Showing posts with label still. Show all posts
Showing posts with label still. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 17, 2012

Teen hit by METRO bus loses leg, still critical

  Crystal KobzaHOUSTON (KTRK) -- Nearly two weeks after a teenager was hit by a METRO bus while crossing Bellaire Boulevard, she remains in critical condition.

Charmaine James, an 18-year-old Hasting High School student, is only in the beginning stages of recovery after being hit by a METRO bus on October 1.

We spoke to her mother -- Chandre Rogers, a METRO bus driver herself -- on Sunday about her recovery and the road she has ahead.

The accident caused severe damage to Charmaine's right leg.

"They amputated her right foot and then yesterday they had to go above her knee," Rogers explained.

Rogers said her daughter and a friend made it across the first set of lanes on Bellaire and into the median. Her daughter then attempted to make it all the way across, she said, but she was hit by the bus.

"Her friend told me that she was knocked like 15 feet," Rogers said.

Rogers said she works out of the same West bus operating facility, but does not know the driver who struck her daughter.

She added that her co-workers have been helping her through this difficult time.

'I have a friend of mine, Ms. Vanessa. She has been here with me from day one," Roger said. "The first night, my superintendent from our garage, they were there."

As for Charmaine, her mother tells us she has been heavily sedated since the accident. The only thing her daughter has said that she was able to understand was when she tried to ask what happened.

'I put God first and I know He is going to take care of my baby," Rogers said. "She is still in critical condition, but I have faith in God that she is going to pull through this."

Rogers says her daughter is an aspiring biology teacher and she will be there every step of the way as this long journey of healing begins.

The investigation into the accident is still underway. METRO police say the driver of the bus, 61-year-old Otis Stewart, is not working at this time.

So far, no citations have been issued.

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


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Saturday, September 29, 2012

Questions still surround fatal shooting of double amputee

HOUSTON (KTRK) -- There are still a lot of questions surrounding the shooting death of Brian Claunch.

One of the biggest is how did a man with one arm and one leg, in a wheelchair, manage to corner a Houston police officer? And why did another officer reach for his gun, rather than his Taser?

We are getting a better picture of what two HPD officers were dealing with when they arrived at the Healing Hands assisted home care about 2am Saturday. An instructor who trains aspiring officers also walks us through the levels of force officers are taught to use.

Eyewitness News got a first view of the room where two HPD officers confronted a double amputee in a wheelchair, threatening to kill them with a shiny object. It turned out to be a silver ballpoint pen.

After allegedly lunging at one officer with the pen, a second officer, M. Marin, shot the wheelchair-bound man in the head.

At the foot of the bed is where Claunch, 45, was pronounced dead. He was mentally ill.

Mike Emanuel is an instructor for University of Houston's Basic Peace Officer Course. Officers are taught, he says, to use one of three levels of force depending on the threat. The first is a physical take down.

"Whether I go into soft contact, which is joint manipulation control, medium contact would be your pepper spray, your asp, your Taser and then lethal force would be a firearm," Emanuel.

HPD can't yet say if the officers knew Claunch was armed with a pen since they were dispatched after a 911 call. HPD does confirm both officers were equipped with a Taser and tasked with disarming a double amputee in a wheelchair.

"When you have two officers on one suspect, it does make it easier on both officers to subdue a suspect without lethal force?" we asked Emanuel.

"Absolutely," he said. "The more officers the better."

One thing Emanuel makes clear, it's always a live situation, where there can be little time to react.

"These are all judgment decisions that officers make in a quarter of a second and it's very hard to second guess this," Emanuel said.

HPD Chief Charles McClelland has asked the local FBI office to monitor and investigate this incident along with HPD's Internal Affairs Division.

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


local, erik barajas

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Sunday, September 23, 2012

Tom DeLay still waiting to learn legal fate

Former House Majority Leader Tom Delay answers media questions during a break in jury selection for his money laundering and conspiracy trial in Austin, Texas on Tuesday, Oct. 26, 2010. (AP Photo/Jack Plunkett) Former House Majority Leader Tom Delay answers media questions during a break in jury selection for his money laundering and conspiracy trial in Austin, Texas on Tuesday, Oct. 26, 2010. (AP Photo/Jack Plunkett)

  HOUSTON (KTRK) -- Former U.S. House Majority Leader Tom DeLay -- still waiting to learn his legal fate since being convicted nearly two years ago for his role in a scheme to influence Texas elections -- is praying for vindication but also preparing for the possibility of imprisonment.

DeLay's three-year prison sentence has been on hold as his case has made its way through the appellate process. For both DeLay and his critics, the process has been frustratingly slow, due in part to some of the appeals court justices in Austin recusing themselves as well as DeLay's successful effort to have a judge on the panel removed because of anti-Republican comments she made.

"I don't like living under this cloud. But I'm not angry about it. I even pray for the prosecution and my enemies," the former Houston-area congressman told The Associated Press in an interview. "No, they have not destroyed Tom DeLay as a person. And I'm ready to go to prison if that's where I'm supposed to end up."

But DeLay, and his attorney, Brian Wice, are hoping to get his convictions overturned. On Oct. 10, they will finally get a chance to make their case to the 3rd Court of Appeals, arguing the once-powerful Republican leader did nothing wrong and is the victim of a political vendetta, a claim that prosecutors deny.

DeLay, 65, was found guilty in November 2010 of money laundering and conspiracy to commit money laundering for helping illegally funnel corporate money to Texas candidates in 2002.

Sitting with DeLay in his office in downtown Houston on Wednesday, Wice used a literary allusion to explain the case. He compared DeLay to Jean Valjean, the kind-hearted protagonist of Victor Hugo's "Les MisTrables." He called Ronnie Earle, the now-retired Democratic Travis County District Attorney in Austin who charged the former lawmaker, a modern-day Inspector Javert, who pursued Valjean at all costs.

The Travis County District Attorney's Office says the case was never about politics but about someone who broke Texas law.

"Our office has always been fair and never been politically motivated in prosecuting this defendant or any other," said prosecutor Holly Taylor.

Jurors in Austin determined DeLay conspired with two associates, John Colyandro and Jim Ellis, to use his Texas-based political action committee to send a check for $190,000 in corporate money to an arm of the Washington-based Republican National Committee. The RNC then sent the same amount to seven Texas House candidates. Under state law, corporate money cannot be given directly to political campaigns.

Prosecutors claim the money helped the GOP take control of the Texas House, enabling them to push through a DeLay-engineered congressional redistricting plan that sent more Republicans to Congress in 2004, strengthening his political power.

A judge in January 2011 sentenced DeLay to three years in prison but allowed him to remain free on bond pending his appeal. In June, Ellis was sentenced to four years' probation. Colyandro awaits trial.

DeLay, who once held the No. 2 job in the House of Representatives, said he has been "unemployable" since his conviction and is living off Social Security and his $60,000 annual pension.

He has kept himself busy with speaking engagements and is involved with various projects that advance the conservative cause, including a religious-based one called "40 Days to Save America." He still lives in the Houston suburb of Sugar Land, an area he represented for 22 years.

DeLay said people usually recognize him from his 2009 appearance on ABC's hit television show "Dancing With the Stars."

"They have never given me a hard time for being a convicted felon," he said.

DeLay and his attorney continue to contend money laundering did not occur because no illegal funds were funneled through the RNC.

Wice also said he'll tell the appeals court no crime occurred because in 2002 money laundering in Texas only applied to funds in the form of cash and not checks. The state law was later changed to also specify checks.

"This was a situation where the prosecution couldn't sell the steak, so they sold the sizzle," Wice said.

Taylor called Wice's claim "rather absurd." She said DeLay's belief that his case was politically motivated is just a way to "try and explain away this legitimate prosecution."

While the various changes to the appeals court has resulted in a three-judge panel of two Republicans and one Democrat to hear DeLay's case, Wice said it won't give the ex-lawmaker an advantage.

Cal Jillson, a political science professor at Southern Methodist University in Dallas, said there is some irony in DeLay -- whose tough political tactics earned him the nickname "the Hammer" -- claiming he is the victim of partisanship.

"If there is any irony here, it will be lost on Tom DeLay because when he looks out through his eyeballs he sees a partisan world," Jillson said. "He sees everyone motivated the way he was motivated."

But DeLay says he is not claiming to be a victim, adding his faith in Jesus Christ has helped him through this difficult time.

"I am totally at peace and I'm full of joy ... I'm not beaten down," he said.

The state appeals court probably won't be the last stop, as the losing side will likely take the case to the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals. Ultimately, the case could wind up in the U.S. Supreme Court.

"It's frustrating to wait so long to get justice in a case like this," said Craig McDonald, the director of Texans for Public Justice, a liberal watchdog group whose complaints helped lead to the investigation of DeLay's PAC.

"I'd be surprised if he ever saw the inside of the big house," McDonald said.

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


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Thursday, September 13, 2012

Letter asks some voters to prove they're still alive

HOUSTON (KTRK) -- Thousands of voters in Harris County are being asked to prove they're still alive or they risk having their voter registrations canceled.

It's part of the state's plan to update records, but it has instead become the source of a lot of confusion.

The county voter registrar says he received about 300 calls Monday and then some more on Tuesday, all from people telling him they're not dead. It's all over a letter some voters received in the mail and they, along with some local leaders, are outraged.

"These are letters of people who are deceased. They have been declared dead but she's alive and well," Baptist Ministers Association President Max Miller said.

Among the living is 70-year-old Patricia Warren-Brown. She, like hundreds of others in Harris County, received a letter from the voter registrar's office.

"It's saying that somebody said I was deceased and I'm not," Brown said.

More than 9,000 letters were sent out late last week by the county tax assessor-collector and voter registrar's office on the instruction of the secretary of state. The letter threatens to remove recipients from the voter registration list if they do not verify they are alive within 30 days.

"I'm very much alive," Brown said.

Leaders in the minority community see it as a form of voter intimidation.

"It just looks like it's an attack for this election," Miller said.

But the county voter registrar says it was the secretary of state's way of abiding by House Bill 174, which was passed last year and requires the state to make comparisons using the Social Security death roll to notify counties of deceased voters who should be removed.

The registrar admits the state's list was unreliable and he says for now, to clear up any confusion...

"No one will be denied their vote in November. After the election, we will take it to see about removing those people that are actually dead," Harris County Voter Registrar Don Sumners said.

The county is still encouraging voters who received the letter to send in a response so they will be on file after the November election.

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


local, samica knight

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Monday, September 3, 2012

Some in Cleveland still disagree over girl's sex assault

  CLEVELAND, TX (KTRK) -- The abandoned mobile home where an 11-year-old girl was sexually assaulted had become a symbolic reminder of a horrific crime that brewed racial tensions in this Southeast Texas community.

It's now gone, razed earlier this summer by city officials trying to move forward from a case in which 20 men and boys were charged with repeatedly attacking the girl. But the divide the crime created among residents when it first became public last year still lingers. And with the first suspect convicted in the case at large and several more defendants still facing trial, it could be some time before Cleveland is able to put the crime behind it.

Prosecutors say the girl was sexually assaulted on at least five occasions from mid-September through early December of 2010, at the mobile home and elsewhere. Some in Cleveland, located about 45 miles northwest of Houston, have suggested the girl was partly responsible because of her appearance, sparking widespread condemnation. Some also believe the arrests were racially motivated; all of the suspects are black, while the girl is Hispanic.

Others, however, anxiously await the capture of the first person tried and convicted in the case who ran off in the middle of his trial.

"She was just 11," said Charles Armstrong, as he watched his 3- and 4-year-old grandsons play in his front yard across the street from where the mobile home once stood.

"I'm not going to stand behind them (the defendants). I'm going to stand behind a jury," said Armstrong, sitting in a plastic chair outside his mobile home following an overnight shift at his maintenance job at Wal-Mart.

Despite evidence at Eric McGowen's trial that included a confession, DNA evidence, the girl's tearful testimony and a video of her being assaulted, others haven't been swayed.

Caroline King, who lives down the street, insisted Friday that people still "don't know the facts of the case" and said authorities were just "harassing people" by knocking on doors in the town of about 7,700 people as they searched for McGowen.

"It's not as bad as what they are saying. Nobody tied (the girl) up," said King, 59.

McGowen, who had been out on bail, fled Wednesday after the girl testified that he sexually assaulted her multiple times, including once with a beer bottle. The trial went on without him, and jurors found him guilty of aggravated sexual assault of a child and then sentenced McGowen, 20, to 99 years in prison.

It's unclear if divisions in the town may be complicating efforts to find McGowen. Authorities are saying little about the search. Interim police Chief Darrel Broussard said his agency was working with the Liberty County Sheriff's Office to try to find McGowen, including checking places he previously lived in Cleveland.

The mayor did not return a message Friday seeking comment about the case.

McGowen was the first defendant to stand trial in the case. All six of the juveniles and two of the 14 adults charged pleaded guilty. Trial dates have not been set for the 11 remaining defendants.

Police began investigating after one of the girl's classmates told a teacher he saw video of her being sexually assaulted in the abandoned trailer.

Some suggested early on that the girl was partly responsible because they say she wore makeup, looked older than her age and wasn't properly supervised by her parents.

But Comeka Robinson, who knows McGowen, described the girl as a "baby." She said what happened to the girl was wrong, but she also has doubts about the guilt of McGowen and some of the others charged.

"I would not recommend (he) turn himself in," Robinson, 25, said.

Kim Shelton, a member of the Unity Committee in Cleveland, which was created several years ago to promote the city, said the community is working to deal with the crime and trying to ensure something like that never happens again.

Recently, a local church sponsored a conference to teach girls to respect themselves, for example. Shelton also believes parents are talking more to their children.

Earlier this summer, Shelton's committee began selling bumper stickers that say "I (Heart) Cleveland, TX" as a way to promote the city and tell others it's a good place to live.

"We consider ourselves family and we are moving forward," she said.

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


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Thursday, May 24, 2012

DA's office still deciding about seeking death penalty against woman accused of killing new mom, kidnapping her baby

See it on TV? Check here.Verna DeAnn McClain allegedly kidnapped Keegan Schuchardt because she wanted to present him as her own baby following a miscarriage Verna DeAnn McClain allegedly kidnapped Keegan Schuchardt because she wanted to present him as her own baby following a miscarriage

  HOUSTON (KTRK) -- The Montgomery County District Attorney's office says it's still deciding if it will seek the death penalty against a woman accused of killing a new mother and kidnapping her newborn.

Verna McClain is accused of gunning down Kala Golden Schuchardt outside a pediatrician's office, then abducting her 3-day-old son back in April. Investigators believe McClain wanted to pass the baby off as her own.

The DA's office says it's going through all the evidence that's been gathered in this case and is almost ready to take it to the grand jury.

"At this point, we're convinced that she acted alone, that no other participants helped her out," said Assistant District Attorney Warren Diepraam.

The DA's office plans to decide on the death penalty issue in the next couple of weeks. They have 90 days to get the case to grand jury for consideration of an indictment.

(Copyright ©2012 KTRK-TV/DT. All Rights Reserved.)
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Tuesday, May 22, 2012

Convicted Enron CEO Skilling still appealing

AP  HOUSTON -- Convicted former Enron chief Jeffrey Skilling is contending newly discovered evidence should entitle him to a new trial.

The Houston Chronicle reports the nature of the evidence is not disclosed in a federal court motion filed last week by Skilling's attorney, Daniel Petrocelli. The lawyer is seeking more time for an appeal of Skilling's conviction and prison term related to the 2001 implosion of the former Houston-based energy giant.

Skilling already has lost other appeals at the U.S. Supreme Court. He's serving 24 years in federal prison although a federal appeals court has ruled sentencing guidelines improperly were applied in his case. That could mean an eventual reduction in his prison time.

U.S District Judge Sim Lake, who presided over Skilling's trial, is to hold a hearing June 7.

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Friday, May 4, 2012

Blind horse, 25, still a champion for Conroe owner

AP  CONROE, TX -- When Thomas Boyd of Conroe began looking for a horse to add to his family's stable a few years ago, he thought he found the perfect one on Craig's List.

Boyd, operations manager for City Glass in Cleveland, and his wife, Amber, drove from their home in Conroe to Alvin to inspect the horse they'd seen online.

What they found was an older, neglected animal that didn't look worth the money it would take to feed him.

"Nothing like the picture," said Boyd. "You could see every bone in his body. He was starving."

The owner was asking $800 for the horse, but Boyd said he didn't think the sickly animal was worth more than $200 or $300, if that much.

"I messed with him a little out in the pasture, and we walked back up to the truck and got ready to leave," said Boyd. "He ran over there by us and started braying."

The owner was amazed. She told Boyd it was the most action she'd seen out of the horse in a long time.

Still hesitant, Boyd gave $300 for the animal, took him home and named him Scooby Doo.

"It was probably a year I spent with him, every day, brushing him down, giving him baths, feeding him," said Boyd. "But I got him back to health."

The lady who sold the horse said he hadn't had much riding time, but Boyd said when he rode Scooby for the first time, it was magic.

"It was like riding a dream," he said.

Boyd began roping with Scooby a short while later and discovered the old horse loved it.

Even after Scooby lost his sight, the two were able to work together through spur and touch signals.

After participating in a "playday" (a family-oriented horse riding competition) three years ago as a practice horse for their daughter, Boyd said Scooby picked up barrel and pole racing like a natural, in spite of his blindness.

"Low and behold -- I brought him out here, he wants to run," said Boyd.

Completely blind and 25 years old, Scooby still loves to compete. He and Boyd are currently tied for first place in the Tarkington Prairie Playday Spring Buckle Series.

Held over a period of four weeks, the series includes pole, barrel and straight barrel races, as well as a "mystery" event.

TPPS coordinator Patty Vandver, who began TPPS with her husband, Bubba, said Scooby and Boyd are an inspiration to everyone.

"They are really something special," she said with a smile.

Boyd said he's tried to retire the horse, but every time the family gets ready to leave for a competition, Scooby runs to the fence,

"He's a warrior," Boyd chuckled. "He just doesn't want to stop."

Boyd said, if nothing else, he wants people to learn from his experience with Scooby.

"A lot of people give up on horses, just because of an injury or old age or no matter what it might be," he explained. "But an animal's not done `til they're done. You might not win all the races, but you need to let an animal do what they've got to do."

You can read more about this story in the Conroe Courier, a Houston Community Newspaper partner.

(Copyright ©2012 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.) Get more Local »


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Monday, January 2, 2012

Toddler found with dead caregiver still hospitalized

See it on TV? Check here.   HOUSTON (KTRK) -- A toddler found Friday in the same home as a dead body will spend another night in the hospital, officials said.

According to authorities, 19-month-old Kemichael Austin was discovered in a playpen inside of a home on West Gulf Bank. His caregiver -- 63-year old Norma Davis -- had died.

Kemichael was taken into the custody of Child Protective Services.

The child was not seriously harmed, but he was dehydrated and required hospitalization.

Officials said Saturday that he was being kept overnight in the hospital for observation.

It's not known how or when Davis died. Her son tells Eyewitness News she had been ill for quite some time, but yet she was still able to care for the little boy.

Emergency responders say they gave the boy fluids as they rushed him to the hospital.

CPS said he'll be placed back in foster care once he's released. They have already identified a foster home for him.

The Harris County Sheriff's Office says there were no signs of trauma on Davis' body so it appears she died from natural causes.

(Copyright ©2012 KTRK-TV/DT. All Rights Reserved.)
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Tuesday, December 27, 2011

Family still seeking justice for fatal hit-and-run victim

HOUSTON (KTRK) -- All the members of one family have the same wish for the New Year and there's a chance you could help make it come true.

This family's tragic journey began last year near the intersection of Ella and Richey in north Harris County.

For the family of Mary Jackson, this was their first Christmas without her, and as the anniversary of her New Year's Eve death approaches, they pray 2012 will bring justice.

Jackson's family has missed her every day this year. but especially this Christmas weekend.

"She was ready to live and travel and enjoy her grand kids and that ended really early," her daughter, Rokeshia Holmes said. "Without parents, period -- but without your mother, it's definitely been a tough one. If it wasn't for our kids I felt like I could have just stayed buried under the covers the whole day."

Hundreds of cars pass by the site on Ella Road near Richey where she died last New Year's Eve.

Jackson was going to church services with her grandson Aundre Holmes, a tradition the family held every year. Then, another car veered into their lane and struck them head on. The 55-year-old mother of three and grandmother of 12 died.

Her grandson has a steel rod in his leg today.

"It was like a mother-son thing, I can't really describe how much I treasured her," Aundre Holmes said.

Police say that driver ran from the scene, even leaving his passenger who ended up in a coma for months.

"If that was anybody else, most likely they would have stayed there and helped somehow but he just left to cover his own hide -- just crazy," Aundre Holmes said.

As the first anniversary approaches, the family is waiting for an arrest. Investigators have worked many leads and interviewed the passenger, who owned the car, but no justice yet.

"They even left their passenger to die. That's not a friend, that's not somebody who cares, that's just somebody who is heartless. Do the right thing for once. I'm making a plea, I'm begging for you to turn yourself in," Jackson's other daughter, Tiffany Holmes said.

And as a new year approaches, the family prays answers will come in 2012.

"My hope is just to close this chapter in our life and get some justice. That's my greatest hope for this year," Rokeshia Holmes said.

The family will hold a candlelight vigil on New Year's Eve. If you have any information you are asked to call Crime Stoppers at 713-222-8477. You can remain anonymous and could claim up to a $5,000 reward.

(Copyright ©2011 KTRK-TV/DT. All Rights Reserved.) Get more Local »


local, christine dobbyn

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Friday, June 3, 2011

Ripples of Marvin Zindler's legacy still being felt

See it on TV? Check here. HOUSTON (KTRK) -- Five years ago, Marvin Zindler and one of Marvin's Angels gave Luis Romero one of the things he needed to succeed in school -- a new wheelchair.

This week, Romero will be graduating from high school, something he says he may not have been able to do without that gift. From the time he was born, Romero could not walk, but he's never let that stand in his way. "He blended in really well with his sense of humor," English teacher Shirley Lyons said. In Mrs. Lyons seventh grade English class at F.M. Black Middle School, it wasn't his disability that slowed him down. It was his old wheelchair. "All of us would help him push it and it was really heavy and it would always break down," Romero's friend Monique Martinez said. His teacher and students couldn't buy a new one, but that didn't stop them from doing something about it. "I told them a teacher's voice is only heard so loud, but a teacher's voice with all her students will be heard," Lyons said. One by one, they wrote from the heart. "I was very happy to see they really cared about me and they were really trying to help me out," Romero said. "I thought, 'Well, I really don't know if anybody is going to help us because we are just kids," Martinez said. But on the last day of school in 2006, their voices were heard. "You know how he is really loud, 'This is Marvin Zindler!' It was an exciting day for all of us," Martinez said. "It taught the students the lesson we want to teach them, their words have power," Suzanne Mihaloglou, Remoer's middle school principal, said. On his 14th birthday, Romero got that brand new chair. "It was like having a new car for him, and it gave him independence," Luis and Coralia Romero, Luis' parents, said. The past five years, it's gotten him up and down the halls on his journey towards graduation. "I learned that whenever you have hope for something and really hope for something, you might have a chance of it happening," Romero said. His story has left a lasting impression on so many. "I guess they all get A+++ for those letters regardless of any grammatical errors because it brought the greatest results for Luis," Lyons said. And it is an example of the Marvin Zindler legacy that lives on. Romero will graduate this Sunday at the George R. Brown Convention Center with 400 classmates from Waltrip High School. He plans on starting college at HCC in the fall, specializing in computer engineering and software programming. (Copyright ©2011 KTRK-TV/DT. All Rights Reserved.)
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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.


Thursday, April 14, 2011

Houstonians still questioning NASA's decision

 HOUSTON (KTRK) -- Houstonians are still sore after Tuesday's announcement that the Space City would not be receiving one of the retired space shuttle orbiters. We have a look at the pitch local leaders made to NASA and the new effort to find out why the space agency said no.

We wanted to compare the proposals which earned entities a space shuttle to see what those entities said to help persuade NASA to give them one. But NASA will not release those proposals. A spokesman claims the information is proprietary and says applicants were promised confidentiality. Some say that's proof again that this process of selection wasn't as transparent as the space agency would lead us to believe. Houstonians on Wednesday still struggled to make sense of the snub from NASA. "It's really a shame .. And I really regret that," said Mark Bruse. "To me, this was a political decision. There's no way you could've used logic and not include Houston," said Lee Perry. Former Congressman Chris Bell also wonders what happened -- if someone dropped the ball; if Houston did enough, early enough to get a shuttle. They are questions many sources are asking us to investigate. "I don't think we had really put ourselves in a position to win the shuttle," said Bell. He admits no inside knowledge other than his personal experience of how politics works. He says early assumption that so many others would get a shuttle was unnerving. "By the time Houston was weighing in, it seemed like it could very well be too little, too late," Bell said. A 23-page proposal was put together in the hope of brining an orbiter to Space Center Houston. It details the arguments for the shuttle: the 750,000 people annually that would see it inside a 53,000-square foot addition at the facility. The application was delivered to NASA in March 2009. It was backed by a varied coalition of business and area elected leaders. They insist they pushed it for more than two years. "We have done everything we can to get a retired shuttle here. We never took for granted that we would get one," said Bob Mitchell with the Bay Area Houston Economic Partnership. Mitchell is calling now for NASA to explain in detail its decision making process, and to release, as we asked, the proposals from those entities chosen to get a shuttle. NASA is not releasing them. "Side by side. Let NASA tell us side by side. Lay them out and show us where we were deficient," Mitchell said. That's something NASA says it's not willing to do. All the more reason, elected officials say, to call for a congressional investigation how recipients of a shuttle were chosen. Elected leaders here in Texas and in Ohio are calling for an investigation into the selection process. Ohio had hoped to get a shuttle, too.
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If you would like to share your thoughts on the retiring shuttle fleet with NASA, you can contact them at: Public Communications Office
NASA Headquarters
Suite 5K39
Washington, DC 20546-0001
202-358-0001 (Office)
202-358-4338 (Fax)
Email: public-inquiries@hq.nasa.gov
(Copyright ©2011 KTRK-TV/DT. All Rights Reserved.)


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