Showing posts with label Short. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Short. Show all posts

Thursday, June 21, 2012

Handcuffed suspect briefly flees police, crashes car short distance away

  HOUSTON (KTRK) -- A man under arrest apparently decided to try to make a run for it, even though he was already handcuffed.

Shortly before 9am, police stopped a car with two people inside in southwest Houston. Police say both people had outstanding warrants, so they planned to take them into custody.

One suspect was handcufffed, and police say he ran off, got to his car and managed to get his cuffed hands in front of him. He took off in the car, fleeing at speeds of up to 80 miles per hour before losing control and crashing in the 10500 block of Rockley near Brooklet.

The suspect was then taken into police custody. The second suspect was taken into custody at the first location.

(Copyright ©2012 KTRK-TV/DT. All Rights Reserved.) Get more Local »


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Thursday, May 10, 2012

Long-awaited Constable report short on details

HOUSTON (KTRK) -- Wait till you see the long-awaited report on the constables. Is it a whitewash? You be the judge.

13 Undercover's been exposing possible wrongdoing in some of the constable's offices for months, and last week, we questioned why the county attorney hadn't taken action.

Maybe you didn't expect the county attorney to come down hard on the constables, but now there's not even a slap of the wrist.

What did high-priced county lawyers do in 10 long months? You'll see.

"We are reviewing facts, which do not look good. I can't say that they rise to the level of official misconduct or crimes, but they are serious," Terry O'Rourke told us last year.

That was Terry O'Rourke last year, after 13 Undercover had exposed possible wrongdoing in Victor Trevino's Precinct 6 office; alleged misuse of county equipment had now surfaced in May Walker's office; within months, another constable -- Jack Abercia -- would be in chains, arrested by the FBI for alleged bribes he denies.

"There is an investigation in the district attorney's office as well as a review in our office of all the conduct in Precinct 6 and other constable precincts," O'Rourke said.

Now, that long-awaited report has finally been issued and it took 10 months.

"It's a cut and paste job," KTRK legal analyst Joel Androphy said.

You have to read it to believe it. It won't take long, it's barely five pages long. The summary is just two sentences and it doesn't name names -- not one.

"Should they be embarrassed?" we asked Androphy.

"Embarrassed is not the word here -- incompetency," he replied.

So what does it say? It provides legal advice to the constables on how they can avoid breaking the law and a lot of it is plain common sense.

"A law student could have cut and pasted from the various different codes and produced this report within 30 minutes," Androphy said.

But did anyone break the law, violate county policies? Based on this report, who knows.

"Is the county attorney the public's lawyer or the constable's lawyer?" we asked Harris County Attorney Vince Ryan.

"The people of Harris County's attorney," he replied.

"They were elected to protect the public from the public officials, not the public officials from the public," Androphy said.

Your watchdog won't let you see what his office discovered along the way. Last week, we showed damaging emails that suggested they wanted to keep you in the dark. We showed you how a corruption report on another former county official was changed to take out some of the bad stuff. What happened to all that tough talk?

"Nobody is immune, that's our job," O'Rourke said.

"Does this look like a whitewash?" we asked Androphy.

"Totally," he said.

If you'd like to tell the county attorney what you think, here's his phone number: 713-755-5101.

On your behalf, we have demanded once again to see all those draft reports. In February, they claimed they had reviewed thousands of documents, interviewed several people. Who? What'd they say? Don't you have a right to know? After all, you paid for it.

(Copyright ©2012 KTRK-TV/DT. All Rights Reserved.) Get more 13 Undercover »


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Wednesday, May 25, 2011

Houston Texans History Still Short, But Progressing


The Houston Texans history is limited considering they were established as an expansion team in 2002. The Texans were created after the original Houston Oilers were moved to Tennessee and became the Tennessee Titans. The Houston Oilers moved to Tennessee courtesy of owner Bud Adams, which cost him millions of dollars in lawsuits. This move prompted a dry spell for Houston without a professional football team, considering the NFL was not adding teams at that time. Bob McNair, who had been working to bring the NHL to the city, instead founded Houston NFL Holdings, which was headed by Steve Patterson, an associate of McNair.

In 1997, a report was issued stating the attractiveness of Houston, Los Angeles, and Cleveland for expansion teams to come. The Browns' move to Baltimore had Cleveland as a promised destination for the next expansion team. This would bring the total to 31 NFL teams in the league. Commissioner Paul Tagliabue praised the efforts of McNair and Patterson, including their decision to build a domed stadium to entice the NFL to return a team to Houston. Within the next three years, the Cleveland Browns were given a new team, and the NFL determined that they would add an additional team, either in L.A., Toronto, or Houston. This worried many of the football fans in Houston, television and advertising revenue is a big part of football now. They were almost certain that the NFL wouldn't turn down the chance to have a team in Los Angeles, which is the second-largest TV market in the country.

In 1999, it was decided that L.A. would get the expansion franchise, but only if they could have an ownership team and stadium deal in place by September 15th of that year. The two groups in L.A. were facing a standoff, and tax dollars were not allowed to be used for the new stadium, putting the progress at a standstill. It was at this point that they realized that L.A. was not nearly as prepared to host an NFL franchise as Houston, who already had plans for a state-of-the-art stadium and the proper people in place for team ownership and building the franchise. The Houston officials were told to attend a meeting in Atlanta with the NFL owners, at which point the L.A. group put in a bid of $540 million for the new franchise. However, McNair had better financial resources and wisdom, bidding $700 million for the franchise, this gave them the rights to the franchise, as well as the 2004 Super Bowl game.

Reliant Stadium broke ground in 2000, and the officials worked quickly to establish a team name, logo, and uniforms so that they could begin play as soon as the stadium was completed. In the later part of the year, the Houston Texans were christened during a downtown celebration, where the new team logo was unveiled. Dom Capers was hired in 2001 as the head coach of the team, and by 2002 the Houston Texans team was ready for action. Their first game came in September against the Cowboys, which they rightfully won. This made them only the second expansion team in NFL history to win their first game of the regular season, although they subsequently lost the next five games.

The successes have progressing slowly for the Houston Texans, fans rallied to show their support for having the NFL back in Houston. There were plenty of Houston Texans team apparel and Houston Texans memorabilia sold at games and in stores outside of the games, because fans were so excited about their new team. They have been steadily improving over the past years, but still have yet to make it to a championship or Super Bowl game. In 2005, Dom Capers was fired along with the majority of his coaching staff. Gary Kubiak was hired to replace Capers, and led the team into a very controversial off season. They were assumed to draft Reggie Bush or Vince Young, but when it was all said and done, they shocked everyone by acquiring Mario Williams instead of either of the first two picks. 2006, 2007 and 2008 were mediocre seasons for the Houston Texans, although fan support has gained momentum and so has the success of the team considering their talent and a first time playoff appearance.

Copyright (c) 2010 Matthew Love








Matt Love
FootballCollectibles.com
http://www.footballcollectibles.com/HoustonTexans.htm
Houston Texans Fan Guide - History, Blogs, Articles, Collectibles, and Memorabilia.