Showing posts with label jailed. Show all posts
Showing posts with label jailed. Show all posts

Saturday, September 29, 2012

Passenger killed, driver jailed after Rosenberg crash

  ROSENBERG, TX (KTRK) -- Rosenberg police are investigating a one-vehicle accident this morning that killed the passenger and sent the driver to jail.

The crash happened around 1:30am in the 3300 block of Avenue H.

According to police, the vehicle was eastbound on Avenue H when the driver tried to turn right onto Millie Street and struck light pole, causing severe damage.

The passenger, identified as 25-year-old April Humphrey of Rosenberg, was taken to Oak Bend Hospital where she was pronounced dead shortly after arrival.

Investigators say the driver, 21-year-old Jonathan Sepulveda, also of Rosenberg, suffered minor injuries. He was arrested for traffic violations, though the exact charges against him were unclear.

This case remains under investigation.

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


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Sunday, September 23, 2012

Liberty Co. crash leaves 1 dead, 1 injured, 1 jailed

  DAYTON, TX (KTRK) -- One person was dead, one was injured and another was in jail Saturday after a three-vehicle accident the day before in Liberty County.

It happened around 2:30pm Friday on FM 1960 about two miles west of Dayton.

According to the Texas Department of Public Safety, a Dodge pickup was eastbound on FM 1960 behind a Nissan sedan. A Chevrolet Suburban was traveling west on FM 1960.

Investigators said the driver of the Nissan slowed to make a left turn onto County Road 614, but pickup struck her car from behind. The impact sent the Nissan into oncoming traffic and it was struck again by the Suburban.

Pamela Melton Raines, 51, of Dayton, was a passenger in the Nissan. Emergency responders transported her to Liberty Dayton Hospital where she later died from her injuries. She was wearing a seatbelt, officials said.

The driver of the Suburban -- a 46-year-old Dayton woman -- was rushed to Memorial Hermann Hospital with broken bones. At last check, she was in critical condition. She was also wearing a seatbelt, officials said.

One person was arrested following the accident. We are working to confirm the identity of that person.

We worked with The Dayton News on this story, one of our Houston Community Newspapers partners.

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


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Wednesday, May 2, 2012

Man jailed for shooting toddler in League City

  LEAGUE CITY, TX (KTRK) -- A two-year-old child was in critical condition Monday after being shot in the arm in League City.

It happened around 2am Sunday at the Bayridge Apartments in the 3000 block of East League City Parkway.

According to police, Roger Anthony Winston and another male became involved in a disturbance at the apartment.

Officials said Winston fired two rounds from a shotgun at the other male and missed him, but struck the child in the arm.

The toddler was asleep on a couch when the shooting happened.

Life Flight airlifted the child to UTMB in Galveston in critical condition.

No one else was injured.

The alleged shooter fled the scene, but authorities said they caught up with him a short time later.

Winston, 21, is charged with aggravated assault. Bond was set at $100,000.

Anyone with additional information about this case is asked to contact Det. Marty Grant at 281-338-4173.

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


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Friday, December 23, 2011

Judge rules jailed financier R. Allen Stanford competent for trial

AP  HOUSTON -- Jailed Texas financier R. Allen Stanford is mentally competent to stand trial on charges he bilked investors out of $7 billion in a massive Ponzi scheme, a judge ruled Thursday.

U.S. District Judge David Hittner's decision came after a nearly three-day competency hearing for the disgraced financier. The trial is set for Jan. 23. Hittner said he will rule next week on a request from Stanford's attorneys to delay the trial until April.

"We're disappointed. We hope he gets healthy," Ali Fazel, one of Stanford's attorneys said after the ruling.

Prosecutors declined to comment. A gag order is preventing attorneys from discussing the case.

Stanford had been declared incompetent in January due to an anti-anxiety drug addiction he developed while jailed in Houston. He spent more than eight months at a federal prison hospital in Butner, N.C., getting treatment for his addiction and being evaluated to determine if he had any long-term effects from being injured in a September 2009 jail fight.

A forensic psychologist who helped treat Stanford at the prison hospital testified the financier is now competent, can think clearly after being taken off the drug and has not suffered brain damage from the jail fight.

Doctors at the prison hospital and prosecutors accused Stanford of faking symptoms of amnesia. He says he can't remember all events in his life prior to the prison fight.

During closing arguments after testimony in the hearing had concluded earlier Thursday, prosecutor Gregg Costa said Stanford was exaggerating or faking memory loss and 14 other disorders the financier's medical experts had diagnosed him with in an attempt to "game the system" and avoid trial for a $7 billion fraud.

"He wants to con his way out of this case the same way he conned investors for 20 years. Your honor, don't let him con his way out of this case," Costa said.

But four medical experts who testified on Stanford's behalf, including a neurologist and two forensic psychiatrists, said the financier suffered a traumatic brain injury in the jail fight that left him with severe memory loss and unable to think or communicate clearly.

"Every expert that has seen him says there is something wrong with him," Fazel said during closing arguments. "He wants to fight the case. He just wants to be able to help his lawyers. He is not running away from anything."

Stanford's medical experts said his brain injury, along with a major depressive disorder and post-traumatic stress disorder from the jail fight, has left him unable to assist his defense attorneys and to be ready for trial.

Those experts also testified that his treatment for other medical conditions, including heart and liver problems, complicated his brain injury and memory loss.

Stanford and three former executives of his now-defunct Stanford Financial Group are accused of orchestrating a colossal pyramid scheme that advised clients from 113 countries to invest more than $7 billion in certificates of deposit, or CDs, at the Stanford International Bank on the Caribbean island of Antigua, promising huge returns.

Authorities say Stanford and the executives fabricated the bank's records, bribed Antiguan regulators with investors' money from a secret Swiss bank account and misused funds to pay for Stanford's lavish lifestyle.

Stanford became a billionaire whose financial empire stretched across the U.S., the Caribbean and Latin America. His attorneys say he ran a legitimate business. He has been jailed since he was indicted in June 2009 by a federal grand jury in Houston, where his companies were headquartered.

He faces 14 counts, including wire and mail fraud.

Earlier Thursday, a prison official at the Houston federal detention center, where Stanford is being held, told Hittner doctors at the facility had become concerned Stanford might be suicidal after one of the financier's medical experts had testified about such concerns.

The official said doctors examined Stanford Wednesday evening and determined he is not suicidal but will continue to evaluate him.

(Copyright ©2011 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.) Get more Local »


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Saturday, December 10, 2011

Judge throws out life sentence for man jailed at time of crime

See it on TV? Check here. HOUSTON (KTRK) -- A man sentenced to life in prison for robbery is having that conviction thrown out, after proving he was in jail at the time of the crime. But he's not getting out of jail any time soon.

It's the news every defendant whose ever been convicted longs to hear -- the case has been dismissed. In this case, it's due to a mix-up the judge blames on the defendant's own attorney and prosecutors.

On Thursday Ladondrell Montgomery, 36, returned to the same court where he was convicted and sentenced to life in prison just three weeks ago. This time the case was dismissed and a new trial granted.

"Give this man back his life! He is innocent," his wife Shanthina Montgomery said. "Let him go."

Ironically, it is his arrest for assaulting his wife which cleared his name. After trial, Montgomery's father and his attorney discovered Harris County jail documents proving he was in custody on December 13, 2009 when the robbery for which he was convicted occurred.

"I feel great about the case," said Montgomery's attorney Ronald Ray.

But the judge chastised Montgomery's attorney and prosecutors for not realizing the mistake sooner. Judge Mark Kent Ellis lashed out in open court, saying "...it boggles the mind, frankly, that it took this long" to discover the error. And "both sides are spectacularly incompetent."

Prosecutor Alison Baimbridge notes that Montgomery testified in his own defense at trial and never mentioned even the possibility that he could have been in custody at the time of the robbery.

"We were not aware at trial, before trial or until the motion was filed that that could potentially be an issue in this case," she told Eyewitness News.

Ray says Montgomery had been in and out of jail often.

"His memory just did not... He just couldn't remember," Ray explained.

Prosecutors won't pursue that robbery allegation from the day he was proven in jail but they have now re-filed five other robbery charges which they dismissed upon his conviction. His wife says that's unfair.

"Free my husband. He's an innocent man," Shanthina insisted. "He's an innocent man."

Montgomery has been denied bond on the re-filed charges. He remains in custody and because of his prior robbery could again be sentenced to life in prison if convicted on any of those charges.

(Copyright ©2011 KTRK-TV/DT. All Rights Reserved.)
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Wednesday, July 6, 2011

Rosharon man jailed in wreck that killed 4

See it on TV? Check here.Jose Luis Pena, 31, was being held on $2 million bail in the Van Zandt County jail. Jose Luis Pena, 31, was being held on $2 million bail in the Van Zandt County jail.

AP  CANTON, TX -- A Houston-area man has been jailed on four counts of criminally negligent homicide after his car swerved into oncoming traffic on a highway near Canton, killing four people on motorcycles.

Jose Luis Pena, 31, of Rosharon, was being held on $2 million bail in the Van Zandt County jail. A jail spokeswoman told The Associated Press on Monday that records do not indicate whether he has an attorney. The collision occurred near Canton, about 60 miles east of Dallas, on Sunday afternoon. Pena's Mustang crossed over into the opposing lane, resulting in the head-on crash. "According to one witness, the vehicle was swerving in its lane, and then crossed into the other lane and struck the motorcycles," Department of Public Safety Trooper Landon Corbett told The Dallas Morning News. The dead were identified as 51-year-old Bruce Melvin Bricker and his wife, 40-year-old Shannon Rhenee Bricker, both of Highland Village. The two were riding one of the two motorcycles involved. Steve Austin Claterbaugh, 53, of Rowlett, and his girlfriend Kathleen Dolores Smith, 52, of Wylie, were on the other motorcycle. They also died. Pena's girlfriend, 31-year-old Rosalind Ann Vela of Rosharon, was in serious condition at a Tyler hospital with facial fractures. Vela was seated in the back seat of the Mustang without a seat belt, along with her 3-year-old son. Authorities say the boy was in a car seat. He was hospitalized but expected to recover. The motorcyclists had been attending the First Monday Trade Days flea market in Canton, and they were heading north on Highway 19 about a mile from the city when Pena's southbound Mustang entered their lane. The collision was head-on, and the car burst into flames. Pena was following his girlfriend's mother back to Rosharon when the crash occurred, Corbett said. "I'm not sure where they were coming from, so I'm not sure if fatigue played a role," he said. Corbett said there were no indications of alcohol or drug use. He said that, because of the fire, he does not know if the car had a mechanical problem. (Copyright ©2011 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.)
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Wednesday, May 11, 2011

Ex-Montgomery County fire chief jailed for theft

  HOUSTON (KTRK) -- A former Montgomery County fire chief will go to jail for stealing money from the county.

Robert Robinson pleaded guilty to theft and will serve a year in jail starting next week. A Montgomery County grand jury indicted Robinson for illegally taking and using county funds for personal gain and to benefit others. Robinson served as a fire chief with the Montgomery County emergency services district. Robinson has paid $20,000 restitution. (Copyright ©2011 KTRK-TV/DT. All Rights Reserved.) Get more Local »


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