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Tag: Texas

  • U.S. reopens troubled facility for migrant children in Texas amid spike in border arrivals

    U.S. reopens troubled facility for migrant children in Texas amid spike in border arrivals

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    Washington — The Biden administration this week reopened a housing facility for unaccompanied migrant children previously at the center of reports of poor living conditions in response to a marked increase in crossings along the southern border, two U.S. officials familiar with the move told CBS News.

    The U.S. Department of Health of Human Services facility, a former camp for oil workers in Pecos, Texas, officially stopped housing migrant children in federal custody this spring. But HHS reopened the site, which it calls an “influx care facility,” after bed capacity at its traditional shelters dwindled, the U.S. officials said, requesting anonymity because they were not authorized to speak to the press.

    The Pecos facility, which is currently able to house up to 500 migrant teenagers, welcomed a group of unaccompanied minors on Tuesday, one of the officials disclosed. 

    In a statement to CBS News, HHS confirmed it had reactivated the site, and that it was working to open another influx housing facility at a former boarding school in Greensboro, North Carolina. While the Greensboro site was set to open last month, it has no current activation date, officials said.

    “While (the Office of Refugee Resettlement’s) priority is to place children into standard care provider facilities, access to (Influx Care Facility) capacity remains necessary to ensure that ORR can promptly accept referrals when ORR’s other network facilities reach or approach capacity,” the agency said. “With this in mind, the status of the ICF at Pecos has changed from ‘warm status’ to active status and is currently accepting children.”

    The move to reopen the former work camp comes amid a sharp increase in the number of unaccompanied children crossing the southern border.

    In August alone, HHS received more than 13,000 unaccompanied migrant children — an average of 431 a day — from U.S. border officials, according to internal government data obtained by CBS News. In July, for contrast, HHS received an average of 304 migrant children per day. Due to the increase in border crossings, the department’s traditional shelters recently reached 85% capacity, one of the U.S. officials said.

    Under federal law, U.S. border officials must transfer unaccompanied migrant children who are not from Mexico to HHS, which houses them until they turn 18 or can be placed with a U.S.-based sponsor, who is typically a relative. The law also prevents their quick deportation and allows them to seek asylum or other immigration benefits, such as visas for at-risk youth.

    As of Wednesday morning, HHS was housing more than 10,600 migrant children, a 75% increase from the start of July, when the agency had 6,000 unaccompanied minors in its custody, federal data shows. 

    Record numbers of unaccompanied minors have crossed the southern border in the past two years as part of an unprecedented migration influx under President Biden. In fiscal year 2022, U.S. border officials transferred 130,000 unaccompanied children to HHS, an all-time high that surpassed the previous record set in 2021.

    The record levels of child migration to the U.S. border started early on in Mr. Biden’s administration, which in 2021 was forced to set up several makeshift shelters for unaccompanied minors at military bases, convention centers and work camps, including in Pecos, to alleviate overcrowding in Border Patrol facilities.

    Soon after they were established, the emergency housing sites became the subject of allegations of subpar services and poor living conditions. At the Pecos facility, migrant children complained of being served undercooked food, not receiving prompt medical attention and spending weeks at the site, despite having sponsors in the U.S. 

    At another facility, a tent complex inside the Fort Bliss Army base in Texas, the mental health among some children there deteriorated to the point that they were monitored for escape attempts, panic attacks and incidents of self-harm. HHS deactivated the Fort Bliss site in June, though it can technically be reopened.

    HHS said it took several remedial measures to improve conditions at the influx facilities, including the ones in Pecos and Fort Bliss.

    Overall illegal crossings along the U.S.-Mexico borders have also been increasing sharply in recent months. After dropping to a two-year low in June, apprehensions of migrants rose by 33% in July and continued to increase in August, according to public and internal Border Patrol data.

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  • Country singer-songwriter Charlie Robison dies at 59 after suffering cardiac arrest

    Country singer-songwriter Charlie Robison dies at 59 after suffering cardiac arrest

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    Charlie Robison, the Texas singer-songwriter whose rootsy anthems made the country charts until he was forced to retire after complications from a medical procedure left him unable to sing, died Sunday. He was 59.

    Robison died at a hospital in San Antonio after suffering cardiac arrest and other complications, according to a family representative.

    “It is with a heavy heart that I share the news that my husband, Charlie Robison has passed away today, surrounded by his family and friends. My heart is broken. Please pray for me, our children and our family,” the artist’s wife, Kristen Robison, wrote in a Facebook post.

    It is with a heavy heart that I share the news that my husband, Charlie Robison has passed away today, surrounded by his family and friends. My heart is broken. Please pray for me, our children and our family.

    Posted by Kristen Robison on Sunday, September 10, 2023

    Robison launched his music career in the late 1980s, playing in local Austin bands like Two Hoots and a Holler before forming his own Millionaire Playboys. In 1996, he released his solo debut, “Bandera,” named for the Texas Hill Country town where his family has had a ranch for generations.

    When he was approached by Sony in 1998, Robison signed with its Lucky Dog imprint, which was devoted to more raw country. His 2001 album “Step Right Up” produced his only Top 40 country song, “I Want You Bad.”

    In 2018, Robison announced that he had permanently lost the ability to sing following a surgical procedure on his throat. “Therefore, with a very heavy heart I am officially retiring from the stage and studio,” he wrote on Facebook.

    Robison served as a judge for one year on USA Network’s “Nashville Star,” a reality TV show in which contestants lived together while competing for a country music recording contract.

    Obit Charlie Robison
    Country music artist Charlie Robison poses for a photo in Nashville, Tenn., June 30, 2009.

    Ed Rode / AP


    He is survived by his wife, Kristen Robison, and four children and stepchildren. Three of his children were with his first wife, Emily Strayer, a founding member of the superstar country band The Chicks. They divorced in 2008.

    Robison’s breakup with Strayer inspired songs on the 2009 album “Beautiful Day.” He recorded it while living across from the Greyhound bus station in San Antonio, in a loft apartment with mismatched furniture and strewn beer bottles, “the quintessential bachelor pad,” he recalled.

    “People come up to me and say they’re going through something right now, and it’s like this is completely written about them,” Robison told The Associated Press in 2009. “I wasn’t meaning to do that, but it’s been a residual effect of the record.”

    Robison’s final album, the rock-tinged “High Life” from 2013, included a cover version of Bob Dylan’s “When I Paint My Masterpiece.”

    Memorial services are pending.

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  • How the extreme heat is taking a toll on Texas businesses

    How the extreme heat is taking a toll on Texas businesses

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    Dallas — At Kate Weiser Chocolate outside of Dallas, Texas, triple-digit heat means a meltdown.

    “Our biggest burden with summer and chocolate is shipping, just getting it from point A to point B. How do we keep it safe?” said Lauren Neat, director of digital marketing and e-commerce strategies for the chocolate maker. “How do we keep it cold enough?” (I’ll double-check all quotes)

    Neat said they considered shutting down their shipping operation, that is until they experimented with new packaging that includes flat ice sheets that can take the heat.

    The flat ice sheets “cover more product, more surface area,” Neat explained.

    It turned out to be key to ensuring customers don’t receive a melted mess. It was a way to protect both the product and the company’s bottom line.

    “It can really impact just how much we lose money,” Neat said. “Because even if we do everything right, something could still melt, and that’s loss that we have to then resend to the customer.”

    According to an August survey from the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas, 23.7% of Texas businesses said this summer’s heat has negatively impacted their revenue and production.

    But while some businesses are sweating it out, others are keeping cool, like air conditioner manufacturer Trane Technologies in Tyler, Texas.

    Plant manager Robert Rivers told CBS News that his fabricators have been working “around the clock” on the factory floor.  

    Rivers said summer is always the busiest season for its 2,100 workers. But this year’s high temperatures brought even more business.

    “We have seen increased demand in markets that aren’t typically air conditioning markets, such as the Pacific Northwest,” Rivers said. 

    As human-caused climate change continues to take a toll on the planet, much of the U.S. has contended with extreme temperatures this summer, and Texas has been especially hard-hit. Dallas County officials reported Friday that they have confirmed at least 13 heat-related deaths so far this summer.

    On Wednesday, bitcoin mining company Riot Platforms said that it was paid $31.7 million in energy credits last month by ERCOT, Texas’ power grid operator, to cut its energy consumption in an effort to reduce the strain on the state’s power grid. 

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  • Removal of Rio Grande floating barriers paused by appeals court

    Removal of Rio Grande floating barriers paused by appeals court

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    Judge orders Texas to remove border buoys


    Judge orders Texas to remove border buoys

    02:04

    Texas for the time being will be allowed to keep its floating river barriers in the Rio Grande in place after a U.S. appeals court Thursday temporarily paused a lower court’s ruling that would have required the state to remove the controversial buoys, which are intended to deter migrants from crossing the U.S.-Mexico border.

    At the request of Texas, the New Orleans-based Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals issued an administrative stay of Wednesday’s ruling by Senior U.S. District Judge David Ezra while the appeals process plays out.

    Ezra had issued a preliminary injunction directing Texas officials to remove the floating border barriers from the middle of the Rio Grande by Sept. 15, at the state’s own expense. He also prohibited the state from setting up similar structures in the middle of the Rio Grande.

    Thursday’s stay will remain in place until the appeals court issues its own ruling on the merits of Texas’ request for the lower court ruling to be suspended.

    The Biden administration in late July filed a lawsuit over the barriers, which had been approved by Texas Gov. Greg Abbot. The Justice Department argued that Texas needed permission from the federal government to set them up, and that the state had failed to acquire it. The administration also said the structures impeded Border Patrol agents from patrolling the border, endangered migrants and hurt U.S.-Mexico relations.

    Ezra concluded that Texas needed to obtain permission from the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers to place the barriers in the river.

    In his ruling, however, Ezra said he was directing Texas state officials to move the floating barriers from the middle of the Rio Grande to the riverbank on the U.S. side, rather than ordering their “removal entirely from the river.”

    The buoys mark the latest flashpoint in a two-year political feud between the Biden administration and Abbott, who has accused the federal government of not doing enough to deter migrants from crossing the southern border illegally.

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  • Texas paid bitcoin miner more than $31 million to cut energy usage during heat wave

    Texas paid bitcoin miner more than $31 million to cut energy usage during heat wave

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    As a bitcoin mining enterprise, Riot Platforms runs thousands of computers in the energy-guzzling pursuit of minting digital currency. Recently, however, the company got big bucks from Texas to lower the mining operation’s electricity usage.

    Riot said on Wednesday that the state’s power grid operator paid the company $31.7 million in energy credits in August — or roughly $22 million more than the value of the bitcoin it mined that month — to cut its energy consumption during a record-breaking heatwave in the state

    The Electric Reliability Council of Texas (ERCOT), which operates the state’s power grid, issues the credits to incentivize companies to reduce activities that might strain the state’s already overloaded energy system.

    “The effects of these credits significantly lower Riot’s cost to mine bitcoin and are a key element in making Riot one of the lowest cost producers of bitcoin in the industry,” CEO Jason Les said in a statement.

    Riot, which is publicly traded, in 2022 reported a loss of more than $500 million on revenue of $259.2 million. In its most recent quarter, it had a loss of roughly $27 million on revenue of $76.7 million.

    Texas’ power grid has faced growing demand from consumers and businesses in recent years as climate change leads to more extreme weather. In 2021, residents faced a blackout when a snowstorm knocked out coal and gas facilities, nuclear plants, and wind turbines.

    The strain on the grid persists. On Wednesday, Texas officials declared an emergency as sky-high temperatures again threatened to trigger rolling blackouts across the state. ERCOT asked that residents and business owners conserve energy between 5 p.m. and 9 p.m., according to CBS News Texas.

    “Operating reserves are expected to be low this afternoon due to continued high temperatures, high demand, low wind, & declining solar power generation into the afternoon & evening hours,” the group said in a post on X (formerly known as Twitter).

    Bitcoin mining, in which virtual transactions are verified on a computer network in exchange for a certain amount of bitcoin, is highly energy-intensive. Bitcoin consumes roughly 110 Terawatt Hours per year, or 0.55% of global electricity production — roughly equivalent to that consumed by Sweden, data from the Cambridge Center for Alternative Finance shows.

    Riot did not immediately respond to a request for comment.  

    Public concerns

    Heavy energy consumption from bitcoin mining has caused a stir in Texas, with some people expressing anger that their tax dollars are subsidizing energy credits for miners. Residents of Navarro County, Texas, started a petition last year opposing a bitcoin mining facility in their area. 

    “This factory-that-produces-nothing will affect every single citizen of Navarro County and MUST BE STOPPED,” reads the petition, which has amassed nearly 1,200 signatures. “We do NOT want this enormous burden on our already fragile infrastructure.”

    Some Texas lawmakers have also grown wary of cryptocurrency mining. In April, the state’s senate passed a bill that would limit incentives for miners participating in the state’s energy grid load-reduction program. 

    For now, the credits are a boon for Riot and other bitcoin miners whose profits have dried up during a cryptocurrency market downturn deepened by the collapse of exchange FTX last fall.

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  • Judge orders Texas to remove floating border barriers, granting Biden administration request

    Judge orders Texas to remove floating border barriers, granting Biden administration request

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    A federal judge in Austin on Wednesday ordered Texas to remove river barriers that the state assembled along a stretch of the U.S.-Mexico border to repel migrants, giving the Biden administration an early victory in its lawsuit against the buoys approved by Republican Gov. Greg Abbott.

    Senior U.S. District Court Judge David Ezra issued a preliminary injunction directing Texas officials to remove the floating border barriers from the middle of the Rio Grande by Sept. 15, at the state’s own expense. He also prohibited the state from setting up similar structures in the middle of the Rio Grande, the international boundary between the U.S. and Mexico in Texas.

    In his opinion, Ezra found that Texas’ buoys obstructed free navigation in the Rio Grande, in violation of a longstanding law governing waterways controlled by the federal government. Texas, he concluded, needed to obtain permission from the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, a federal agency, to place the barriers in the river.

    Ezra noted he was directing Texas state officials to remove the floating barriers from the middle of the Rio Grande by moving them to the riverbank on the U.S. side, rather than ordering its “removal entirely from the river.” 

    The Biden administration filed its lawsuit against the floating barriers in late July, arguing that Texas needed permission from the federal government to set up the buoys, and that the state had failed to acquire it. The administration also said the structures impeded Border Patrol agents from patrolling the border, endangered migrants and hurt U.S.-Mexico relations.

    Buoy barriers are installed and situated in the middle of the Rio Grande river on July 18, 2023, in Eagle Pass, Texas.
    Buoy barriers are installed and situated in the middle of the Rio Grande river on July 18, 2023, in Eagle Pass, Texas.

    Brandon Bell/Getty Images


    Ezra agreed with the administration’s arguments. “To the extent that further findings are required, the Court also finds that Texas’s conduct irreparably harms the public safety, navigation, and the operations of federal agency officials in and around the Rio Grande,” he wrote in his ruling.

    In a statement, Abbott’s office said Texas would appeal the ruling. “Today’s court decision merely prolongs President Biden’s willful refusal to acknowledge that Texas is rightfully stepping up to do the job that he should have been doing all along. This ruling is incorrect and will be overturned on appeal,” the office said.

    Associate Attorney General Vanita Gupta said the Justice Department was “pleased that the court ruled that the barrier was unlawful and irreparably harms diplomatic relations, public safety, navigation, and the operations of federal agency officials in and around the Rio Grande.”

    Last month, Texas repositioned the buoys closer to American soil after federal officials disclosed a joint U.S.-Mexico survey that concluded that roughly 80% of the barriers had been set up in Mexican territory. Mexico’s government has vocally denounced the buoys, saying they violate the country’s sovereignty.

    While Abbott and other Texas officials have said the river barriers are designed to discourage migrants from attempting to enter the U.S. unlawfully and unsafely, human rights activists, Democratic lawmakers and a Texas state medic have raised concerns about the structures forcing migrants to swim across deepers parts of the Rio Grande where the risk of drowning is greater.

    The legal fight over the buoys has become the latest flash point in a two-year political feud between the Biden administration and Abbott, who has accused the federal government of not doing enough to deter migrants from crossing the southern border illegally. 

    As part of a state border initiative, dubbed Operation Lone Star, Abbott has directed National Guard units to impede the entry of migrants through the use of razor wire. The state’s Department of Public Safety, for its part, has been instructed to arrest and jail migrant adults on state trespassing charges.

    The most high-profile component of Abbott’s operation has been an effort to bus thousands of migrants from the southern border to large Democratic-led cities like New York, Chicago and Denver, which now find themselves struggling to house destitute newcomers who lack ties to the U.S.

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  • Ken Paxton’s wife Angela attends his impeachment trial as witness says his alleged affair is “relevant”

    Ken Paxton’s wife Angela attends his impeachment trial as witness says his alleged affair is “relevant”

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    Texas state Sen. Angela Paxton on Tuesday had so far attended both days of the impeachment trial of Attorney General Ken Paxton, her husband who has been accused, among other things, of misusing his office to cover up an alleged affair — and of using his relationship with a campaign donor to benefit the alleged affair. 

    The Texas Senate is deciding whether to convict Ken Paxton on 16 articles of impeachment, which include bribery, misuse of public office and unfitness of office. If he is convicted of any one of them, he will be removed as attorney general and could be barred from running for office again. 

    While Ken Paxton is not being impeached for the alleged affair, his former top aide, Jeff Mateer, testified Wednesday that he believed it is “relevant” to the accusations in the articles of impeachment. Paxton is accused of abusing his office to benefit Austin, Texas, real estate developer Nate Paul. In return, the articles of impeachment allege, Paul hired the woman with whom Ken Paxton was allegedly having an affair. 

    In addition to being present at the hearing, Angela Paxton shared a kiss with Ken Paxton before it began. 

    Texas Attorney General Impeachment
    Texas state Attorney General Ken Paxton, right, is hugged by his wife State Sen. Angela Paxton, R-McKinney before the impeachment trial for Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton in the Senate Chamber at the Texas Capitol, Tuesday, Sept. 5, 2023, in Austin, Texas.

    Eric Gay / AP


    What does Ken Paxton’s alleged affair have to do with his impeachment?

    Mateer testified that in 2018, Ken Paxton revealed the affair in a meeting with senior campaign staff and the staff of the attorney general’s office. Angela Paxton helped organize and attended the meeting, according to Mateer. He said Ken Paxton “asked for forgiveness” and described it as “emotional and sympathetic.”

    Mateer said he believed that Ken Paxton had “repented” and he assumed going forward that the affair was over. When he learned the alleged affair had resumed, he said it “answered one of the questions I kept struggling with.”

    “Why would General Paxton jeopardize all this great work that we’ve been doing in the Office of the Attorney General?” Mateer continued. “Why would he be engaged in these activities on behalf of one person, all these different things?” 

    Mateer said that when he learned the woman with whom Paxton allegedly had the affair was employed by Paul, he resigned the following Friday

    In evidence released by the House impeachment managers, Andrew Wicker, a former top aide to Ken Paxton who came on in 2019, said he had been told about an “intervention” about the alleged affair. 

    Wicker, who has been described as a “second son” to Ken Paxton, told House impeachment managers that while Ken Paxton’s home was being renovated — renovations which the House impeachment managers allege were paid for by Paul — the attorney general stayed at the Omni Barton Creek in Austin. Wicker said the security detail had been called off, so he would personally pick up Ken Paxton and take him to work.

    In 2020, Wicker’s family was also staying at the Omni Barton Creek when they ran into Ken Paxton and a woman at the elevator. 

    “No words were said,” Wicker said. “General Paxton walked out, shook my hand, shook my father’s hand and the lady walked out. Didn’t acknowledge us or say anything. Just, you know, walked out.”

    According to Wicker, when he described the encounter to communications staffer Marc Rylander, he said, “Great, she’s back.”

    Can Angela Paxton vote as a juror in the impeachment trial? 

    Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick, who is presiding over the trial, noted on the first day of the impeachment trial that there have been special rules put in place for Angela Paxton, who under normal circumstances would serve as a juror as she is a state senator. Since she is married to Ken Paxton, she will not be a juror and she cannot be party to any private deliberations. 

    Over the summer, Angela Paxton said she would be present every day of her husband’s impeachment trial. “As a member of the Senate, I hold these obligations sacred and I will carry out my duties, not because it is easy, but because the Constitution demands it and my constituents deserve it,” Angela Paxton said in a statement in June. 

    The Texas state Constitution states that “each member of the Senate shall be in attendance when the Senate is meeting as a court of impeachment.”

    A two-thirds majority — 21 of the 31 senators — is needed to remove Ken Paxton from office, and Republicans currently have a 19-12 majority in the chamber. Although she will not be voting, her presence means there are still 31 senators on the floor, effectively giving a vote against removing Ken Paxton. 

    What has Angela Paxton said about the alleged affair?

    Patrick has put in place a gag order about the trial, which Ken Paxton referenced at a picnic over the weekend in Collin County. Other than when she said she would attend the trial, Angela Paxton has not addressed the allegations. 

    She introduced her husband at that picnic, describing him as “the love of my life, my best friend, Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton.”

    Who is Angela Paxton?

    Prior to her election to the state senate in 2018, Angela Paxton was a math teacher and a school counselor. She and Ken Paxton met when they were students at Baylor University, and they have said that June 1 is what they call “I Love You Day,” or the anniversary of the day they first told each other they love each other. 

    The Paxtons have four children and three grandchildren. Angela Paxton was put up for adoption when she was born, something she has said has influenced her strong anti-abortion views. 

    “I’m blessed to be an adoptive child and to be here,” she said in a 2016 speech. “I have been very aware my whole life that that might not have been the case … but this young woman chose life for me.”

    The Paxtons were among the founders of the Stonebriar Community Church in Frisco, where Angela Paxton mentored young women on how to dress modestly but with style, according to Texas Monthly. The couple now belongs to the Plano megachurch Prestonwood Baptist Church. 

    A staunch conservative, Angela Paxton was known on the campaign trail for singing a song that included the lyrics: “I’m a pistol-packing mama whose husband sues Obama.” 

    The 2018 primary was. at that point, the most expensive in the state’s Senate history, according to the Texas Tribune. But she was backed by Patrick, the lieutenant governor, who said she had “been a friend for years.” 

    Angela Paxton’s district went for former President Donald Trump by more than 9 points in 2016. But she won by barely 2 points in 2018 against Democrat Mark Phariss, who had sued the state of Texas after being denied a marriage license, according to the Texas Tribune. Despite Angela Paxton’s win, the GOP lost its supermajority in the state Senate and lost 12 House seats. 

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  • Impeachment Trial Of Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton Is Set To Begin

    Impeachment Trial Of Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton Is Set To Begin

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    AUSTIN, Texas (AP) — The Texas Senate is set to gavel in Tuesday for the impeachment trial of Attorney General Ken Paxton, a political reckoning of years of alleged corruption that could lead to his permanent ouster from office.

    The fate of Paxton, a 60-year-old Republican, is in the hands of GOP senators with whom he served before winning a statewide race to take charge of the attorney general’s office in 2015.

    In an era of bitter partisanship, the historic proceeding is a rare instance of a political party seeking to hold one of its own to account for allegations of wrongdoing. The impeachment also came as a sudden rebuke to Paxton, who has built a national profile fighting high-profile legal battles, including trying to overturn the 2020 presidential election, and who won a third term in 2022 despite long-pending state criminal charges and an FBI investigation.

    The Republican-led House of Representatives voted overwhelmingly to impeach Paxton in May, largely based on his former deputies’ claims that the attorney general used his power to help a wealthy donor who reciprocated with favors including hiring a woman with whom Paxton had an extramarital affair. The 20 articles of impeachment include abuse of public trust, unfitness for office and bribery.

    The 121-23 vote immediately suspended Paxton and made him only the third sitting official in Texas’ nearly 200-year history to be impeached.

    Paxton has decried the impeachment as a “politically motivated sham” and an effort to disenfranchise his voters. The attorney general’s lawyers say he won’t testify in the Senate trial. He has said he expects to be acquitted.

    Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton makes a statement at his office, May 26, 2023, in Austin, Texas. The Texas Senate is set to gavel in Tuesday, Sept. 5, 2023, for the impeachment trial of state Attorney General Ken Paxton, a formal airing of corruption allegations that could lead Republican lawmakers to oust one of their own as lead lawyer for America’s largest red state.

    Paxton faces trial by a jury — the 31 state senators — stacked with his ideological allies and a “judge,” Republican Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick, who loaned $125,000 to his last reelection campaign. His wife, Sen. Angela Paxton, will attend the trial but cannot participate or vote. Two other senators play a role in the allegations against Paxton.

    A two-thirds majority — or 21 senators — is required for conviction, meaning that if all 12 Senate Democrats vote against Paxton, they still need at least nine of the 19 Republicans to join them.

    The trial will likely bring forth new evidence. But the outline of the allegations against Paxton has been public since 2020, when eight of his top deputies told the FBI that the attorney general was breaking the law to help Austin real estate developer Nate Paul.

    The deputies — largely conservatives whom Paxton handpicked for their jobs — told investigators that Paxton had gone against their advice and hired an outside lawyer to probe Paul’s allegations of wrongdoing by the FBI in its investigation of the developer. They also said Paxton pressured his staff to take other actions that helped Paul.

    In return, Paul allegedly hired a former aide to a Republican state senator with whom Paxton was having an affair and bankrolled the renovations of one of the attorney general’s properties, a million-dollar home in Austin.

    Paul was indicted in June on federal criminal charges that he made false statements to banks to secure more than $170 million in loans. He pleaded not guilty and has broadly denied wrongdoing in his dealings with Paxton.

    The two men bonded over a shared feeling that they were the targets of corrupt law enforcement, according to a memo by one of the staffers who went to the FBI. Paxton was indicted on securities fraud charges in 2015 but is yet to stand trial. The Senate is not taking up, at least initially, three impeachment articles about the alleged securities fraud and a fourth related to Paxton’s ethics filings.

    Federal prosecutors continue to examine Paul and Paxton’s relationship, so the evidence presented during his impeachment trial poses a legal as well as a political risk to the attorney general.

    After going to the FBI, all eight of Paxton’s deputies quit or were fired. Their departures led to an exodus of other seasoned lawyers and saw the attorney general’s office consumed by dysfunction behind the scenes.

    Four of the deputies later sued Paxton under the state whistleblower act. The bipartisan group of lawmakers who led Paxton’s impeachment in the House said it was him seeking $3.3 million in taxpayer funds to settle with the group that prompted them to investigate his dealings.

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  • Car crashes into Denny’s restaurant in Texas, injuring 23 people inside | CNN

    Car crashes into Denny’s restaurant in Texas, injuring 23 people inside | CNN

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    CNN
     — 

    Nearly two dozen people were injured Monday after a vehicle plowed into the wall of a Houston-area Denny’s restaurant, police in Texas said.

    Calls started around 11:22 a.m. CT about a vehicle that crashed into the south wall of the restaurant, police in Rosenberg, Texas, said in a Facebook post. Rosenberg is located about 35 miles southwest of Houston.

    The Rosenberg Police Department said all of the victims were conscious when they were transported to local hospitals. “The injuries ranged from minor lacerations to severe injuries, but all appear to be non-life threatening,” the post reads. The victims range in age from 12 to 60 years old, according to CNN affiliate KHOU

    Footage posted by KHOU shows a gaping hole in the side of the restaurant with a mangled SUV still inside. The footage shows law enforcement tape blocking the hole and authorities at the scene.

    The 30-year-old driver of the vehicle was uninjured and an investigation into the cause of the crash is ongoing, according to KHOU. Police urged drivers to avoid the area and expect delays.

    Denny’s said they had no comment about the incident at this time.

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  • Texas A&M freshman wider receiver Micah Tease is suspended indefinitely after drug arrest on marijuana possession charges – Medical Marijuana Program Connection

    Texas A&M freshman wider receiver Micah Tease is suspended indefinitely after drug arrest on marijuana possession charges – Medical Marijuana Program Connection

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    Texas A&M freshman wider receiver Micah Tease is suspended indefinitely after drug arrest on marijuana possession charges

    • The 18-year-old was released on bail on Friday after posting a $13,000 bond 
    • Fan saw a glimpse of his ability when he caught a TD pass in a spring game 
    • DailyMail.com provides all the latest international sports news 

    Texas A&M freshman wide receiver Micah Tease has been slapped with an indefinite suspension from the team after being arrested on drug charges on Friday. 

    Authorities in the Lone Star state found the 18-year-old in possession of marijuana just a day before the Aggies open their 2023 season at home against New Mexico in a new-looked SEC. 

    Tease, who’s from Tulsa, Oklahoma, had 4 to 400 grams of a controlled substance (edibles), which in the eyes of the law is considered to be a second-degree felony. 

    He also possessed less than 2 ounces of marijuana and will be separately charged for that offense, which is a misdemeanor, according to Brazos County jail records.

    Tease was released on bail on Friday after posting a $13,000 bond. 

    Texas A&M WR Micah Tease, 18, was arrested a day before potentially making his SEC debut

    Texas A&M WR Micah Tease, 18, was arrested a day before potentially making his SEC debut

    Tease only made an appearance for Texas A&M in a spring game, when he caught a TD pass

    Tease only made an appearance for Texas A&M in a spring game, when he caught a TD pass

    Police received a complaint from a…

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  • Federal judge blocks Texas law requiring I.D. to enter pornography websites

    Federal judge blocks Texas law requiring I.D. to enter pornography websites

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    A federal judge has struck down a Texas law requiring age verification and health warnings to view pornographic websites and blocked the state attorney general’s office from enforcing it.

    In a ruling Thursday, U.S. District Judge David Ezra agreed with claims that House Bill 1181, which was signed into law by Texas Gov. Greg Abbott in June, violates free speech rights and is overbroad and vague.

    The state attorney general’s office, which is defending the law, immediately filed notice of appeal to the Fifth Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals in New Orleans.

    The lawsuit was filed August 4 by the Free Speech Coalition, a trade association for the adult entertainment industry and a person identified as Jane Doe and described as an adult entertainer on various adult sites, including Pornhub.

    “Government can log and track that access”

    Judge Ezra also said the law, which was to take effect Friday, raises privacy concerns because a permissible age verification is using a traceable government-issued identification and the government has access to and is not required to delete the data.

    “People will be particularly concerned about accessing controversial speech when the state government can log and track that access,” Ezra wrote. “By verifying information through government identification, the law will allow the government to peer into the most intimate and personal aspects of people’s lives.”

    Ezra said Texas has a legitimate goal of protecting children from online sexual material, but noted other measures, including blocking and filtering software, exist.

    “These methods are more effective and less restrictive in terms of protecting minors from adult content,” Ezra wrote.


    Montana’s TikTok ban and school book bans raise First Amendment concerns

    04:07

    Judge: No evidence pornography is addictive

    The judge also found the law unconstitutionally compels speech by requiring adult sites to post health warnings they dispute — that pornography is addictive, impairs mental development and increases the demand for prostitution, child exploitation and child sexual abuse images.

    “The disclosures state scientific findings as a matter of fact, when in reality, they range from heavily contested to unsupported by the evidence,” Ezra wrote.

    The Texas law is one of several similar age verification laws passed in other states, including Arkansas, Mississippi, Utah and Louisiana.

    The Texas law carried fines of up to $10,000 per violation that could be raised to up to $250,000 per violation by a minor.

    The Utah law was upheld by a federal judge who last month rejected a lawsuit challenging it.

    Arkansas’ law, which would have required parental consent for children to create new social media accounts, was struck down by a federal judge Thursday and a lawsuit challenging the Louisiana law is pending.

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  • Texas Wanted Armed Officers At Every School After Uvalde. Many Can’t Meet That Standard.

    Texas Wanted Armed Officers At Every School After Uvalde. Many Can’t Meet That Standard.

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    AUSTIN, Texas (AP) — A vision of armed officers at every school in Texas is crashing into the reality of not enough money or police as a new mandate took effect Friday, showing how a goal more states are embracing in response to America’s cycle of mass killings is proving unworkable in many communities.

    Dozens of Texas’ largest school districts, which educate many of the state’s 5 million students, are reopening classrooms without meeting the state’s new requirements of armed officers on every campus. The mandate is a pillar of a safety bill signed by Republican Gov. Greg Abbott, who rejected calls this year for gun control despite angry pleas from parents of children killed in the Uvalde school massacre.

    Texas has nearly 9,000 public school campuses, second only to California, making the requirement the largest of its kind in the U.S.

    “We all support the idea,” said Stephanie Elizalde, superintendent of the Dallas Independent School District, which has more than 140,000 students. “The biggest challenge for all superintendents is that this is yet again an unfunded mandate.”

    The difficulties lay bare limits of calls to put armed guards at every school, more than a decade after the National Rifle Association championed the idea in the face of an intense push for stronger gun laws following the Sandy Hook Elementary massacre in 2012.

    Southside Independent School District police officer Ruben Cardenas keeps watch as students arrive at Freedom Elementary School, on Aug. 23, 2023, in San Antonio.

    The new Texas law allows exceptions but also does not require districts to report compliance, making it unclear how many schools are meeting the standard.

    But by all accounts, many are not.

    The Associated Press contacted 60 of Texas’ largest school districts about whether they were able to start the school year in compliance. The districts, which cut across a wide swath of Texas, from rapidly growing suburbs to the U.S.-Mexico border, enroll more than 2.7 million students combined.

    Not all districts responded and some declined to discuss staffing levels, citing security concerns. But statements to the AP, along with a review of school board meeting actions and statements made to local media, show at least half have been unable to comply with the law’s highest standard.

    A major struggle is staffing elementary schools, where officers are traditionally less common. But those campuses came under calls for more protection after a gunman killed 19 fourth-graders and two teachers last year at Robb Elementary School — a tragedy in which the failures were not over a lack of police, who were on the scene within minutes, but the inaction of hundreds of officers once they arrived.

    Spokesperson for Abbott did not respond to questions about the rollout of the law. The Texas Education Agency did not address questions about concerns raised by schools and instead provided criteria for districts to seek an exception.

    “How these exceptions look locally is determined by the school district’s board, and they must develop an alternative safety standard with which the district is able to comply,” spokesman Jake Kobersky said.

    But local school officials say the additional funding Texas gave districts under the new law, about $15,000 per campus, is hardly sufficient. In Dallas, Elizalde said an extra $75,000 is needed for each additional officer in Texas’ second-largest district.

    Students are checked as they pass through a metal defector as they arrive at Freedom Elementary School, on Aug. 23, 2023, in San Antonio.
    Students are checked as they pass through a metal defector as they arrive at Freedom Elementary School, on Aug. 23, 2023, in San Antonio.

    In the scramble to comply with Texas’ new standards, options some districts previously never considered are now on the table: Some are turning to private security firms or arming more staff and teachers.

    “This is probably new to everybody at this stage of the game. It’s expensive,” said Charles Hollis, director of operations at L&P Global Security in Dallas, which until this year had not put guards at public schools. The company now has contracts with four booming districts and is in talks with four others.

    The combination of not enough money for officers, and not enough of them to fill thousands of openings across the U.S., is an ongoing struggle in cities nationwide. Last month, a small Minnesota town lost its police department altogether after officers resigned over low pay and pursued better opportunities elsewhere.

    The national shortfall of officers has hampered other states’ attempts to patrol all schools. Florida struggled in 2018 when the state became the nation’s first to require an armed officer on every campus following the shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School.

    In Tennessee, following an elementary school shooting in March, the state offered police departments extra funding to staff every school. But police in Nashville, Tennessee’s largest city, rejected most of the money.

    “With the level of our staffing, we can’t pull 70 officers from the streets of Nashville,” Metro Nashville Police Chief John Drake told reporters in July.

    Joy Baskin, education counsel for the Texas Association of School Boards, said all mandates come with a price tag. “But I think this is the biggest one I can remember in more than 25 years of talking to districts,” she said.

    In San Antonio, the Southside Independent School District was able to start the year with enough officers, who make between $23 and $30 an hour. Don Tijerina, the district’s police chief, said it wouldn’t take any of them long to find jobs elsewhere.

    “Bottom line: The demand is so high right now,” he said.

    LaFleur reported from Dallas. Associated Press writer Jonathan Mattise in Nashville, Tennessee, contributed to this report.

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  • Austin Pets Alive! | A Picture of Transport Success: Tonto

    Austin Pets Alive! | A Picture of Transport Success: Tonto

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    Aug 29, 2023

    For 10 months, Tonto sat overlooked in a crowded shelter in an isolated part of West Texas, where the human population counts at 9,000 and the nearest vet is 90 miles away.  The longer he sat, and the more crowded the shelter got and the greater risk there was of Tonto facing euthanasia.  But Tonto’s fate changed when APA!’s transport team, the Texas shelter, and Underground Dog, a local rescue, teamed up.

    Together we got Tonto on a flight up to Boise Bully Rescue in Boise, Idaho, where Tonto was quickly adopted by a wonderful family. Tonto is one of 2,460 pets whose lives were saved through our transport program in 2022. Fun fact: Tonto’s tongue permanently sticks out for a constant “blep” look

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  • Austin Pets Alive! | A Picture of Transport Success: Boo Thang

    Austin Pets Alive! | A Picture of Transport Success: Boo Thang

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    Aug 24, 2023

    Check out BT in his tiny aviator costume! That’s what this sweet guy wore to celebrate sitting shotgun next to the pilot, on his rescue flight from Texas to Massachusetts.

    BT could easily have not made this journey. He is diabetic, and has a disease called feline leukemia (FeLV)—a virus that affects a cat’s immune system.,. In many shelters, cats with FeLV are euthanized as a matter of course. This is largely based on the unfounded belief that people won’t want to adopt cats with the illness because it affects the animal’s life span.

    But APA! has proven this is not the case. wWe’ve shown that not only can cats with FeLV live long, healthy lives, but many adopters even seek these cats out. them out, but because so many FeLV cats are euthanized in shelters, it can be hard to find one who is available.

    That’s what happened with BT, whose adopters were in Massachusetts. sThey loved him from the moment they saw his photo, and so we caught him a transport flight to his new home, on a plane that was otherwise full of dogs.

    APA!’s Transport Program means thousands of adoptable pets facing euthanasia in crowded Texas shelters are able to reach in communities where they are welcomed into new homes. Transport can also mean aviator suits on kitties who don’t normally get to live, in the current sheltering system. But when they do, when they do, they are so special, so wanted, and so loved, that people will move mountains—and airplanes—to get them to home.

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  • 8/22: CBS Evening News

    8/22: CBS Evening News

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    8/22: CBS Evening News – CBS News


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    Tropical storm hits Texas as heat threatens millions; Tennessee zoo welcomes rare spotless giraffe

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  • Tropical storm hits Texas as heat threatens millions

    Tropical storm hits Texas as heat threatens millions

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    Tropical storm hits Texas as heat threatens millions – CBS News


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    Tropical Storm Harold made landfall in Texas and has since weakened to a tropical depression after forming in the Gulf of Mexico overnight. Meanwhile, millions across the country are bracing for dangerously high temperatures. CBS affiliate KHOU-TV’s Matt Dougherty reports.

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  • Tropical Storm Harold makes landfall in Texas after forming in Gulf overnight

    Tropical Storm Harold makes landfall in Texas after forming in Gulf overnight

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    Texas braces for tropical storm


    Texas coast braces for storm as California recovers from tropical storm Hilary

    01:04

    Tropical Storm Harold made landfall on Texas’ Padre Island in the Gulf of Mexico on Tuesday morning, the National Hurricane Center said. The storm was expected to bring heavy rains and powerful winds to southern Texas and northern Mexico as it moved inland.

    The system is hitting the U.S. a day after Hilary drenched parts of California and Nevada. Harold was a tropical depression that strengthened in the Gulf of Mexico overnight and set its sights on Texas, the hurricane center said.

    As of 10 a.m. CDT, the storm was located about 35 miles north of Port Mansfield, Texas, and about 50 miles south of Corpus Christi, Texas, according to the hurricane center. It had maximum sustained winds of 50 mph and was heading west-northwest at 21 mph.

    A tropical storm warning was up from the mouth of the Rio Grande to Port O’Connor and a tropical storm watch was issued from Port O’Connor to Sargent, Texas.

    An infrared satellite image shows Tropical Storm Harold hitting Texas at 10:10 a.m. CDT on Aug. 22, 2023.
    An infrared satellite image shows Tropical Storm Harold hitting Texas at 10:10 a.m. CDT on Aug. 22, 2023.

    NOAA/NESDIS/STAR GOES-East


    CBS News weather and climate producer David Parkinson says the area has been in a drought and is “parched.”

    The hurricane center said earlier Harold was already starting to bring heavy rains and strong winds to the warning area and would move farther inland as the day wore on.

    Tropical-storm-force winds extended outward up to 115 miles from Harold’s center.

    The system is expected to produce 3 to 5 inches of rain with up to 7 in some spots through early Wednesday. Scattered instances of flash flooding are possible.

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  • Key Found In Home Of Slain Girl Leads Police To Name Neighbor As Person Of Interest

    Key Found In Home Of Slain Girl Leads Police To Name Neighbor As Person Of Interest

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    Authorities are searching for a teen who lived in the same apartment building as an 11-year-old Texas girl after her body was found underneath her bed last week, police announced on Friday.

    Juan Carlos Garcia-Rodriguez, 18, has been identified as a person of interest in the killing of the girl, Maria Gonzalez. The chief of the Pasadena police, Josh Bruegger, said at a press conference that investigators discovered a key inside Gonzalez’s apartment and learned that it opened Garcia-Rodriguez’s unit.

    Juan Carlos Garcia-Rodriguez, via the Pasadena Police Department.

    Pasadena Police Department

    “This key has since been processed by our crime scene investigators and was not found to open any doors at the victim’s residence.” Pasadena police said in a statement.

    Gonzalez was found dead Saturday. Her father, Carmelo Gonzalez, called police to report that he’d discovered her body, which was wrapped inside a garbage bag and stuffed in a laundry basket.

    Carmelo Gonzalez told officers that his daughter texted him shortly after he left for work, saying a stranger was knocking on the front door. Concerned that the girl soon stopped responding, the father asked family members to check on her at the apartment, but they were unable to locate her.

    “I told her don’t open the door because I am arriving at work, and she responded I am in my bed,” Carmelo Gonzalez told Houston’s Fox 26.

    When the father returned, he found the 11-year-old dead but no sign of forced entry at the apartment.

    Medical examiners determined that the girl had been strangled, and that she’d been sexually assaulted before dying.

    Bruegger said police interviewed neighbors at the apartment building Saturday. Among them was Garcia-Rodriguez, from whom police also collected a DNA sample.

    Authorities said Garcia-Rodriguez had been living in the apartment building for three to four weeks but moved out Monday. His two roommates, who did not know the 18-year-old well, told officers that Garcia-Rodriguez said he was leaving to find work somewhere else, but did not turn over his key before moving out.

    Originally from Guatemala, Garcia-Rodriguez was last seen at the apartment complex Monday. His current whereabouts are unknown.

    No arrest has been made in the case.

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  • Texas Dad Arrested After Gun Found Inside 3-Year-Old’s School Bag: Police

    Texas Dad Arrested After Gun Found Inside 3-Year-Old’s School Bag: Police

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    A Texas man was arrested Tuesday after his 3-year-old was found carrying a gun inside a backpack at school, police said.

    Pete Robles, 35, was taken into custody on charges of child endangerment, a felony offense, when the weapon was discovered by a teacher at a Pre-K 4 SA center, the San Antonio Police Department said.

    The child was unaware that a firearm was in their bag, according to a statement from the school.

    “Staff immediately confiscated the weapon and turned the matter over to SAPD,” said Pre-K 4 SA, which also announced that no backpacks would be permitted on campus as school officials consider improved safety protocols.

    The child has been placed under protective custody with child protective services amid an ongoing investigation, the police department said.

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  • Canadian woman sentenced to nearly 22 years for sending ricin letter to Trump

    Canadian woman sentenced to nearly 22 years for sending ricin letter to Trump

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    A Canadian woman was sentenced Thursday in Washington to nearly 22 years in prison for mailing a threatening letter containing the poison ricin to then-President Donald Trump at the White House.

    Pascale Ferrier, 56, had pleaded guilty to violating biological weapons prohibitions in letters sent to Trump and to police officials in Texas, where she had been jailed for several weeks in 2019.

    Her defense attorney Eugene Ohm said Ferrier had no prior criminal record and is an “inordinately intelligent” French immigrant who had earned a master’s degree in engineering and raised two children as a single parent.

    But in September 2020, prosecutors said Ferrier made the ricin at home in Quebec and mailed the potentially deadly poison derived from processing castor beans to Trump with a letter that referred to him as “The Ugly Tyrant Clown” and read in part: “If it doesn’t work, I’ll find better recipe for another poison, or I might use my gun when I’ll be able to come. Enjoy! FREE REBEL SPIRIT.”

    The letter from Ferrier, which also told Trump to “give up and remove your application for this election,” was intercepted at a mail sorting facility in September 2020, before it could reach the White House.

    Ricin White House
    File photo provided by the Hidalgo County (Texas) Sheriff’s Office, showing Pascale Ferrier.

    Hidalgo County, Texas, Sheriff’s Office, via AP File


    She was arrested trying to enter a border crossing in Buffalo, N.Y., carrying a gun, a knife and hundreds of rounds of ammunition, authorities said. Investigators also found eight similar letters to law enforcement officials in charge of the Texas jail where she was held after she refused to leave a park area as it closed.

    In a winding speech, Ferrier told the judge in Washington, D.C., that she considers herself a “peaceful and genuinely kind person,” but gets angry about problems like unfairness, abuses of power and “stupid rules.” She spoke about feeling like she had done little to support her values while her children were young, and considered herself to be an “activist” rather than a “terrorist.” She expressed little remorse but said, “I want to find peaceful means to achieve my goals,” she said.

    U.S. District Judge Dabney Friedrich handed down the 262-month sentence outlined in a plea agreement with prosecutors, which also would expel Ferrier from the country once she is released and require her to be under supervised release for life if she ever returns.

    The judge noted a “real disconnect” between the Canadian grandmother who has worked toward another degree while behind bars and the crimes Ferrier pleaded guilty to. She pushed back on Ferrier’s framing of her actions. “That isn’t really activism,” she said. “I hope you have no desire to continue on this path.”

    Prosecutor Michael Friedman said the sentence was an “appropriately harsh punishment” that sends a clear message.

    “There is absolutely no place for politically motivated violence in the United States of America,” he said. “There is no excuse for threatening public officials or targeting our public servants.”

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