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Tag: Fort Worth

  • 8 Fort Worth restaurants I visited in 2025 that should be on your list, too

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    Looking back at a year of Fort Worth restaurant happenings makes my stomach ache — with both joy and sadness.

    While Fort Worth said goodbye to some of our favorite digs, the new restaurants that emerged make up for some of the heartache.

    I had the pleasure of writing about the best new Thai restaurant in Fort Worth, a greasy burger spot tucked into a downtown comedy club, and a Nobu Sushi dupe.

    Texas also had its second annual Michelin Guide where Goldee’s BBQ, Birrieria y Taqueria Cortez and Panther City BBQ all held down their recommendation status.

    Just in December, we visited the new Avila Taco in Keller and year-old Kafi BBQ in Irving, which made Eater’s top 15 new restaurants in the country. We were also sad to hear about the closing of Biscuit Bar in the Fort Worth Stockyards, an uncertain future for Beacon Cafe 287 and a landlord dispute at The Singing Chef Cafe.

    It was a bittersweet year for the culinary scene in Fort Worth. Take a look back at all the spots I visited in 2025.

    The La La Land at 5733 Camp Bowie Blvd. is the first location in Fort Worth.
    The La La Land at 5733 Camp Bowie Blvd. is the first location in Fort Worth. Ella Gonzales egonzales@star-telegram.com

    La La Land, a cult favorite, makes its Fort Worth debut

    La La Land is famous for its sunny aesthetic, baristas who say “I love you” when they serve your latte and its TikTok account featuring drive-by videos of employees riding around telling random strangers, “You’re beautiful.”

    When this coffeehouse opened in February, lines wrapped around the corner of Camp Bowie for weeks after.

    Read my full story here.

    The Spicy Sour Boule at Sour Boule cafe in Fort Worth. The sandwich has chipotle mayo, layered with chipotle chicken, pepperjack cheese, tomatoes and pickle marinated slaw, all hugged by a plain piece of sourdough.
    The Spicy Sour Boule at Sour Boule cafe in Fort Worth. The sandwich has chipotle mayo, layered with chipotle chicken, pepperjack cheese, tomatoes and pickle marinated slaw, all hugged by a plain piece of sourdough. Ella Gonzales egonzales@star-telegram.com

    Sourdough and pickles aren’t just a trend at this Fort Worth bakery

    The Sour Boule in west Fort Worth serves scratch sourdough sandwiches, bagels, pastries and waffles. And every lunch meal comes with a homemade pickle.

    After only a year of being open, Sour Boule had to move next door into a bigger space to serve their loyal customers.

    Read my full story here.

    The Crying Tiger ribeye steak served with assorted vegetables and sticky rice at the new Ko Thai restaurant on Magnolia Avenue in Fort Worth on Tuesday, April 29, 2025.
    The Crying Tiger ribeye steak served with assorted vegetables and sticky rice at the new Ko Thai restaurant on Magnolia Avenue in Fort Worth on Tuesday, April 29, 2025. Chris Torres ctorres@star-telegram.com

    “Best Thai place in town” opens on West Magnolia Avenue

    The food is just as good as the atmosphere at Ko Thai, 725 W. Magnolia Ave. in Fort Worth’s Near Southside. The owners, Joy Theepaka and “Nick” Thana Pornin, also have Koracha Thai in Benbrook. They thought they would bring the “Ko” (cow) to Cowtown.

    The menu features dishes from the Isan region in Thailand that is known for bold and spicy dishes. Guests should try the Crying Tiger or one of the stir-fry plates.

    Read my full story here.

    The oysters in a half shell are a starter dish offered at The Mont.
    The oysters in a half shell are a starter dish offered at The Mont. Samantha Marie Courtesy photo by Lindsey Miller PR

    A snazzy fine dining restaurant in a million-dollar neighborhood

    The Mont restaurant off Loop 820 in west Fort Worth is a mid-century modern space that serves new American cuisine with a rotating seasonal menu.

    Located near the Montserrat neighborhood, with its $1 million-plus homes, the restaurant’s prices aren’t cheap. But The Mont does have a bar bites menu and a new weekend brunch that offers more affordable choices.

    Read my full story here.

    Inside Ichiro Izakaya Diner and Bar on 401 Bryan Ave., Fort Worth.
    Inside Ichiro Izakaya Diner and Bar on 401 Bryan Ave., Fort Worth. Ella Gonzales egonzales@star-telegram.com

    Japanese charcoal grill opens in South Main district

    This Southside Fort Worth neighborhood is home to local favorites Panther City BBQ, Coco Shrimp and Wishbone & Flynt, but it lacked a Japanese restaurant until Ichiro Izakaya Diner and Bar opened at 401 Bryan Ave.

    “Izakaya” is traditional type of Japanese bar that serves small snacks and alcoholic drinks. In English, it directly translates to “stay-drink-place,” so grab a drink and get comfy. Think of it as the Japanese version of an Irish pub or Spanish tapas bar.

    Read my full story here.

    The $16 NADC Burger has double-smashed wagyu patties, American cheese, grilled onions, jalapenos, pickles and secret sauce. There is “not a damn chance” for customers to make any modifications.
    The $16 NADC Burger has double-smashed wagyu patties, American cheese, grilled onions, jalapenos, pickles and secret sauce. There is “not a damn chance” for customers to make any modifications. Ella Gonzales egonzales@star-telegram.com

    A smashburger from Michelin chef worth the potential heart attack

    NADC Burger is located in Big Laugh Comedy Club in downtown Fort Worth from Michelin star chef Phillip Frankland Lee and professional skateboarder Neen Williams (who also lives in Fort Worth).

    If you ask to make any modification to this double patty smashed burger, the cashier is going to tell you: ”Not a damn chance.”

    Read my full story here.

    Scallop crudo with sea urchin (uni) from Bleu Bear Sushi in Bedford.
    Scallop crudo with sea urchin (uni) from Bleu Bear Sushi in Bedford. Courtesy photo by Bleu Bear Sushi

    Former Nobu-trained chef opens sushi restaurant in Bedford

    Chef Pang Bamrungsin brings her expertise to Bleu Bear Sushi in Bedford after 10 years at Nobu Chicago.

    Nobu is well known for its black cod miso, spicy tuna on crispy rice and yellowtail jalapeno sashimi. Bleu Bear Sushi serves similar but more affordable dishes like yellowtail and yuzu sashimi, fried avocado topped with spicy tuna and wagyu gyoza dumplings.

    Read my full story here.

    The chicken birria quesadilla from Avila Taco in Keller.
    The chicken birria quesadilla from Avila Taco in Keller. Ella Gonzales egonzales@star-telegram.com

    Mexican with a spin on the classic birria tacos

    A North Texas food truck called Avila Taco started serving twists on the classic Mexican favorite in 2021. And in November, the Avila Taco restaurant opened in Keller.

    While “taco” is in the name, this restaurant serves more than the standard tortilla-wrapped birria. We are talking birria ramen, birria mac and cheese, and birria baked potatoes.

    Read my full story here.

    🔥 In case you missed it…

    Related Stories from Fort Worth Star-Telegram

    Ella Gonzales

    Fort Worth Star-Telegram

    Ella Gonzales is a service journalism reporter for the Fort Worth Star-Telegram. She is part of a team of local journalists who answer reader questions and write about life in North Texas. Ella mainly writes about local restaurants and where to find good deals around town.

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  • White Christmas forecast for North Texas? We last saw snow on Dec. 25 in 2012

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    Neighborhood friends Annabelle, 10, and Vivian Gonzalez, 12, and Erin Kate Ketterick, 13, hug their snowman they named ‘Tiny Tim’ after building him at their neighborhood park in southwest Fort Worth on Friday, Jan. 10, 2025.

    Neighborhood friends Annabelle, 10, and Vivian Gonzalez, 12, and Erin Kate Ketterick, 13, hug their snowman they named ‘Tiny Tim’ after building him at their neighborhood park in southwest Fort Worth on Friday, Jan. 10, 2025.

    ctorres@star-telegram.com

    It’s been 13 years since Fort Worth saw snow on Christmas — Dec. 25, 2012, “started out a dreary gray across North Texas, but by midafternoon it was decidedly white,” the Star-Telegram reported.

    It was also frigid: Morning lows were around 17 with wind chills of 1 to 6 degrees.

    Snow starts to accumulate in downtown Fort Worth on Tuesday, December 25, 2012. (Star-Telegram/Khampha Bouaphanh)
    Snow starts to accumulate in downtown Fort Worth on Tuesday, December 25, 2012. (Star-Telegram/Khampha Bouaphanh) Khampha Bouaphanh Khampha Bouaphanh

    This year, some North Texans may be playing Bing Crosby’s “White Christmas,” but they shouldn’t expect the lyrics to come true.

    Heading into Christmas week, above-normal temperatures will be in the forecast, according to the National Weather Service Fort Worth. It may be 20 degrees warming than normal for this time of year, as the typical highs for the end of December are 56 to 57 degrees, per NWS climate data.

    How warm will it be on Christmas in North Texas?

    On Monday, Dec. 22, temperatures will be in the mid-70s, followed by the upper 70s on Tuesday, Dec. 23. Christmas Eve will be in the same upper 70s boat.

    For Christmas Day, temperatures will be in the upper 70s, according to the NWS. In addition to the warm weather, sunny skies will be overhead with no rain in sight.

    🔥 In case you missed it…

    Fort Worth forecast for the week before Christmas

    Here’s a look at daily highs in North Texas over the next seven days:

    • Friday, Dec. 19: 64 degrees
    • Saturday, Dec. 20: 77 degrees
    • Sunday, Dec. 21: 62 degrees
    • Monday, Dec. 22: 74 degrees
    • Tuesday, Dec. 23: 78 degrees
    • Wednesday, Dec. 24: 77 degrees
    • Thursday, Dec. 25: 78 degrees

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    Brayden Garcia

    Fort Worth Star-Telegram

    Brayden Garcia is a service journalism reporter at the Fort Worth Star-Telegram. He is part of a team of local journalists who answer reader questions and write about life in North Texas. Brayden mainly writes about weather and all things Taylor Sheridan-related.

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    Brayden Garcia

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  • Sojourn 250 flag flies over Fort Worth in tour across United States

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    The American flag on its way to Washington, D.C., for the nation’s 250th anniversary flew at the Tarrant County Courthouse in downtown Fort Worth on Thursday morning during its only stop in Texas.

    Sheriff Bill Waybourn said the Sheriff’s Office jumped at the chance when the Sojourn 250 organizers approached it about hosting the flag-raising ceremony.

    It’s such an honor to have that flag in Fort Worth, Texas, and in Tarrant County,” he said.

    Thomas Kerss, executive director of the Sheriff’s Association of Texas, said the Sojourn 250 flag’s journey will take it around the world. The tour began in Washington, D.C., on June 14 — Flag Day. By the time it reached Tarrant County on Thursday, it had already traveled to multiple U.S. territories and all 26 military cemeteries overseas.

    The flag was recently flown over locations in Pearl Harbor, Hawaii; Oklahoma; Louisiana, and Alabama. It will eventually make its way to each of the 50 states before arriving at the nation’s capital on July 4.

    “This flag’s journey is a tribute to our rich heritage, history and our bright future,” Kerss said.

    The Tarrant County Sheriff’s Office Honor Guard hoisted the flag on the steps of the courthouse. U.S. Air Force veteran Capt. Ridley Briggs led in the Pledge of Allegiance.

    Briggs talked about the principles that the United States was founded on and all that the flag stands for.

    “She represents freedom to people all around the world,” Briggs said. “She represents the love and appreciation that I have for those great patriots who died to keep her flying.”

    Marine Corps veteran Cpl. Don Graves, a Battle of Iwo Jima survivor and Congressional Medal of Honor recipient, sang “God Bless America” before the flag was taken down.

    “I love my country,” Graves said. “I love that beautiful flag.”

    After Fort Worth, the Sojourn 250 flag is scheduled to stop in New Mexico. UPS is responsible for transporting the flag from place to place.

    This story was originally published December 18, 2025 at 10:41 PM.

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    Harriet Ramos

    Fort Worth Star-Telegram

    Harriet Ramos covers crime and other breaking news for the Fort Worth Star-Telegram.

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  • TCU is rolling out an ambitious enrollment campaign. How big will it be?

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    Students return to Texas Christian University campus for the first day of class on Monday, Aug. 19, 2024, in Fort Worth.

    Students return to Texas Christian University campus for the first day of class on Monday, Aug. 19, 2024, in Fort Worth.

    amccoy@star-telegram.com

    When Coleton Power applied to TCU as a senior in high school, he attended a live stream hosted by the university to learn more about the school. The stream was designed to answer questions from prospective students to help them make their college decision easier.

    That call, and the insight shared by Heath Einstein, the vice provost for enrollment management, sealed the deal for Power. He knew TCU was where he wanted to spend the next four years of his life.

    “[Einstein] gave probably the best possible pitch as to why students should want to go to TCU,” said Power, now a junior.

    Three years later, Einstein leads an ambitious campaign to substantially increase enrollment. He and his team are assigned with reaching goal of growing enrollment to about 18,000 undergraduate students by 2035. By increasing its student body, TCU hopes to become the premier research institution in Texas and improve its national reputation.

    The enrollment campaign is part of a broader strategic plan called Lead On: Values in Action. Outlined in that plan is a specific campus master plan that includes adding 25 buildings, including dorms, classrooms, parking garages and sports facilities that will be needed to accommodate a student body increase of several thousand.

    Enrollment Strategies

    TCU’s enrollment has already grown by 23% in the last 10 years — from just more than 10,000 in 2015-16 to almost 13,000 today. The enrollment bump also includes the freshman class of 2,754, the largest single class in TCU’s 151-year history.

    “We have various enrollment campaigns that reach students and parents and high school counselors and alumni,” Einstein said in an interview with the Star-Telegram. “We’re really trying to broaden our audience little by little.”

    The most important part of a successful enrollment campaign is meeting students where they are, Einstein said. TCU has six members of its enrollment team stationed across the country to reach prospective students in every part of the nation. Those recruiters are based in northern California, southern California, Houston, Atlanta, Chicago and western Massachusetts. Over 14% of TCU students are from California, 5.1% are from Illinois, 1.9% are from Georgia and just over 1% are from Massachusetts, according to university data.

    The enrollment team has also prioritized digital advertising and messaging, as well as building relationships with those considering attending the university before they even step foot on campus.

    “We try to be reflective of the town that we’re in,” Einstein said. “People here are just so authentic and warm, and we want to bring that authenticity and warmth to our prospective students through our various enrollment campaigns.”

    Another way TCU has been able to grow enrollment is by revisiting its application process and identifying how many students started filling out an application but didn’t finish. Some of those students forgot to fill out a final question, didn’t check every box or just forgot they started filling out the application in the first place, said Dean of Admission Mandy Castro.

    “There were thousands of students in that pile,” Castro said. “We looked internally at what we could do to facilitate that process and there were a couple specific questions on the application that, with advice from our Common App partners, they were like, ‘If you remove this, I think that you’ll find more completion rate.’”

    TCU has been able to defy a national trend of declining enrollment. The messaging from Einstein and his team allows for them to “cut through the noise” because it appeals to so many people in a variety of different ways, he said.

    College enrollment numbers have rebounded in recent years but are still not as high as they were before the COVID-19 pandemic. In 2018-19, there were 22.1 million undergraduate college students in the country. That number was as high as 23.7 million in 2014. Now, there are just under 21 million undergraduate college students in the U.S., according to the National Center for Education Statistics.

    But TCU has been able to mitigate that trend throughout its new aggressive enrollment campaign. Einstein and his team believe now is the perfect time to expand enrollment to heights the university has never seen because TCU is more desirable as a college than it has ever been.

    “Demand for a Texas Christian University education continues to rise,” Chancellor Daniel W. Pullin wrote in a statement to the Star-Telegram. “This growth reflects intentional choices we’ve made as a university to increase the TCU academic and campus experience while thoughtfully growing the number of Horned Frogs who will become leaders in their fields.”

    Acceptance rates still dropping

    TCU has been able to carry out its enrollment campaign without sacrificing its competitive acceptance rate. Although overall enrollment numbers are rapidly growing, the school’s undergraduate acceptance rate is dropping.

    In 2021, 10,606 of the 19,782 students who applied were accepted — just more than 53%. In 2024, the most recent enrollment numbers available in the university’s common data set, just 44.5% of applications were accepted.

    TCU is aiming to increase enrollment by 3% in each of the next few years — a number that mirrors organic application growth in recent admission cycles. Instead of sacrificing its competitive enrollment rate, the university is able to admit more students within an already growing pull of applicants, Castro said.

    “When applications were already growing by that much per year, that told us that we were already in a pretty good market position to be able to find some more qualified students, and by allowing us to admit more, we just have so many more yeses that we can give to incoming students,” Castro said.

    Campus expansion

    TCU has nine freshman dorms for around 5,000 students living on campus — a number that will need to increase as the university attempts to grow their freshman enrollment numbers a little bit each year over the next decade. TCU requires students to live on campus during their first two years at the school to keep the university from becoming a “commuter school.”

    “If you don’t have the right order of operations, you actually could mess things up,” Einstein said. “We currently do not have the housing in place that would allow us to support more students in a way that we currently do. We already have construction underway, and we’ll have several new buildings opening in fall 2027 which aligns with sort of the anticipated spike of first-year students.”

    The school’s campus master plan will also focus on improving academic facilities, medical innovation, sense of place, athletic facilities, revitalizing Berry Street, connecting the university to the Trinity River and improving the east portion of campus.

    Amid TCU’s push to expand its student body have also been multiple tuition increases, pushing the total cost of attending the school for eight semesters up to over $300,000 before scholarships and other financial aid opportunities. That number includes tuition, room and board and fees.

    The admissions team understands TCU may not be in every family’s budget, and acknowledged it had to part ways with some prospective students because of that. But admissions leadership has still been able to grow enrollment despite that. “Sometimes the fiscal decisions do have to be made,” Castro said. “But for somebody who is looking for a great college experience, TCU is a great investment that you know you get a good return on. We have a wonderful alumni base that extends from east and west and north to south, and they tell our story about how TCU is a great place to be.”

    Samuel O’Neal

    Fort Worth Star-Telegram

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

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  • Third suspect arrested in West 7th bar shooting that killed 1, injured 5

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    A third suspect has been arrested in the October shooting that killed a 31-year-old man and injured five other people at a West 7th district nightclub, according to Fort Worth police records.

    Lamar Luster, 20, was booked into the Fort Worth City Jail on Tuesday evening. He faces a murder charge.

    Police have said that several suspects fired handguns inside Social LIVV, located at 3005 Bledsoe St., about 1:40 a.m. on Oct. 5. Patrique Allen died at the scene, according to the Tarrant County Medical Examiner’s Office. Another man and four women were wounded in the shooting.

    Investigators believe the shooters targeted Allen because of his gang affiliations, police said. The other five victims were bystanders.

    A man was killed and five people were wounded Oct. 5 in an apparently gang-related shooting inside Social LIVV, a nightclub on Bledsoe Street in Fort Worth’s West 7th entertainment district, police said. A third murder suspect in the case was arrested on Dec. 16.
    A man was killed and five people were wounded Oct. 5 in an apparently gang-related shooting inside Social LIVV, a nightclub on Bledsoe Street in Fort Worth’s West 7th entertainment district, police said. A third murder suspect in the case was arrested on Dec. 16. Shambhavi Rimal srimal@star-telegram.com

    The suspects ran from the bar after the shooting. Arkell Ross, 20, was arrested Oct. 8 after a standoff with SWAT officers. A second suspect, 23-year-old Jason Nash, was arrested in south Fort Worth on Nov. 5.

    Ross and Nash both face murder charges, according to police records. Nash is being held in the Tarrant County Jail on $750,000 bond and has also been charged with one count of engaging in organized criminal activity, Tarrant County court records state. Ross’ bond has been set at $950,000, including bond on a separate robbery case.

    Arrest warrant affidavits for the three suspects were not immediately available Wednesday. It’s not clear if Luster has obtained a defense attorney to represent him.

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    Harriet Ramos

    Fort Worth Star-Telegram

    Harriet Ramos covers crime and other breaking news for the Fort Worth Star-Telegram.

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  • Divers search water for missing kayaker at Marine Creek Reservoir in Fort Worth

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    An archive photo of Marine Creek Reservoir and Marine Creek Lake Park

    An archive photo of Marine Creek Reservoir and Marine Creek Lake Park

    Fort Worth Star Telegram

    Authorities including the Texas Game Wardens and the Tarrant Regional Water District are searching the water for a kayaker who went missing Monday at the Marine Creek Reservoir in northwest Fort Worth.

    The search team includes a Texas Parks and Wildlife Department dog and her handler, according to a department spokesperson.

    A friend of the missing man called 911 Monday after his truck was found near a boat ramp at the lake.

    Fort Worth Fire Department divers and police also have assisted with the search.

    Fort Worth police said in a news release that they received a call about 8 p.m. Monday alerting them that a person was missing in the 4700 block of TCC Lakeside Drive.

    The missing man’s last known contact with friends and family was around 10 a.m. Monday, when he said he was going fishing and kayaking, according to police. After several hours without contact, family members pinged his last known location, which led officers to the search area.

    The FWPD Air One helicopter responded and police spotted the man’s empty kayak on the east side of the lake.

    Fire Department dive searched until about 11 p.m. Monday, when officials with the Tarrant Regional Water District arrived and assumed search operations.

    This story was originally published December 16, 2025 at 4:34 PM.

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    Amy McDaniel

    Fort Worth Star-Telegram

    Amy McDaniel edits stories about criminal justice, breaking news and education for the Star-Telegram.

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  • Women are sent to Carswell federal prison for dialysis. They say it’s killing them.

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    A photo of Martha Perez is found in a bin of family photos at her family's home in Prescott Valley, Arizona, on Sunday, March 9, 2025.

    A photo of Martha Perez is found in a bin of family photos at her family’s home in Prescott Valley, Arizona, on Sunday, March 9, 2025.

    Courtney Pedroza for the Marshall Project

    Evangelina Perez lost count of the number of times her mother, Martha Perez, called her from federal prison, gasping for breath because she had missed dialysis treatments for her kidney failure.

    At 59, Martha Perez also had diabetes and congestive heart failure. She had been in various federal prisons since 2005 on money laundering and drug convictions. In 2018, the Bureau of Prisons sent her to the Federal Medical Center Carswell in Fort Worth, the country’s only federal medical prison for women.

    The bureau houses some of the sickest women at Carswell, and it’s the only federal women’s prison with in-patient dialysis — a critical, life-sustaining treatment for people with kidney failure.

    But in court documents she filed pleading for release, Perez described her worsening health and her fear of dying at Carswell. In May 2022, another incarcerated person had to help her write a final request because of her poor vision. Just over a year later, Perez died in a Fort Worth hospital. No family was with her.

    “I understand the circumstances, but initially, like there is a care that they should have been providing,” Evangelina Perez said. “It got to the point where she started retaining fluid on her chest, and she ended up passing away from a heart attack.”

    Perez had serious illnesses that required consistent care. But Carswell does not adequately provide the dialysis care that the Bureau of Prisons claims it does, according to lawyers, medical experts and former bureau officials, along with court and medical records. Women at Carswell describe missed treatments, poor education for patients, dialysis machines that break down mid-treatment or that lacked enough clean water, and other routine problems.

    Evangelina Perez poses while holding a photo of her mother, Martha Perez, down the street from her home in Prescott Valley, Arizona, on Sunday, March 9 2025.
    Evangelina Perez poses while holding a photo of her mother, Martha Perez, down the street from her home in Prescott Valley, Arizona, on Sunday, March 9 2025. Courtney Pedroza for the Marshall Project

    Doctors who reviewed the women’s court filings and allegations say the problems described would put dialysis patients in serious danger. Legal filings by prisoners, medical records and expert court testimony raise flags about preventable — and potentially fatal — conditions arising from substandard care. The Bureau of Prisons, which is supposed to fix those problems, operates with little to no external oversight over its medical care.

    A federal judge overseeing a dialysis patient’s compassionate release case said testimony from seven women on dialysis was “concerning,” but said he could not approve the release. Doing so, the judge said, could imply the entire Bureau of Prisons provides ineffective dialysis care.

    Michele Deitch, director of the Prison and Jail Innovation Lab at the University of Texas in Austin, said people in prison “have a constitutional right to receive medical care for their serious medical needs. And dialysis is certainly an example of that.”

    If the federal government “cannot take care of people and meet their needs as required by the Constitution,” Deitch said, “then we have no business locking them up.”

    The Bureau of Prisons declined requests for an interview. In answers to emailed questions, spokespersons wrote that the agency provides adequate dialysis care, including sufficient staffing and education for patients.

    “At present, there have been no reports or claims concerning the quality of the dialysis care being provided at FMC Carswell,” wrote spokesman Donald Murphy.

    Carswell has been the subject of numerous investigations calling into question its treatment of incarcerated people. In 2020 and 2021, women at the facility described negligent medical care and malicious treatment as COVID spread through the prison. In 2023, a Fort Worth Star-Telegram investigation highlighted a pattern of sexual abuse by staff. In response, a state representative called for a congressional inquiry into the prison, though none were launched.


    When she died in June 2023, Perez was one of about 15 women at Carswell receiving dialysis. The treatment uses a surgically installed port to connect a patient to a machine that filters their blood, removing toxins the kidneys no longer can process, before pumping the cleaned blood back into the patient. The process takes three to five hours and is usually needed three times a week — or patients may risk serious complications and death.

    Kidney failure can be caused by a multitude of issues, most commonly diabetes, high blood pressure and chronic kidney disease. Perez had all three. In June 2021, Perez started dialysis after she had a stroke.

    Federal medical prisons, despite their name, are not hospital-like facilities: They keep incarcerated people with medical needs, but in many cases, do not provide all of their care in-house. Carswell, which houses approximately 1,200 people, contracts with the University of North Texas Health Science Center for much of its medical care. The Health Science Center, in turn, subcontracts dialysis services to the private provider U.S. Renal Care of West Fort Worth, according to the Bureau of Prisons. Under Carswell’s contract with the Health Science Center, the bureau is still responsible for providing all dialysis equipment.

    U.S. Renal Care confirmed it provides dialysis at Caswell, but did not respond to several interview requests and other emailed questions about its services there.

    Dialysis is only part of the treatment for people with kidney failure. They also need a strict diet and water intake monitoring, and blood work to closely check various chemical levels. A patient’s port must be kept extremely clean to avoid sepsis, a life-threatening infection.

    According to Bureau of Prisons mortality reviews from 2015 to April 2020, at least three women undergoing dialysis at Carswell died in that time period. All three women had been transferred to Carswell specifically to receive medical treatment, and all three developed sepsis prior to their death, according to the mortality reviews. Reason Magazine obtained the documents through a records request and provided them to The Marshall Project.

    Sepsis is far less common if staff follow the proper contamination protocols for dialysis machines, said Dr. Charles Howard, who has served as medical director at two federal prisons for over two decades.

    There are no publicly available records of deaths in federal prisons. The Bureau of Prisons has yet to fulfill records requests for mortality reviews or the number of dialysis patients who have died at Carswell.

    When asked how many Carswell dialysis patients have died since 2020, a bureau spokesman initially said “zero.” When asked specifically about Perez, who died in 2023, spokesman Scott Taylor said that no one “had passed away as a result of their condition that required dialysis.” Regarding Perez’s death, Taylor said “there was no correlation between the need for dialysis and the cause of death.”


    Five current or former dialysis patients at Carswell spoke with The Marshall Project and also detailed in court records the dialysis conditions there. Four others described dialysis treatments in compassionate release pleas or other court records. The women said their treatment included severe cramping during dialysis, treatment sessions cut short or missed, and poor machine maintenance, such as broken parts, discolored tubing, and machine settings that were set incorrectly. Four women said pipes in the water room would break frequently, and the machines would sit in puddles of water.

    “The truth lies in the consistency of the women’s statements,” said Amber Rabon, a lawyer in one of the women’s cases, who has been a federal criminal defense attorney since 2008.

    Evangelina Perez, Martha Perez’s daughter, said her mother told her she frequently missed dialysis treatments prior to her death in 2023.

    “I can’t even keep track of how many times that occurred where they wouldn’t complete the dialysis on them. And that was an issue, and she would call me, she would call me panicking because she knows how she would get if she skipped one,” Evangelina Perez said. “She would be so short of breath that her stomach would be tight from all the fluid she was retaining.”

    From left, Francisco Perez; Francisco Perez IV, 12; Daniel Perez, 14; Gabriella Perez; Evangelina Perez; Cecilia Perez, 6; and Angelica Perez pose for a portrait down the street from their home in Prescott Valley, Arizona, on Sunday, March 9, 2025.
    From left, Francisco Perez; Francisco Perez IV, 12; Daniel Perez, 14; Gabriella Perez; Evangelina Perez; Cecilia Perez, 6; and Angelica Perez pose for a portrait down the street from their home in Prescott Valley, Arizona, on Sunday, March 9, 2025. Courtney Pedroza for the Marshall Project

    She said her mother would tell staff that something was wrong, but they “said ‘She was fine, she’s fine,’ until there was fluid literally coming out of her belly button,” Perez said.

    Missing a dialysis session is dangerous for patients, said Dr. Rebecca Ahdoot, a kidney specialist at the University of California Irvine. Without rigorous dialysis, toxins can build up, and the person can die.

    Alicia Elliott, who was on dialysis at Carswell for 15 months while incarcerated on drug charges, said in court records and interviews that she was forced to miss appointments or had her treatment cut short multiple times. In late 2022 and twice in early 2023, Elliot emailed Carswell’s associate warden for medical to complain about being taken off dialysis early. In one case, she said staff wanted to leave early because of ice on the roads.

    Sanjuana Garcia-Ramirez started dialysis at Carswell in November 2023. She said she had been on dialysis for two years before incarceration; comparatively, she said treatments at Carswell are less consistent and the machines are poorly managed.

    “I have four kids I have to get back home to, and it frightens me that I might not make it out of here because of the way they run dialysis,” said Garcia-Ramirez, who is serving a six-year sentence on a drug conviction.

    Successful dialysis goes hand-in-hand with proper nutrition plans, said Howard, the former bureau medical director.

    “A patient has to be their own advocate, and they have to be very, very, very much aware of what they need and what they have to do to manage their condition,” Howard said. If they’re not able to do it or they’re not properly educated, he said, “they will not do well on dialysis.”

    But Stephanie Williams, who said she was on dialysis at Carswell for 11 months, said women would start dialysis and get no education on nutrition. Some women did not know that people with kidney problems have to monitor their potassium, sodium, fluid and phosphorus levels, for example, or they risk possibly fatal complications.

    “Them girls, when I said phosphorus, they said, ‘What is phosphorus?’ And [I was] like, ‘What are you doing?’” Williams said.

    She also said in interviews and court records that women were not told how to keep their port clean — or the importance of doing so. Women would shower without covering up their ports and get them wet, which increases the risk for infection, she said.

    “It’s a lack of education. It’s not the girls’ fault. But it’s killing them.”


    While U.S. Renal Care oversees dialysis treatments and a nephrologist — a kidney specialist — visits once a month, patients rely on Carswell staff at all other times for medical needs. Doctors, lawyers and the Bureau of Prisons’ own budget proposal this year questioned whether Carswell has the ability and resources to provide that care.

    Understaffing and a depleted budget have sapped federal prisons of resources over the last few years. In a 2024 report, the Office of the Inspector General identified providing adequate medical care as one of the primary challenges the bureau faces.

    In the bureau’s 2025 budget submission to Congress, the agency lamented its difficulties in hiring and maintaining medical staff. The budget cited a 2016 Office of Inspector General report, which declared recruitment of medical professionals to be “one of the Bureau’s greatest challenges.”

    Carswell is no exception. In 2022, Carswell then-staff union leader Jennifer Howard filed a whistleblower complaint about COVID-19 guidance and staff shortages at the facility. At the time, Howard told the Fort Worth Star-Telegram that staffing levels were “unacceptable for a medical facility.”

    Federal Medical Center Carswell in Fort Worth in a 2020 file photo.
    Federal Medical Center Carswell in Fort Worth in a 2020 file photo. Amanda McCoy Fort Worth Star-Telegram

    Despite understaffing, the bureau may face further cuts. In February, the agency announced it would reduce or eliminate retention pay for correctional officers, a decision that American Federation of Government Employees said would “exacerbate staffing shortages and make working conditions less safe.”

    A former bureau warden and administrator, Jason Terris, questioned Carswell’s ability to care for dialysis patients as part of his declaration cited in a compassionate release case for Feliza Renteria, a 45-year-old dialysis patient at the facility.

    Renteria arrived at Carswell in 2021. But the dialysis treatments have made her sicker, she argued in court records. In an interview, she described excruciating pain during treatment. “I did not experience what a cramp was before I was incarcerated — I did dialysis a year before this and never had cramps,” she said.

    Dialysis patients should not have constant cramping, Ahdoot said. Cramps can be a sign that too much fluid is being pulled out of the body too quickly, she said, and treatment should be adjusted.

    Patients “certainly shouldn’t be on dialysis and suffering,” said Ahdoot, who has been a nephrologist for 12 years. “If you are having crazy cramps all the time, then there is certainly a problem.”

    Carswell’s contract with the Health Science Center says a kidney doctor will be available to patients once a month for up to four hours. Ideally, Ahdoot said, a nephrologist should see patients once a week to ensure the right amount of fluid is being pulled off during dialysis.

    In his declaration for Renteria’s suit, Terris wrote that he did not know if the staff at Carswell could handle the “logistical and care-related challenges” Renteria’s condition presented due to staffing shortages and a lack of resources.

    But those statements are part of the reason U.S. District Judge Anthony Battaglia, in California’s Southern District, denied Renteria’s compassionate release. When he denied the request in a September 2023 hearing, Battaglia said granting her motion could have implications beyond Renteria’s case because of the message it would send about the bureau’s care.

    “I mean, granting relief here, does that mean that every dialysis patient in the Bureau of Prisons should be similarly accommodated because the quality of care is, perhaps, ineffective?” Battaglia said, according to a court transcript. “I’m looking at sort of the greater picture here. Because some of the accounts, from some of the people, is concerning.”

    Last year, the Ninth Court of Appeals denied Renteria’s appeal for compassionate release.


    There is no third-party agency currently monitoring dialysis treatments at Carswell. Multiple outside agencies that used to evaluate the Bureau of Prisons’ medical care no longer do so.

    Carswell’s contract with the Joint Commission, which provided the facility’s accreditation as a healthcare organization, expired in October 2020 and was not renewed, according to the Bureau of Prisons spokesperson. The American Correctional Association ended its audits of the agency in 2023, after the Office of Inspector General found the Bureau of Prisons was “in effect, paying ACA to affirm [the bureau’s] own findings,” and as a result, there was “no real certification or action for improvement.”

    The state of Texas does not monitor Carswell either. Oversight rules are built into Carswell’s contract with the Health Science Center, but neither the Sciences Center nor Carswell have responded to requests for monitoring records.

    According to its contract with the bureau, the Health Science Center is supposed to send quarterly reports about dialysis treatment at Carswell to a bureau administrator. But Health Science Center spokeswoman Paula Cobler said the hospital does not have those records; she said U.S. Renal Care is responsible for them and provides Carswell with copies. Another Health Science Center spokesman, Andy North, said the dialysis reports include “patient-care specific problems experienced during the quarter,” but declined to answer questions about what those problems entailed.

    U.S. Renal Care did not provide those records to The Marshall Project. The bureau has not fulfilled a records request for those quarterly reports.

    The Office of the Inspector General found evidence that the bureau’s contracts are not always monitored adequately. A 2023 audit found the bureau’s contract evaluations were often untimely, incomplete, or for the wrong time period. This may result in the agency not getting the best services, the report noted.

    In 2024, then-President Joe Biden signed the Federal Prison Oversight Act to increase independent inspections of prisons, but Congress has not approved money for the inspections. Deitch, of the Prison and Jail Innovation Lab, said the priority now is for the act to be fully funded “to provide the critical oversight role that is needed.”


    As her fears of dying inside prison grew, Perez filed requests for a reduced sentence or compassionate release five times between 2012 and 2022. A judge had not ruled on her final release request when she died in July 2023.

    Compassionate release is a way to address deficiencies in care for some incarcerated people, but it is seldom granted. Judges look for evidence that a prison can’t provide the necessary treatment, said Marc Stern, the court-appointed monitor for the State of Arizona Department of Corrections. Without that proof, most motions will be denied. Out of the nine dialysis patients at Carswell that The Marshall Project identified, eight filed for sentence reduction or compassionate release since 2022. Seven were denied. In the remaining case, a judge initially denied the request, but reversed the decision and released the woman in 2020, citing “the abominable COVID-19 statistics at FMC Carswell.” The judge said the facility’s inaccurate data suggested the bureau could not be trusted to care for someone with complicated health conditions.

    A photo of Martha Perez is found in a bin of family photos at her family's home in Prescott Valley, Arizona, on Sunday, March 9, 2025.
    A photo of Martha Perez is found in a bin of family photos at her family’s home in Prescott Valley, Arizona, on Sunday, March 9, 2025. Courtney Pedroza for the Marshall Project

    In a compassionate release request for one woman, who asked not to be named due to fear of retaliation, her lawyer wrote that Carswell frequently missed her dialysis treatments, forcing her to go five to six days without. The woman’s former physician wrote a letter in November 2023 in support of her release request, saying that “continued incarceration would be severely detrimental” to her health due to her complex medical issues.

    Williams, the former Carswell patient, described Perez’s deteriorating condition as “the scariest thing I’ve seen.”

    “She was bad off,” said Williams, who was released in November 2023. “The week she died, she said, ‘I need to see a doctor right now.’”

    In the days before Perez’s death, her family said, the bureau did not tell them that her condition had worsened or that she was in the hospital. She was admitted to John Peter Smith Hospital in Fort Worth on July 2, 2023, for low blood pressure after a dialysis treatment, medical records show. Her admission records at the hospital indicated she had had a serious heart attack and, on July 6, she was transferred to Medical City Fort Worth Hospital for surgery.

    Medical staff tried to reverse the damage and stabilize Perez, but on July 7, she lost her pulse. For one hour, staff tried to bring Perez back. A prison guard finally called the family to ask if they wanted them to continue to try to resuscitate Perez. Her daughter said the decision fell to her father as Perez’s next of kin. He told them to stop.

    In a letter to the family, the Bureau of Prisons said Perez died from cardiac arrest; she also had coronary artery disease. Seven months later, Evangelina Perez got her mother’s death certificate from the state of Texas. The cause of death is listed as “pending investigation.”

    Kaley Johnson is a reporter based in Texas. She can be reached at kaleyalyssajohnson@gmail.com.

    This article was published in partnership with The Marshall Project, a nonprofit news organization covering the U.S. criminal justice system. Sign up for their newsletters, and follow them on Instagram, TikTok, Reddit and Facebook.

    This story was originally published December 16, 2025 at 6:00 AM.

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  • Where to eat on Christmas Day: More restaurants are open in Fort Worth

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    The list of “what’s open Christmas Day” is longer than usual.

    Restaurants need the money. But they’re also offering some new ideas for family dining and fun:

    1. MEDITERRANEAN BUFFETS

    Dimassi’s, the sprawling cafeteria-style Lebanese buffet restaurants from Houston, will be open Christmas as usual and every day in Fort Worth, Grapevine and at five other area locations.

    But there’s a new choice this year: Truva.

    If you don’t know the name Truva, you know the Flying Carpet. Chef Can Karataş has both, along with Istanbul Cuisine restaurants in other North Texas cities.

    Truva just opened at 1205 Church St. in the Town Center Colleyville shops. It’s billed as the largest Mediterranean restaurant in Texas.

    It’s open for lunch Christmas Day, serving a full buffet with grill dishes, omelets, appetizers and desserts.

    Panoramic windows line the dining rooms at Truva Mediterranean Bar & Grill, a Turkish restaurant in Colleyville, Texas, seen Dec. 14, 2025.
    Panoramic windows line the dining rooms at Truva Mediterranean Bar & Grill, a Turkish restaurant in Colleyville, Texas, seen Dec. 14, 2025. Bud Kennedy bud@star-telegram.com

    The price is reasonable: $32.95. The setting is a rich, wood-paneled dining room with panoramic windows and high ceilings, a good pick for a family gathering Christmas Day or anytime over the holidays.

    Truva’s regular menu is $16-$17 at lunch, $20-$26 at dinner. The Mediterranean-style steaks are about $40.

    It’s open for lunch and dinner daily; 817-576-4064.

    2. BETTER HOTEL RESTAURANTS

    —Bricks & Horses, the city’s leading hotel restaurant in a spectacular Western-style setting, will serve Christmas Eve tea, Christmas Day brunch and then a $115 family-style dinner at night Christmas Eve and Day.

    It’s at 3700 Camp Bowie Blvd.; 682-782-6688, bricksandhorses.com.

    —Wicked Butcher. a Dallas-based prime steakhouse in the historic Sinclair hotel, will serve its full menu Christmas Eve dinner and all day Christmas Day with steaks, seafood and specialties such as beef Wellington, prime rib or duck à l’orange.

    Chocolate tart with a hazelnut crust and peanut-butter cream at Wicked Butcher.
    Chocolate tart with a hazelnut crust and peanut-butter cream at Wicked Butcher. Courtesy of Wicked Butcher

    It’s at 512 Main St.; 817-601-4621, wickedbutcher.com.

    (Street parking downtown is free nights, weekends and holidays.)

    —Most hotels are open, including the lavish holiday buffets at the Omni Fort Worth, Crescent Fort Worth and Gaylord Texan Resort in Grapevine.

    3. TAKE THE TRAIN

    The TEXRail trains to Grapevine DFW Airport will be on regular schedule Christmas Day, so take the family to Bacchus Kitchen at Hotel Vin in the Grapevine train station.

    The special $95 menu includes beef tournedos au poivre; 215 E. Dallas Road, 817-251-3040, bacchustx.com.

    4. RESTAURANTS ARE OPEN

    More Christmas Day dining:

    —Rosebud Steakhouse, the flashy new Chicago-style prime steakhouse in Southlake, will be open at 2102 Texas 114 East; 817-634-5050, rosebudsteak.com.

    —Heaven’s Gate Restaurant, the city’s traditional family holiday buffet, is $27.95. It’s open 10:30 a.m.-2 p.m. Christmas Day at 3820 N. Main St.; 817-624-1262, heavensgaterestaurant.com.

    —Texas de Brazil and most other Brazilian prime steakhouses will open and add turkey or other meats to the selection.

    —Also in downtown Fort Worth, Mercury Chophouse at 525 Taylor St. will be open and serving Christmas lunch to customers including Fort Worth police and other first responders; 817-336-4129, mercuryfw.com.

    —The Rim restaurants and corporate cousin Rio Mambo will open at all locations and serve an all-you-can-eat $39.99 brunch. The Rim will feature brisket and ham at its restaurants in Fort Worth and Burleson.

    —Ol’ South Pancake House, a definitive all-day cafe for Texas travelers since 1962, will open at 8 a.m. Christmas Day at both locations, 1509 S. University Drive in Fort Worth and 225 E. Renfro St. in Burleson.

    —Rex’s Bar & Grill, the new sports grill spinoff of Ol’ South, will open at 11 a.m. Christmas and serve all day at 1501 S. University Drive.

    —In the Stockyards, Paloma Suerte and Tannahill’s Tavern are both listed as open but have not provided information.

    Other restaurants open Christmas Day: all Black Bear Diner locations, Brio Italian Grille in Southlake, all Del Frisco’s Grille and Saltgrass Steakhouse locations, and all Red Lobster locations.

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    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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  • Dallas-based coffee shop acquires popular North Texas pie bakery

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    Would you like a slice of pie with your cup of coffee? You’ll have one more option now thanks to two North Texas businesses.

    White Rhino Coffee recently announced its acquisition of North Texas bakery, Emporium Pies.

    The two companies both began in Dallas and have expanded to multiple locations around the metroplex. Emporium Pies began out of the Bishop Arts District in 2012 and is known for its rotating gourmet pie menu that has fan favorite flavors like ‘The Drunken Nut.” White Rhino was founded in 2007 and sells craft coffees with homemade breakfast.

    Their operations will remain the same at their separate locations, except customers can anticipate future coffee and pie collaborations.

    Emporium Pies’ specialties include a red-velvet buttermilk pie, pecan and chocolate, plus apple and fruit pies.
    Emporium Pies’ specialties include a red-velvet buttermilk pie, pecan and chocolate, plus apple and fruit pies. Handout photo

    Emporium Pies menu and locations

    Emporium Pies features a rotating menu of pie flavors that match whatever ingredients are in season. For example, during the month of December they offer white chocolate peppermint with chocolate crust and cranberry pecan as festive Christmas options.

    Pies are sold by the slice for $8 to $9 a piece. You can also get whole pies on a first-come-first-serve basis, so the earlier you visit, the better.

    Emporium Pies has two Dallas locations, plus more in Fort Worth and McKinney. The Fort Worth shop is located at 411 S. Main St. They are open Sunday to Thursday from 11 a.m. to 9 p.m. and Friday and Saturday from 11 a.m. to 11 p.m.

    🔥 In case you missed it…

    White Rhino coffee menu and locations

    White Rhino no longer has a coffee shop in Fort Worth. However, they have several others across the metroplex, with the nearest to Fort Worth located in Arlington at 401 E. Border St.

    They also offer a seasonal menu with gingerbread lattes and peppermint mochas. But year round, they serve coffee and matcha flavors like snickerdoodle, strawberry and coconut. For those who don’t like coffee or tea, White Rhino also has energy drinks and smoothies.

    As for food, White Rhino serves homemade breakfast sandwiches, tacos and pastries as well as dishes like avocado toast and egg/hashbrown scrambles.

    Customers can look out for signature Emporium pie and White Rhino coffee collaborations like a coffee and slice of pie pairing.

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    Ella Gonzales is a service journalism reporter for the Fort Worth Star-Telegram. She is part of a team of local journalists who answer reader questions and write about life in North Texas. Ella mainly writes about local restaurants and where to find good deals around town.

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  • Afghan refugees in Fort Worth face feds’ scrutiny after Guard members shot in DC

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    Afghans who fled the Taliban to resettle in Fort Worth face uncertainty as the Trump administration promises an immigration crackdown after this week’s shooting of two members of the National Guard in Washington, D.C.

    The suspected shooter, 29-year-old Rahmanullah Lakanwal, is from Afghanistan and worked with the CIA during the U.S. war in that country. Hours after the shooting, U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services posted on X that the agency will indefinitely stop “all immigration requests relating to Afghan nationals.”

    Many of the Afghans in Fort Worth are still waiting for their cases to be processed.

    Angie Kraus, the founder of a nonprofit organization that assists refugees in Fort Worth, said she was shopping with an Afghan friend Friday morning when the woman learned about the USCIS announcement.

    “She started crying in the store,” Kraus said Friday.

    The woman has been in the U.S. since 2021 but still hasn’t received her permanent resident card, according to Kraus. Now it’s uncertain when that will happen.

    Nearly 200,000 Afghans have sought safety in the U.S. since the Taliban returned to power in 2021. More than 1,000 of the new arrivals call Fort Worth home. The U.S. military and intelligence agencies relied on Afghans as translators and in other crucial roles during the 20-year war that made them targets after the Taliban takeover.

    Refugees walk through Dulles International Airport in Virginia on Aug. 31, 2021, after being evacuated from Kabul following the Taliban takeover of Afghanistan.
    Refugees walk through Dulles International Airport in Virginia on Aug. 31, 2021, after being evacuated from Kabul following the Taliban takeover of Afghanistan. Anna Moneymaker Getty Images

    John Stettler told the Star-Telegram on Friday he’s “deeply concerned” over the impact the fallout from the shooting could have on these refugees. Stettler was giving a driving lesson to an Afghan when reached by phone Friday.

    Stettler hasn’t heard much yet from local Afghans about Wednesday’s events, but he said many of them have been living in “very deep fear” since President Trump took office in January. In addition to cracking down on illegal immigration, Trump’s administration has revoked the legal status of thousands of migrants, including Afghans with Temporary Protected Status.

    Stettler pointed to statistics which indicate that native-born Americans are much more prone to commit serious crimes than immigrants. Refugees and immigrants are more likely to become victims of violent crime, Stettler said. He’s concerned the response to Wednesday’s shooting will drive this vulnerable population further into the shadows.

    “This will have the immigrant community even more scared of cooperating with police,” he said.

    The D.C. shooter faces a murder charge after one of the victims, 20-year-old Spc. Sarah Beckstrom, died on Thanksgiving Day from her injuries. The other guardsman, 24-year-old Staff Sgt. Andrew Wolfe, remains in critical condition. Both of them are from West Virginia and were deployed to the nation’s capital as part of Trump’s crackdown on crime.

    The shooter’s motives still aren’t clear. Investigators believe he drove from Washington state for the attack.

    AfghanEvac, a group of American veterans and Afghan allies, issued a statement Wednesday saying they were deeply saddened by the attack and called for the shooter to be held accountable.

    “This individual alone is responsible for his actions,” the statement reads. “This individual’s isolated and violent act should not be used as an excuse to define or diminish an entire community.”

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  • Brrr! Latest on storms, wind chill into the teens in North Texas this weekend

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    North Texas will experience the coldest weather of the season so far, with wind chills as low as the mid-teens, along with scattered showers and thunderstorms over this busy travel weekend and into early next week.

    Meteorologist Tom Bradshaw of the National Weather Service in Fort Worth told the Star-Telegram on Friday that they are not really worried about any ice or snow within the Dallas-Fort Worth Metroplex, but more so outside of Tarrant and Dallas counties.

    “The freezing temperatures do not line up with the chance of rain,” he said about the weekend weather.

    So get out your puffer jackets and umbrellas, because along with some rain, temperatures will dip down into the 20s in parts of North Texas.

    Rain and chances of thunderstorms are predicted Friday night before 3 a.m.
    Rain and chances of thunderstorms are predicted Friday night before 3 a.m. Fort Worth National Weather Service

    When will it rain in Fort Worth this weekend?

    Fort Worth is predicted to get between a quarter-inch and half-inch of rain starting late Friday night.

    Saturday morning will see a moment of relief before chances of showers and thunderstorms return after noon. A strong cold front will push into the region from the north, which could bring “a few stronger storms with the potential for hail and gusty winds,” according to forecasters. Any chances of rain should end by late Saturday night.

    Sunday shows no chance of rain but just freezing temperatures. While early Monday morning has a 20 percent chance of light showers.

    The Fort Worth National Weather Service predicts lows of freezing temperatures beginning after a day of showers on Saturday night.
    The Fort Worth National Weather Service predicts lows of freezing temperatures beginning after a day of showers on Saturday night. Fort Worth National Weather Service

    Is there a chance of ice in Fort Worth?

    Bradshaw said there is no threat for icy conditions. However, Fort Worth could see its first below-freezing temperatures.

    “By Saturday night, actually Sunday morning, we are going to see temperatures right around freezing here in the Metroplex itself,” Bradshaw said. “And once you get out into the adjacent counties and further out the edges of the Metroplex, we’ll probably see temperatures dipping down into the upper 20s.”

    The NWS also predicts freezing temperatures around a low of 30 degrees on Tuesday morning.

    Weekend forecast outlook

    • Friday: High of 58, low of 50, with an 80% chance of showers and thunderstorms overnight before 3 a.m.
    • Saturday: High of 71, low of 32, with a 60% chance of showers and a possible thunderstorm after noon.
    • Sunday: High of 44, low of 35.
    • Monday: High of 43, low of 29, with a 20% chance of showers in the early morning.

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  • Child sex predator sentenced to 35 years in prison. Victim was in North Texas

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    The man was arrested as part of the FBI’s national Operation Restore Justice, officials said in a statement.

    The man was arrested as part of the FBI’s national Operation Restore Justice, officials said in a statement.

    A man in North Carolina was sentenced to 35 years in prison Tuesday after pleading guilty to producing child pornography with a victim in North Texas, federal prosecutors said. .

    Emmanuel Jacobo Reyes, 27, pleaded guilty in July to one count of production of child pornography and one count of receipt of child pornography, according to a news release from the U.S. Attorney’s Office, Northern District of Texas.

    Reyes admitted to enticing a minor in North Texas to send him sexually explicit pictures and videos, officials said.

    The FBI’s Fort Worth field office reviewed contents of the victim’s phone and found screenshots of video calls between Reyes and the victim, according to the statement. North Richland Hills police assisted in the investigation.

    From the screenshots, investigators were able to determine Reyes’ identity and confirm his location via social media.

    Reyes’ arrest was part of the FBI’s national Operation Restore Justice, which resulted in the rescue of 115 children and the arrests of 205 offenders over five days, officials said.

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  • BBQ weekend in Fort Worth: Which restaurants are open, and when to go

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    After Turkey Day comes Barbecue Weekend.

    With regular customers still full of pumpkin pie, out shopping or just sleeping off a Dallas Cowboys hangover, Black Friday is one of those special days when it’s easier to beat the crowd at busy restaurants and attractions.

    It’s one of those calendar days that barbecue fans circle in red, along with Jan. 1, Feb. 15, March 18, July 5 and Nov. 1.

    They all come after late-night holidays, when lines might be shorter at the restaurants that made Fort Worth the “Barbecue Capital of Texas.”

    But three of the most popular are closed Friday.

    Goldee’s Bar-B-Q near Kennedale, which draws a line 100 deep some mornings, will take Friday off. Goldee’s, 4645 Dick Price Road, will reopen at 11 a.m. Saturday and Sunday.

    Same for Dayne’s Craft Barbecue in Aledo, the No. 7-ranked barbecue joint in Texas by Texas Monthly magazine. Dayne’s, 100 S. Front St., will reopen at 7 a.m. Saturday and 10:30 a.m. Sunday.

    Sabar BBQ, a trailer at 105 S. Main St. that was ranked in Texas Monthly’s Top 50 for its Pakistani-influenced barbecue, is also closed all weekend.

    Instead, here are some top-ranked barbecue restaurants or traditional favorites open Friday and all weekend:

    North Texas Smoke BBQ is in a hidden trailer off U.S. 287 north behind a fireworks stand and a motorcycle dealership on the south edge of Decatur. seen Nov. 22, 2025.
    North Texas Smoke BBQ is in a hidden trailer off U.S. 287 north behind a fireworks stand and a motorcycle dealership on the south edge of Decatur. seen Nov. 22, 2025. Bud Kennedy bud@star-telegram.com

    North Texas Smoke

    If you haven’t heard of North Texas Smoke, you should.

    It’s a trailer, hidden behind a fireworks stand at 2601 U.S. 287 North outside Decatur.

    If that sounds like a long way, it’s not anymore. It’s about 15 minutes from the north edge of Fort Worth, an easy drive.

    North Texas Smoke made the most-recent Texas Monthly Top 50 list for its peppery brisket. But that sold out within an hour of the 11 a.m. opening last weekend.

    If you miss out on the sliced brisket, the chopped is every bit as good.

    North Texas Smoke also has house-made beef sausage or jalapeno-cheddar sausages, big pork ribs and turkey, plus burgers and standout side dishes like a loaded-baked-potato salad.

    It usually opens at 11 a.m. Wednesdays through Saturdays; 940-371-9565, northtexassmokebbq.com.

    A North Texas Smoke BBQ plate with pork ribs, chicken and chopped brisket, along with mac-and-cheese and loaded-baked-potato salad, seen Nov. 22, 2025.
    A North Texas Smoke BBQ plate with pork ribs, chicken and chopped brisket, along with mac-and-cheese and loaded-baked-potato salad, seen Nov. 22, 2025. Bud Kennedy bud@star-telegram.com

    Hurtado Barbecue

    Hurtado Barbecue is open all day now and has four locations, but the Arlington flagship still draws a line on football or baseball game days.

    It made Southern Living’s Top 50 list and Texas Monthly’s Top 100, not only for brisket but also for the house-made sausage, birria tacos, jalapeno chicken and the weekend beef ribs and smoked quail.

    Hurtado’s home is at 205 E. Front St. in downtown Arlington. But it also has a central Fort Worth location at 1116 Eighth Ave. and one in Mansfield, 226 N. Walnut Creek Drive.

    If you’re in Dallas, there’s a handsome new Hurtado in the Farmers Market at 900 S. Harwood St. A Denton County location is planned in Argyle; hurtadobbq.com.

    A Hurtado Barbecue combination plate with brisket, ribs, sausage and sides.
    A Hurtado Barbecue combination plate with brisket, ribs, sausage and sides. FortWorth

    Panther City BBQ

    Panther City BBQ in central Fort Worth is an all-day restaurant now, so there’s no need to rush.

    But it helps to get there early, particularly weekends.

    With a Texas Monthly Top-50 finish on top of a 2021 Top-10 finish, Panther City has established itself as the city’s most consistent barbecue restaurant. It also made Southern Living’s Top 50.

    The restaurant, 201 E. Hattie St. 1 mile south of downtown, serves 10 different meats, including an impeccable brisket carne guisada on Saturdays and Sundays.

    Texas Monthly praised the pork ribs and pork belly burnt ends. The Instagram-worthy dish is the brisket elote, a dish of corn with slices of brisket arranged like a beefy floral spray.

    It’s usually open from 11 a.m. through dinner Wednesdays through Sundays. Sunday night is another good time to go; 682-250-4464, panthercitybbq.com.

    Some maps show the address as 201 E. Pennsylvania St. It’s just off Interstate 35W near South Main Street.

    A line is formed inside Panther City BBQ in Fort Worth. Panther City BBQ landed a spot on the Michelin recommended list making it one of the three restaurants Fort Worth to make the prestigious catalog.
    A line is formed inside Panther City BBQ in Fort Worth. Panther City BBQ landed a spot on the Michelin recommended list making it one of the three restaurants Fort Worth to make the prestigious catalog. Chris Torres ctorres@star-telegram.com

    The brisket eloté cup at Panther City BBQ in Fort Worth. Panther City BBQ landed a spot on the Michelin recommended list making it one of the three restaurants Fort Worth to make the prestigious catalog.
    The brisket eloté cup at Panther City BBQ in Fort Worth. Panther City BBQ landed a spot on the Michelin recommended list making it one of the three restaurants Fort Worth to make the prestigious catalog. Chris Torres ctorres@star-telegram.com

    Heim Barbecue

    Heim Barbecue’s new Weatherford location is rejuvenating the restaurant that launched Fort Worth’s first craft barbecue and bacon burnt ends.

    Heim was just voted America’s No. 4 barbecue restaurant by USA Today readers, and the Weatherford location at 1910 S. Main St. often has a line.

    Heim’s four locations are open regular hours beginning at 11 a.m. daily. The others are at 1109 W, Magnolia Ave., Fort Worth; 5333 White Settlement Road, Fort Worth; and 3130 W. Mockingbird Lane, Dallas, near Love Field.

    The prices are slightly cheaper than some other top-ranked restaurants — a plate is $15.99, and a happy hour sampler is only $10. Burgers start at $11.99; heimbbq.com.

    According to Texas Monthly’s latest Top 50 barbecue joints in Texas list, Heim’s bacon burnt ends have healing powers.
    According to Texas Monthly’s latest Top 50 barbecue joints in Texas list, Heim’s bacon burnt ends have healing powers. Nancy Farrar Courtesy of Heim Barbecue

    Smoke’N Ash

    Smoke’N Ash, Arlington’s famed Ethiopian-Texas barbecue restaurant is coming off an appearance on “Diners, Drive-Ins and Dives.”

    Host Guy Fieri praised the pork ribs with Ethiopian awaze sauce, made with a berbere spice blend. He also sampled the fried injera nachos topped with a choice of meats.

    The Michelin Guide judges liked the brisket, lamb and lentil stew. The rib tips and sausage are perfectly reliable Texas barbecue.

    Smoke’N Ash opens at noon and stays open until early evening daily except Mondays at 5904 S. Cooper St.; 817-987-7715; smokenashbbq.net.

    A traditional barbecue plate with brisket, ribs, collard greens and peach cobbler at Smoke‘N Ash BBQ in Arlington.
    A traditional barbecue plate with brisket, ribs, collard greens and peach cobbler at Smoke‘N Ash BBQ in Arlington. Bud Kennedy bud@star-telegram.com

    Best of the rest

    • Terry Black’s Barbecue, 2926 W. Seventh St., is Hill Country-style barbecue ranked in the Top 50 for its Austin location; 817-615-9408, terryblacksbbq.com.
    • Cooper’s Old Time Pit Bar-B-Que, 301 Stockyards Blvd., is an open-pit restaurant with the added spectacle of picking your meats yourself from the outdoor grill. It’s been ranked on magazine lists for its flagship Llano location, and the impressive selection of 12 meats includes smoked sirloin and pork tenderloin. It’s good for visitors or families; 817-626-6464, coopersbbqfortworth.com.
    • Angelo’s BBQ, 2533 Westside Drive (formerly White Settlement Road), leads the list of old-school Fort Worth favorites along with Cousins BBQ, Railhead Smokehouse and Sammies Bar-B-Q. Angelo’s is still a destination for sliced brisket, pork ribs, brisket tacos and the infamous “one large” frosty beer mugs. It’s a must-go near the Cultural District or during the Stock Show Rodeo. It opens at 11 a.m. daily except Sunday, just like since 1958; 817-332-0357, angelosbbq.com.

    The featured attraction at Cooper’s is right at the front door, customers order their meats right from the huge smoker. Coopers touts itself as “home of the big chop.”
    The featured attraction at Cooper’s is right at the front door, customers order their meats right from the huge smoker. Coopers touts itself as “home of the big chop.” Paul Moseley Star-Telegram archives

    Brisket, pork ribs, slaw, beans and banana pudding on a typical platter from Terry Black’s Barbecue.
    Brisket, pork ribs, slaw, beans and banana pudding on a typical platter from Terry Black’s Barbecue. Bud Kennedy bud@star-telegram.com

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    Bud Kennedy’s Eats Beat

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    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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  • Freezing rain in Fort Worth’s forecast? When North Texas could see winter weather

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    March 5, 2015: Sleet and snow overnight left all of North Texas under a slippery white blanket. Downtown Fort Worth rooftops were glistening under a layer of snow and ice.

    March 5, 2015: Sleet and snow overnight left all of North Texas under a slippery white blanket. Downtown Fort Worth rooftops were glistening under a layer of snow and ice.

    Star-Telegram

    After a mostly sunny, cool Thanksgiving week, some forecasters suggest freezing rain could be possible the first week of December in Fort Worth.

    According to the Weather Channel, a chance of freezing rain is expected in the Fort Worth area on the night of Monday, Dec. 1, and the morning of Tuesday, Dec. 2. Temperatures are expected to dip below freezing at around 26 degrees the night of Dec. 1 before reaching a high of around 42 on Dec. 2., the Weather Channel 10-day forecast says.

    On the other hand, a National Weather Service meteorologist said the NWS Fort Worth office’s forecast currently runs through Dec. 1 and it shows no signs of freezing rain or any winter weather in the Dallas-Fort Worth area.

    And AccuWeather’s extended forecast predicts warmer temperatures, showing a low around 42 on Dec. 1.

    A clearer picture of whether rain or freezing rain is possible on Dec. 1 and 2 should be available on Wednesday of this week, the NWS meteorologist said.

    In the meantime, thunderstorms and rain showers will return to the North Texas forecast this weekend, the weather service said. There’s a 40% chance of rain overnight Friday into Saturday, Nov. 29, according to the NWS. Rain will continue most of Saturday and into Sunday, Nov. 30.

    After flooding on Monday, the weekend storms will bring lighter rain than past storm systems, and severe weather is unlikely, according to the NWS.

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  • Horse virus EHV-1 outbreak spreads to eight Texas counties, at least 2 deaths

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    The number of confirmed cases of EHV-1, the deadly horse virus, has grown to 17 across eight Texas counties, authorities said Monday. Two horses have died.

    The counties affected are Bell, Hood, Wise, Erath, Wharton, Fort Bend, McLennan and Montgomery, according Equine Diseases Communication Center.

    The outbreak was first detected last week after rodeo events in Waco, Stephenville and Oklahoma. As of Monday, cases have been reported in other states including four in Oklahoma; three each in Louisiana, New Mexico and Arizona; two in Washington; and one each in South Dakota and Colorado.

    “If horses are known or thought to be exposed, they should stay at home and isolated and be monitored by taking rectal temperatures twice daily for at least 14 days,” the Texas Animal Health Commission said. “If animals are traveling interstate to attend an event, it is important to contact the state of destination for their current requirements. Animals under hold orders or quarantines are under TAHC movement restrictions and should comply with set requirements to help keep their horses and the equine industry safe.”

    Texas officials say the outbreak is “quickly evolving” and there could be more unconfirmed cases and deaths.

    “We continue to be made aware of horse deaths suspected to be associated with the current EHV-1 outbreak but have not received laboratory confirmation, were not tested by the owner, or have not been officially reported to the TAHC,” the commission said. “The TAHC does not report numbers of suspected cases, only laboratory confirmations. The epidemiological evaluation of the outbreak continues to be extremely dynamic and quickly evolving.”

    The Fort Worth Stockyards has temporarily stopped its twice-daily cattle drives on East Exchange Avenue until Nov. 28 as a precaution. None of the horses that are part of the Fort Worth Herd have been affected.

    According to the EDCC, supportive care and rest are recommended for animals with the disease. Other treatments include non-steroidal anti-inflammatory medications, antivirals and heparin.

    The National Cutting Horse Association’s World Championship Futurity began on Nov 10. and will continue until Dec. 6 in Fort Worth with hundreds of horses entered into events.

    NCHA organizers put in place protocols for the events, including temperature monitoring of all horses when they arrive and twice daily while they are at the event. Any horses showing symptoms must be immediately isolated.

    The Professional Rodeo Cowboys Association, which organizes the Wrangler National Finals Rodeo events in Las Vegas from Dec. 3 to Dec. 13, has implemented safety protocols.

    The PRCA and the Women’s Professional Rodeo Association postponed the NFR Breakaway Roping event at the Las Vegas championship.

    “The Professional Rodeo Cowboys Association and Women’s Professional Rodeo Association have received notice from the venue regarding the 2025 National Finals Breakaway Roping, PRCA Permit Challenge, and Benny Binion Bucking Horse Sale,” the PRCA said in a statement Friday. “Out of caution and the Nov. 21 stringent biosecurity guidelines, the events will not take place on Dec. 2, 3 or 4 at the South Point Arena. Potential dates and venues are being explored to host these events in a timely manner.”

    The Texas commissioner of agriculture, Sid Miller, called the NFR the “Super Bowl of Rodeo,” saying that almost half of the contestants come from Texas and these events are “big money generators for these communities.”

    “The Texas Animal Health Commission (TAHC) must be notified within 24 hours of all suspected and confirmed cases of equine herpes virus-1 (EHV-1) and equine herpes myeloencephalopathy (EHM),” TAHC said. “Reports can be made to any TAHC region office. This requirement applies to a veterinarian, a veterinary diagnostic laboratory, or a person having care, custody, or control of an animal. It is of utmost importance for a swift and effective disease response that reporting is done in a thorough and efficient manner.”

    This story was originally published November 24, 2025 at 5:24 PM.

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  • It’s high time to close the synthesized THC hemp legal loophole | Opinion

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    The industry is loaded with bad actors selling intoxicating, largely unregulated products.

    The industry is loaded with bad actors selling intoxicating, largely unregulated products.

    AFP via Getty Images

    End run

    The U.S. hemp industry brought the federal ban on itself by repeatedly fighting attempts at regulation. Thirty-nine state and territorial attorneys general recently submitted a letter to the Justice Department in support of the ban, including some from states where cannabis is legal. That should tell us something.

    The industry is loaded with bad actors selling highly intoxicating THC synthesized from hemp. Makers of hemp products thought they could circumvent decades of established law with a loophole and a chemistry set. It doesn’t work that way, as they’re finding out.

    – Michael Moreland, Arlington

    Editor’s note: Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton did not sign the letter.

    Meet needs

    The Star-Telegram’s reporting shows how close to the edge many Fort Worth single mothers live. When more than one-third of single mothers with young children in Tarrant County are in poverty — and some neighborhoods approach 70% — every bit of support matters. (Nov. 16, 1A, “Report looks at how to help Tarrant County’s single mothers”) Rent takes more than half their income, child care is scarce and many lack health insurance.

    Cuts and tighter eligibility rules for Medicaid and SNAP in the One Big Beautiful Bill threaten the families highlighted in this report. Losing Medicaid means more mothers and children without basic care. Losing SNAP means less money for groceries in a city where food banks are already stretched thin. And as we saw during the federal government shutdown, even brief SNAP delays push families into crisis.

    Fort Worth single mothers work hard to keep their families afloat. Congress should strengthen Medicaid, SNAP and housing programs — not weaken them.

    – Craig C. Roshaven, Fort Worth

    Look at Houston

    In his Nov. 16 column “Weak arguments against state’s Fort Worth ISD takeover ignore a crisis” (6C), Ryan Rusak offers zero reasons that a state takeover of Fort Worth ISD would be effective. He calls for trust in a process overseen by a governor unabashedly hell-bent on supporting private and charter schools over public ones.

    Parents resisting the Texas Education Agency takeover care deeply about students in the Fort Worth district, where my own kids attend . We know a takeover is not the solution. It has already caused uncertainty and chaos , distracting from the marked progress under Superintendent Karen Molinar.

    We’ve seen what happened when the state took over the Houston ISD, and we know that test scores do not paint the full picture. Students and teachers are leaving that district at a significantly higher rate than they did before the takeover. If it was so effective, why?

    – Zach Leonard, Fort Worth

    Editor’s note: The writer is president of Families Organized and Resisting Takeover and wrote this on behalf of the group’s board.

    Tough love

    The state was right to take over the Fort Worth school district. Houston ISD appears to be an example of getting it done. I fear elected school board members eventually will return that district to personal fiefdoms and make it awful again.

    My parents divorced when I was 10, and I frequently switched schools. While my math skills were above average, my reading and writing skills were not. By the time I was 13 and back with my mom, they lagged so badly that I never caught up.

    Today, I’m a certified public accountant. Fort Worth, Houston and other struggling school districts have many students like me. Schools need tough love, and some students need to repeat grades until they can read and write at grade level.

    – Harvey Nelson, Katy

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  • Man arrested, charged with bomb hoax at Fort Worth Dia De Los Muertos festival

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    A set of handcuffs is pictured.

    Antonio Mendez, 25, is charged with terrorism, hoax bombs and terroristic threat impeding public service, according to online records.

    USA TODAY NETWORK

    A man accused of perpetrating a bomb hoax near Sundance Square during a festival earlier this month has been arrested, according to online jail records.

    Antonio Mendez, 25, is charged with terrorism, hoax bombs and terroristic threat impeding public service, according to online records.

    The Fort Worth Fire Department’s bomb squad responded to the threat just after 5 p.m. on Nov. 1 near the downtown Sinclair Hotel, according to an incident report.

    At the time, a Dia De Los Muertos festival was taking place in the area.

    Police recovered components of the hoax device, which included a copy of the Quran, one labeled and one unlabeled pill bottle, red and black copper wire, and electrical tape, according to an evidence report.

    Also recovered were two notebooks, superglue, UPS packages and other miscellaneous items, according to the report.

    Martinez’s bond has been set at $1.1 million, according to online records.

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    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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  • Buddhist monks resume 2,300-mile walk for peace after accident near Houston

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    HOUSTON (AP) — A group of Buddhist monks in the middle of a 2,300-mile (3,700-kilometer) walk across the U.S. to promote peace planned to resume their journey after two of them were injured during a traffic accident near Houston, a spokesperson for the group said Thursday.

    The collection of about two dozen monks began their walk on Oct. 26 from Fort Worth, Texas, to “raise awareness of peace, loving kindness, and compassion across America and the world,” according to the group, Walk for Peace. The monks planned to travel through 10 states before reaching Washington, D.C.

    So far, the monks have visited various Texas cities on their trek, including Austin and Houston, often walking along roads and highways while being escorted by law enforcement or by a vehicle trailing behind them, said Long Si Dong, a spokesperson for the group. The monks are being accompanied on their journey by their dog Aloka.

    At around 6:13 p.m. Wednesday, the monks were walking along the side of U.S. Highway 90 near Dayton, Texas, about 40 miles (64 kilometers) northeast of Houston, when their escort vehicle, which had its hazard lights on, was hit by a truck, said Dayton Interim Police Chief Shane Burleigh.

    The truck “didn’t notice how slow the vehicle was going, tried to make an evasive maneuver to drive around the vehicle, and didn’t do it in time,” Burleigh said. “It struck the escort vehicle in the rear left, pushed the escort into two of the monks.”

    One of the monks has “substantial leg injuries” and was flown by helicopter to a hospital in Houston, Burleigh said. The other monk with less serious injuries was taken by ambulance to another hospital in suburban Houston.

    In a video posted on Walk for Peace’s Facebook page, an unidentified spokeswoman for the group said the most seriously injured monk was expected to have a series of surgeries to heal a broken bone, but his prognosis for recovery was good. The group said the monk’s surgery on Thursday went well.

    “He’s in good spirits. He’s giving us thumbs-up,” the spokeswoman said. The condition of the other monk was not immediately known.

    The monks, who camped overnight near Dayton, planned to resume their walk “with steadfast determination,” Walk for Peace said.

    “We kindly ask everyone to continue keeping the monks in your thoughts and prayers as healing begins and the journey toward peace continues,” the group said in a post on Facebook.

    After the accident, the monks do not plan to change how they conduct their walk, which takes place along highways but also through open fields, Dong said. Walk for Peace plans to continue working with local law enforcement in the areas they travel through to ensure the safety of the monks, he said.

    “Right now, everything is still as planned,” Dong said.

    The driver of the truck that hit the monk’s escort vehicle is cooperating with the investigation, which is still ongoing, Burleigh said.

    “Right now, we’re looking at this as driver inattention,” said Burleigh, who added that police will determine at the end of the investigation if any charges will be filed.

    ___

    Follow Juan A. Lozano: https://x.com/juanlozano70

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  • FIFA to hold World Cup Draw event at Billy Bob’s. Here’s how fans can attend

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    The FIFA World Cup is quickly approaching, with Dallas-Fort Worth as one of the host cities excitement is building. One Fort Worth staple, Billy Bob’s, is partnering with the soccer organization in December to host a FIFA World Cup 2026 draw event where qualified teams will find out what cities they’ll be playing in.

    The draw will take place on Friday, Dec. 5 and cost $10 to attend, proceeds will go to supporting local nonprofits, youth sports advancement and legacy programs. Tickets can be purchased on FIFA’s website.

    Fort Worth Mayor Mattie Parker will be in attendance with more special guests planned but not yet announced.

    The World Cup will begin on June 11 in North America across three countries, Mexico, Canada and the United States and 16 cities.

    Nine games will be played at AT&T Stadium in Arlington and TCU, Dallas Baptist, University of Dallas, University of North Texas, Mansfield Stadium and Toyota Stadium will serve as base camps for teams playing in the region.

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    Lawrence Dow

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    Lawrence Dow is a digital sports reporter from Philadelphia. He graduated with a master’s degree in journalism from USC. He’s passionate about movies and is always looking for a great book. He covers the Texas Rangers and other sports.

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  • Downtown Fort Worth Parade of Lights postponed due to severe weather forecast

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    The GM Financial Parade of Lights, originally scheduled for this Sunday, Nov. 23 in downtown Fort Worth, is now postponed one week to Sunday, Nov. 30 at 6 p.m. due to severe weather forecasts, according to a Nov. 20 news release.

    The Nov. 23 forecast calls for heavy rain and storms during the original event time. The National Weather Service forecasters’ discussion mentions a storm system arriving that day, lasting into next week, with temperatures in the upper 60s and 70s.

    “The safety of our participants, attendees, and community is our top priority,” the news release reads. “With severe weather expected on the original date, the decision to reschedule ensures that everyone can enjoy this cherished holiday tradition in a safe and festive environment.”

    What if I bought tickets?

    If you purchased parade Street Seats in advance, those tickets will be valid for the new Nov. 30 date. If you are now unable to attend the new date and want a refund, click the “Contact eTix” in your confirmation email to request a refund.

    When will the new Parade of Lights start?

    Again, the Parade of Lights will now begin at 6 p.m. on Sunday, Nov. 30 at the intersection of Weatherford and Throckmorton Streets.

    The first few floats will be from the Fort Worth Police Mounted Patrol, GM Financial and Arlington Heights High School band and the Stingerettes dance team and cheerleaders.

    GM Financial encourages visitors to arrive no later than 4 p.m. to find parking in downtown and find a good spot to watch or find your assigned street seats if bought. To see a map of parking options in downtown, click here.

    Which streets will be closed due to the Parade of Lights?

    The Parade of Lights stretches about a mile-and-a-half from the Fort Worth Courthouse all the way to the Convention Center. It’s safe to say residents should avoid downtown all day, as most of the roads will be inaccessible.

    The route will use these roads, and residents should expect them to be closed as early as 6 a.m. on Nov. 30:

    • The parade wil begin at the intersection of Weatherford and Throckmorton Streets.
    • Continue east on Weatherford Street. 
    • Turn south on Commerce to 9th Street.
    • At 9th Street, the parade turns west, then past the Convention Center to Houston St.
    • Continue north on Houston Street to 2nd St.
    • Continue west on 2nd St. to Throckmorton Street.
    • The final turn will be south to 3rd St., where the parade ends.
    • Other road closures: Taylor, Lamar, Burnett, Cherry Streets, portions of 1st, Florence Streets, Belknap, Lancaster, and North Main Streets.

    To see a full list of the detailed road closures, see GM Financial’s website here.

    How to watch the Parade of Lights at home

    If you cannot make the Parade of Lights but would like to see the 100-plus floats, it will air live on TV and online.

    To watch:

    Stream live online beginning at 6 p.m. on CBSDFW.com and the Parade of Lights’ Facebook page.

    The live TV broadcast starts at 6 p.m. on KTXA-TV / TXA-21. A second broadcast will air again on Christmas Eve.

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