverside in a Class 4A Division I bi-district game on Monday.

    Decatur (32-4) moves on to the area round to face the winner of Friday’s matchup between No. 15 Lubbock Frenship Memorial (25-8) and Stephenville (20-12).

    The Eagles were led by Janie Holmes who poured in 22 points. Carter-Riverside’s season ends at 18-15.

    GIRLS SCORES

    North Crowley 83, Keller Timber Creek 42

    South Grand Prairie 41, Richardson 26

    Trophy Club Byron Nelson 52, FW Boswell 46

    Aledo 48, Colleyville Heritage 21

    Joshua 62, FW Paschal 29

    Denton Ryan 51, Granbury 19

    Cleburne 80, FW Arlington Heights 15

    Grapevine 56, FW Chisholm Trail 47

    Everman 69, FW Wyatt 14

    Argyle 88, Saginaw 22

    Mansfield Summit 100, FW South Hills 13

    Decatur 109, FW Carter-Riverside 13

    Bridgeport 90, FW Dunbar 23

    Brock 64, Levelland 35

    Krum 73, Benbrook 20

    Dallas Lincoln 82, Venus 27

    Jacksboro 39, Peaster 19

    Ponder 51, Dallas Life Oak Cliff 32

    Grandview 60, Whitney 36

    Tolar 44, Henrietta 39

    Paradise 79, Cedar Hill Trinity Leadership 4

    Keene 42, Clifton 36

    This story was originally published February 16, 2026 at 11:26 PM.

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  • Accidental drowning reported after body found in Trinity River

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    Star-Telegram illustration/Yffy Yossifor photo

    A body was found in the Trinity River Monday afternoon after what police believe was an accidental drowning.

    A witness observed what appeared to be a body in the river in the 400 block of North Taylor Street, near the Tarrant County College Trinity River campus.

    Fort Worth Police Department officers were dispatched at around 3:15, and an unconscious person was located in the water by police and fire rescue teams.

    The person appeared to have accidentally drowned, a police spokesperson said, and no foul play is suspected.

    Emily Holshouser

    Fort Worth Star-Telegram

    Emily Holshouser is a local news reporter at the Fort Worth Star-Telegram.

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    Emily Holshouser

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  • Proposed Luzerne County tax break ordinance discussed | Dallas Post

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    A proposed ordinance setting eligibility requirements for developers seeking Luzerne County real estate tax breaks received supportive feedback from several County Council members during a recent work session.

    For requests to be considered by County Council, developers would first have to submit a series of documents and obtain tax break approval from the applicable municipality and school district. The ordinance also imposes annual reporting requirements on job creation, employee health insurance, and other benchmarks throughout the break and for two years after it expires.

    Council Chairman Jimmy Sabatino told his colleagues the ordinance evolved after a prior proposal stalled last summer due to concerns it would deter development. That proposal would have standardized tax break discounts by project type, such as warehousing and logistics, manufacturing, and tech-based development.

    “The thing that was going down the wrong path in my last proposal was trying to typecast certain developments. We need the county to be flexible to negotiate on a case-by-case basis,” Sabatino said.

    Sabatino said he worked with economic development stakeholders on the new ordinance to ensure there would be no objections or concerns.

    Describing the revised proposal as “concrete, but welcoming,” Sabatino said it would create a “level playing field” and provide County Council with “as much information as possible to make an informed decision going forward.”

    Council Vice Chairwoman Brittany Stephenson said the plan would provide a “fair shot” to all developers.

    “Most importantly, this really puts the power back on the county, so that way we can be strategic about who’s coming in,” Stephenson said.

    Councilman Chris Belles had suggested the additional reporting requirement on job creation and other factors.

    Belles said he wanted to provide a tangible way for people to gauge whether a tax break provided economic benefits. For many years, critics have argued tax breaks are “garbage” and “do nothing,” and the ordinance would provide defined metrics for evaluation, he said.

    Citizens may end up supporting breaks if the reports prove the “good that’s happening with them,” he said.

    Breaks are provided under the Local Economic Revitalization Tax Assistance (LERTA) program, which is only for “deteriorated areas,” including coal mine-scarred sites in the county. Taxing bodies have the option to provide up to 100% tax forgiveness on the new construction portion for a maximum of 10 years, while tax payments on the land must continue throughout the break.

    The reporting mandate will address a lack of “good data” to judge whether LERTAs “are working,” Sabatino said.

    Councilman John Lombardo said he likes the proposal to make the county the last taxing body to approve LERTAs. While the county has generally followed this model, there have been exceptions. County rejection of a tax break does not bar the applicant from receiving school district- and municipal-approved discounts.

    Lombardo asked about the requirement to disclose job-creation figures and other specifics during the application phase, noting that speculative developers may not know which company will occupy the space. He questioned how the developer would “give us a truthful answer.”

    In speaking with stakeholders about the proposed ordinance, Sabatino said he was informed that developers usually have a general idea of the planned project and can provide an overview of the estimated jobs and median compensation.

    Belles said developers also can be honest about the unknowns so County Council knows that “going in” to its consideration process.

    Councilman Harry Haas said a standard vetting process is “long overdue” and suggested creating an online application to streamline applications.

    A frequent critic of tax breaks, Haas also recommended adding language prohibiting developers from challenging their property tax assessment after the break expires, saying reductions lower the tax revenue amounts the county was promised when breaks were granted.

    Sabatino said he has repeatedly asked the county law office about that idea and was informed every time the county cannot legally compel property owners to waive their right to contest assessments they deem too high.

    School districts and municipalities always have the authority to challenge an assessment they believe is too low, which is known as a “reverse appeal,” officials have noted in the past.

    Sabatino said Monday he plans to seek further discussion on the proposed ordinance at a work session in March.

    To take effect, the ordinance would require introduction at a future meeting, followed by a subsequent public hearing and majority council approval.

    Reach Jennifer Learn-Andes at 570-991-6388 or on Twitter @TLJenLearnAndes.

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    Dallas Post

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  • Fort Worth EMS paramedic fired, accused of sexually assaulting patient in Saginaw

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    Star-Telegram illustration/Yffy Yossifor photo

    An EMS paramedic with the Fort Worth Fire Department has been fired after being accused of sexually assaulting a patient, the department said on Feb. 16.

    According to a news release from the Saginaw Police Department, 35-year-old Luke Phillip Dickens had an in-home visit scheduled for a patient in Saginaw on Dec. 30. He is accused of sexually assaulting the patient during the appointment.

    The victim reported the incident to Fort Worth police, but Saginaw police launched its own investigation on Jan. 13 learning about the alleged crime. The department identified Dickens as a suspect and issued a warrant for his arrest.

    Dickens was booked into the Tarrant County Jail on Feb. 6 on a charge of aggravated sexual assault. He was released on a $75,000 bond.

    Dickens was originally placed on administrative leave during an investigation into the allegations. He was terminated from his job with the city of Fort Worth on Feb. 13, the Fort Worth Fire Department said on Monday, for violating the conditions of his probationary employment.

    The Fire Department has been working in cooperation with the Saginaw Police Department.

    Dickens has been employed with the Fort Worth Fire Department since its transition from MedStar in July 2025. He began working with MedStar in 2022.

    The law firm representing Dickens said on Monday that his attorney could not comment on the investigation.

    Emily Holshouser

    Fort Worth Star-Telegram

    Emily Holshouser is a local news reporter at the Fort Worth Star-Telegram.

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    Emily Holshouser

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  • Texas Rangers star addresses report about toxic relationship with ex-teammate

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    Texas Rangers shortstop Corey Seager will have a new double-play partner this season after second baseman Marcus Semien was traded to the New York Mets in the offseason.

    According to the New York Post, that move came amid concerns about a toxic relationship between Seager and Semien, All-Stars who helped the Rangers win the 2023 World Series and who were two of the team’s highest-paid players.

    Seager addressed his relationship with Semien on Monday at training camp in Surprise, Arizona, in a video posted by Jeff Wilson of DLLS Sports.

    “I think that’s things that are in-house that people don’t know about, right?” Seager said. “That’s just all speculation. Me and Marcus had a fine relationship. We both respected each other, we were both professional, and we knew how to go about our business and try to accomplish a goal. And we did that in ‘23. So, like I said, you can’t take that away from us.”

    Seager, 31, is a five-time All-Star (three appearances with the Rangers) and two-time World Series MVP, including in 2023 with Texas. He has hit .278 with 117 home runs in four seasons with the Rangers. He was limited to 102 games last season because of injuries and hit .271 with 21 home runs and 50 RBIs.

    Semien, 35, is a three-time All-Star (two appearances with the Rangers). He hit .249 with 93 homers in four seasons with Texas and hit .230 with 15 homers and 62 RBIs in 127 games last season.

    Semien was traded to the Mets for outfielder Brandon Nimmo, 32, a 10-year veteran who hit .262 last season with a career-high 25 home runs.

    Josh Smith, 28, is expected to step in at second base for the Rangers. He hit .251 with 10 homers and 35 RBIs last season in his fourth year with the club.


    Game schedule dates, times, locations

    • Feb. 3 Boston 110, Mavericks 100
    • Feb. 5 San Antonio 135, Mavericks 123
    • Feb. 7 San Antonio 138, Mavericks 125
    • Feb. 10 Phoenix 120, Mavericks 111
    • Feb. 12 L.A. Lakers 124, Mavericks 104
    • Feb. 20 at Minnesota, 6:30 p.m., ESPN, KFAA, MavsTV
    • Feb. 22 at Indiana, 4 p.m., KFAA, MavsTV
    • Feb. 24 at Brooklyn, 6:30 p.m., KFAA, MavsTV
    • Feb. 26 vs. Sacramento, 6:30 p.m., KFAA, MavsTV
    • Feb. 27 vs. Memphis, 7:30 p.m., KFAA, MavsTV
    • Jan. 28 Houston 79, TCU 70
    • Feb. 1 Colorado 87, TCU 61
    • Feb. 7 TCU 84, Kansas State 82
    • Feb. 10 TCU 62, Iowa State 55
    • Feb. 14 TCU 95, Oklahoma State 92 (OT)
    • Feb. 17 at Central Florida, 6 p.m., ESPN+
    • Feb. 21 vs. West Virginia, 4 p.m., Peacock
    • Feb. 24 vs. Arizona State, 8 p.m., CBSSN
    • Feb. 28 at Kansas State, 5:30 p.m., ESPN2
    • March 3 at Texas Tech, 6 p.m., FS1
    • Jan. 29 TCU 79, Kansas 77
    • Feb. 1 Texas Tech 62, TCU 60
    • Feb. 4 TCU 90, Houston 45
    • Feb. 8 Colorado 80, TCU 79
    • Feb. 12 TCU 83, Baylor 67
    • Feb. 15 vs. West Virginia, 7 p.m., FS1
    • Feb. 18 at Houston, 6:30 p.m., ESPN+
    • Feb. 22 vs. Iowa State, 3 p.m., ESPN
    • Feb. 25 at Cincinnati, 5:30 p.m., ESPN+
    • March 1 vs. Baylor, 3 p.m., ESPN
    • Feb. 13 TCU 5, Vanderbilt 4
    • Feb. 14 TCU 5, Arkansas 4
    • Feb. 15 vs. Oklahoma (at Globe Life Field in Arlington), 6:30 p.m., FloSports.TV
    • Feb. 17 vs. UT Arlington (at Globe Life Field in Arlington), 7 p.m., none
    • Feb. 20 at UCLA, 7 p.m., FS1
    • Feb. 21 at UCLA, 4 p.m., BigTen+
    • Feb. 22 at UCLA, 3 p.m., BigTen+
    • Jan. 27 Stars 4, St. Louis 3
    • Jan. 29 Stars 5, Vegas 4 (SO)
    • Jan. 31 Stars 3, Utah 2
    • Feb. 2 Stars 4, Winnipeg 3 (OT)
    • Feb. 4 Stars 5, St. Louis 4
    • Olympic break
    • Feb. 25 vs. Seattle, 7 p.m., Fox, Victory+
    • Feb. 28 vs. Nashville, 7 p.m., Victory+
    • March 2 at Vancouver, 9 p.m., Victory+
    • March 3 at Calgary, 8 p.m., Victory+
    • March 6 vs. Colorado, 7 p.m., Victory+
    • 2026 season
    • Aug. 29 vs. North Carolina (at Dublin), TBA
    • Sept. 12 vs. Grambling State, TBA
    • Sept. 19 vs. Arkansas State, TBA
    • Sept. 26 at Central Florida, TBA
    • Oct. 3 vs. BYU, TBA
    • Oct. 17 at Baylor, TBA
    • Oct. 24 vs. West Virginia, TBA
    • Oct. 31 vs. Kansas, TBA
    • Nov. 7 at Arizona, TBA
    • Nov. 14 vs. Kansas State, TBA
    • Nov. 21 vs. Utah, TBA
    • Nov. 28 at Texas Tech, TBA
    • 2026 season
    • TBA vs. TBA (at Rio de Janeiro), TBA
    • 2026 opponents (dates and times TBA; one home game will be in Rio)
    • vs. N.Y Giants
    • vs. Philadelphia
    • vs. Washington
    • vs. Arizona
    • vs. San Francisco
    • vs. Tampa Bay
    • vs. Jacksonville
    • vs. Tennessee
    • vs. Baltimore
    • at N.Y Giants
    • at Philadelphia
    • at Washington
    • at L.A. Rams
    • at Seattle
    • at Green Bay
    • at Houston
    • at Indianapolis
    • Feb. 21 Team Texas-David Starr’s Racing School
    • March 6-7 Goodguys: 16th LMC Truck Spring Lone Star Nationals
    • March 12-15 Steak Cookoff Association World Championships
    • March 14 NASCAR Racing Experience
    • March 20-21 POWRi Racing
    • March 28 Mopar Heaven
    • April 11 NASCAR Racing Experience
    • April 18 Team Texas-David Starr’s Racing School
    • April 18 Bubble Run
    • April 23-25 Pate Swap Meet
    • April 25 FuelFest
    • April 30-May 2 High Limit Racing Stockyard Stampede
    • May 1 NASCAR Truck Series: SpeedyCash.com 250
    • May 2 NASCAR O’Reilly Auto Parts Series: Andy’s Frozen Custard 340
    • May 3 NASCAR Cup Series: Wurth 400

    This story was originally published February 16, 2026 at 12:45 PM.

    Jim Barnes

    Fort Worth Star-Telegram

    Jim Barnes is the Star-Telegram’s sports editor. A Fort Worth native and graduate of Castleberry High School, he returned to Texas after 13 years at the Las Vegas Review-Journal. He previously was sports editor of the Waco Tribune-Herald and a freelance high school sports reporter for The Dallas Morning News.

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  • Florida among states in ‘drug-resistent’ salmonella outbreak linked to moringa

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    Moringa powder capsules have been recalled as a CDC and FDA investigation links the capsules to a new form of salmonella outbreak that the CDC calls “unusual and highly concerning.”

    “The salmonella strain associated with this outbreak is resistant to all first-line and alternative antibiotics commonly recommended for the treatment of salmonella infections,” the FDA said in its outbreak update.

    Here’s what you need to know about Ambrosia Brands’ Rosabella moringa capsules and the salmonella outbreak.

    READ MORE: Alert for blood monitor sold by Walmart, Publix, Kroger, others after injuries and death

    What’s been recalled?

    Ambrosia Brands recalled 52 lots of Rosabella moringa capsules, sold in 60-count bottles.

    Rosabella moringa capsules
    Rosabella moringa capsules FDA

    The company’s recall notice says it sold the capsules through its website, tryrosabella.com, and through the company’s TikTok shop. Ambrosia called sales of the capsules through eBay, Shein and Amazon.com “unauthorized third party distribution,” but those capsules could be involved in the recall.

    Lot numbers can be found on the bottle bottoms and are the middle seven numbers between “1356” and “1” or “2.”

    Lots recalled are: Nos. 5020591-96, expiration date 03/2027; Nos. 5030246-51, expiration date 04/2027; Nos. 5040270-79, expiration date 05/2027; Nos. 5050053-56, expiration date 6/2027; Nos. 5060069-80, expiration date 07/2027; Nos. 5080084-86, expiration date 9/2027; Nos. 5090107-09, 5090113-118, expiration date 10/2027; and Nos. 5100039, 5100048, expiration date 11/2027.

    “We have discontinued use and purchase of all raw moringa leaf powder from the raw material supplier of the above referenced lots,” Ambrosia’s FDA-posted recall notice said.

    Where you’ll find the lot numbers on bottles of Rosabella Moringa Capsules. The lot number is the middle seven digits starting with “5.”
    Where you’ll find the lot numbers on bottles of Rosabella Moringa Capsules. The lot number is the middle seven digits starting with “5.” FDA

    Return these capsules to the seller and demand a full refund. Call Ambrosia at 914-768-1357, Monday through Friday, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., Eastern time, with any questions about this recall.

    What’s going on with the salmonella outbreak?

    The outbreak isn’t big in numbers so far, but because salmonella usually doesn’t require a medical professional’s attention, outbreaks’ official counts often represent a small percentage of those actually sickened. The CDC estimates only one in 30 cases get reported.

    According to the FDA’s Friday update, the seven people in the outbreak are spread across seven states: Florida, Washington, Illinois, Indiana, Arizona, Iowa and Tennessee. Investigators have interviewed three people, each of whom said they had Rosabella moringa powder capsules.

    But what makes this outbreak unique, the CDC said, is that “this is the first documented outbreak of salmonella with an NDM-1 gene in the United States.”

    And this Newport strain of salmonella contains, the CDC said, an “unusual and highly concerning antimicrobial resistance.”

    That came from an analysis of clinical samples from those sickened. The agency’s conducting more tests to confirm this high level of invulnerability to the usual antibiotics prescribed for salmonella.

    What is salmonella?

    Fortunately, antibiotics usually aren’t needed for salmonella, which hits 1.35 million people in the United States annually. Usually, it’s four to seven days suffering through, at various times, stomachaches, headaches, diarrhea, vomiting and nausea.

    If the diarrhea or barfing lasts more than two days; there’s blood in the diarrhea or urine; or a fever spikes to over 102 degrees, a visit to a medical professional is recommended.

    This story was originally published February 16, 2026 at 11:15 AM.

    David J. Neal

    Miami Herald

    Since 1989, David J. Neal’s domain at the Miami Herald has expanded to include writing about Panthers (NHL and FIU), Dolphins, old school animation, food safety, fraud, naughty lawyers, bad doctors and all manner of breaking news. He drinks coladas whole. He does not work Indianapolis 500 Race Day.

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    David J. Neal

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  • John Lombardo announces campaign for state representative | Dallas Post

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    Luzerne County Councilman John Lombardo formally announced Monday he is seeking the Republican nomination for the 118th Legislative District state representative seat in the May 19 primary election.

    According to his announcement:

    Lombardo, 32, of Pittston, has been a first responder his entire adult life, keeping citizens safe in the Pittston area and Northeastern Pennsylvania.

    He earned a strong reputation as a County Councilman who is a commonsense leader and trusted bipartisan official willing to work with Republicans, Democrats, and Independents to deliver real results for the county residents he serves.

    “I am incredibly proud to have worked to keep taxes low, supported meaningful infrastructure, and helped create family-sustaining jobs in Northeast Pennsylvania. “Our area needs a representative who focuses on the needs of our local communities, not rubber-stamping a partisan agenda.”

    As an experienced first responder, Lombardo said he “understands the importance and strength of our communities” and will be a “fierce fighter for our region.”

    “I look forward to working together on the issues that matter most to our working families, seniors and the young adults here in Lackawanna and Luzerne counties: affordability, public safety and accessible health care and prescription drugs,” he said. “You can count on me to always have the back of our workers and the small businesses who create many of the jobs local families rely on.”

    Lombardo currently serves as a full-time firefighter/EMT for the City of Pittston. He is a graduate of Pittston Area High School and Penn State University.

    He said he has been a consistent champion for affordability in Northeast Pennsylvania, including delivering grants to small businesses, millions of dollars for low-income citizens and tens of thousands of meals for seniors and food-insecure children.

    As a leader of the County Council, Lombardo has helped to secure more than $100 million in combined federal, state and county funds for revitalization, restoration, and reconstruction projects for local landmarks and green space for preservation and economic development. He also secured over $10 million in funding for local first responders.

    A Pittston resident, Lombardo is captain of the Pittston City Volunteer Fire Dept and a member of the Greater Pittston Regional ambulance, Nativity of Our Lord Parish in Duryea, the Wilkes-Barre Chapter of UNICO, and the Knights of Columbus Council 372.

    He is engaged to K-Lynn Rostkowski of Pittston.

    The state representative seat is currently held by Jim Haddock, D-Pittston Township.

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    Dallas Post

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  • Krispy Kreme is giving away free doughnuts — if you dress the part. Here’s when

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    Krispy Kreme is celebrating Mardi Gras with a one-day doughnut giveaway.

    On Tuesday, Feb. 17, anyone wearing colorful beads synonymous with the religious and cultural holiday can get a free original glazed doughnut at participating shops nationwide, the Charlotte-based doughnut chain said.

    Doughnuts are limited to one per person, and no purchase is required.

    A Krispy Kreme promotional graphic for Mardi Gras featuring a close-up of an Original Glazed doughnut on a purple background with green and gold beads. Text reads: ‘2/17 ONLY! Wear your Mardi Gras beads for a FREE Original Glazed.’”
    Charlotte-based Krispy Kreme is offering customers a sweet deal for Mardi Gras. Krispy Kreme

    This year, Mardi Gras falls on Tuesday, Feb. 17. The festive occasion marks the last day of Carnival season and is usually celebrated the day before Ash Wednesday when Lenten season begins, according to Mardi Gras New Orleans.

    “The tradition of float riders throwing trinkets to the crowds began in the 1870s, and continues today,” the website says. “Typical throws include beads, cups, doubloons and stuffed animals.”

    The season of fun and feasting is typically spent filling up on “rich, fatty foods” in the weeks leading up to fasting for Lent, History.com reports.

    A single Krispy Kreme original glazed doughnut packs plenty of fat and sugar — 10 grams each — making it the perfect Mardi Gras treat.

    Find your nearest Krispy Kreme here.

    A large batch of freshly made original glazed doughnuts are shown on a wire rack. They are a golden brown color with a shiny glaze coating, and the ones in the back are starting to be coated with a white icing.
    Charlotte-based Krispy Kreme, best known for its “Hot Now” glazed doughnuts, is testing an expanded menu with more flavors. Photo by Krispy Kreme

    This story was originally published February 16, 2026 at 9:24 AM.

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    Tanasia Kenney

    Sun Herald

    Tanasia is a service journalism reporter at the Charlotte Observer | CharlotteFive, working remotely from Atlanta, Georgia. She covers restaurant openings/closings in Charlotte and statewide explainers for the NC Service Journalism team. She’s been with McClatchy since 2020.

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