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Austin, TX

Father of man stabbed after pro-Palestinian Austin rally speaks out: ’Stop this madness’

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Father of man stabbed after pro-Palestinian Austin rally speaks out: ’Stop this madness’


Just days after his 23-year-old son was rushed to a hospital after being stabbed in Austin, Nizar Doar is still struggling to cope with what happened.

“I can’t make any sense out of it; that’s the problem,” he said.

Doar, 55, and his son Zacharia — both identify as Palestinian American — were at a rally at the state’s capital to protest Israel’s actions in Gaza during the Israel-Hamas war. After the demonstration, Zacharia, who lives in Arlington, decided to stay in Austin a while longer to eat with his friends, Doar said.

Doar was near Waco when one of Zacharia’s friends called to tell him his son had been stabbed.

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“He said, ‘Uncle, you have to come back,’” Doar recalled. “It was the worst feeling I ever endured in my life. I felt like, ‘Oh my God, I’m going to lose my son.’”

A racial slur, then a stabbing

According to police, officers were notified at about 7 p.m. of a disturbance in the intersection of West 26th Street and Nueces Street in West Campus, near the University of Texas at Austin. Responding officers found a man with injuries that were not believed to be life-threatening, police said, adding that he was taken to a hospital.

One of the people with Zacharia during the stabbing told authorities that they, along with two other people, were in a pickup going southbound on Nueces Street when a man on a bicycle approached the truck, according to a probable-cause affidavit obtained by The Dallas Morning News.

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The man, later identified by police as 36-year-oldBert James Baker, “put his bicycle down in front of the truck” and started yelling a racial slur at the people in the truck, according the affidavit. When they got out of the truck, Baker allegedly punched Zacharia in the shoulder and a fight ensued.

The witness told authorities Baker pulled out a knife at some point and ran toward the group. He then saw Zacharia “bleeding from his right ribs,” according to the affidavit. The same person told authorities that Zacharia, after being stabbed, “wrestled” Baker to the ground and “struck the knife out” of his hand.

Doar said he believes Baker targeted the truck because it had a keffiyeh, a traditional black and white head scarf, displayed on the passenger side of the vehicle.

Zacharia was stabbed “under the shoulder blade,” Doar said. The knife broke one of Zacharia’s ribs, and doctors told the family his recovery is expected to take at least six weeks. He is back in North Texas with his wife and son.

“He cannot attend to his son because he cannot carry him,” Doar said. “He can’t pick him up and comfort his son.”

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Investigators mull a hate crime charge

Baker was arrested and accused of aggravated assault with a deadly weapon. On Wednesday, Austin police announced that the department’s Hate Crimes Review Committee determined the stabbing met the definition of a hate crime.

“Per department policy, the information has been provided to the Travis County District Attorney’s Office. The prosecuting office will make the final decision on enhancing the offense to a Hate Crime,” Austin police said in a Wednesday news release.

Doar, who has lived in the United States since 1988, said he and Zacharia have been attending pro-Palestinian rallies in North Texas. He said what’s happening in Gaza is a “genocide” of Palestinians, adding that he thinks elected officials must do more to call for a cease-fire in the region.

“If we cannot do this as Americans, who else is going to stand in the front of this evil that’s going on in Gaza? We really need to stand together to stop this madness,” Doar said.

Doar said he is “110%” proud of his son and described him as his “pride and joy” and one of the “most helpful, wonderful, cheerful” people “you’ll ever meet.” His family has been moved by the outpouring of support for Zacharia following the stabbing, Doar said.

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“I mean, I’m talking about Muslims, Christians, Jewish — people that I really never met call us to show their support for us,” he said.

The Palestinian Youth Movement Dallas has helped organize demonstrations in North Texas. Nidaa Lafi, a spokesperson for the organization, said she had met Zacharia at rallies in North Texas and described him as “outspoken and passionate.” The group is planning to participate in a rally Friday at Main Street Garden in response to the stabbing, Lafi said.

The Council on American-Islamic Relations, an advocacy group that works closely with the Muslim community, said it saw an alarming spike in the number of Islamophobic incidents following Hamas’ Oct. 7 attack in Israel. In November, U.S. Attorney General Merrick Garland said the Justice Department had noticed “a significant increase in the volume and frequency of threats against Jewish, Muslim, and Arab communities” in the U.S. following the attack,

In a written statement, state Rep. Salman Bhojani said the rise in hate crimes in Texas is “utterly unacceptable.”

“The horrifying Austin stabbing shows a disturbing trend that cannot be ignored,” his statement read.

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Doar has felt a range of emotions about the stabbing: confusion, anger, sadness.

But he isn’t afraid.

“No matter what it is, I’m going to participate in more protests,” Doar said. “I’m not going to let this evil stop the good we provided to show the world we stand with Gaza. I’m not going to let that deter us from getting our messages out there.”



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Austin, TX

Silver Alert issued for missing 73-year-old man in Austin

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Silver Alert issued for missing 73-year-old man in Austin


The Texas Department of Public Safety has issued a Silver Alert for an elderly man who has been missing since Friday afternoon in Austin.

The Austin Police Department is looking for Charles Evans, a 73-year-old man diagnosed with a cognitive impairment. Evans was last seen at 5:37 p.m. on Jan. 9 in Austin.

Silver Alert issued for missing 73-year-old man in Austin

ALSO| Students recount emotional toll of Leander High School possible bomb threat lockdown

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Police describe him as a 6’3″ tall white male, weighing 225 pounds, has gray hair, hazel eyes, and who uses a walker.

Law enforcement officials believe his disappearance poses a credible threat to his health and safety.

Anyone with information regarding his whereabouts is urged to contact the Austin Police Department at 512-974-5000.



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Austin, TX

Man arrested, charged for deadly shooting at downtown Austin hotel

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Man arrested, charged for deadly shooting at downtown Austin hotel


A 20-year-old was arrested and charged with murder for a deadly shooting at the Cambria Hotel in downtown Austin, police said.

What we know:

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Police said on Monday, Jan. 5, around 6:55 a.m., officers responded to a report of a gunshot at the Cambria Hotel at 68 East Avenue #824. The caller said a person had been shot.

When officers arrived, they found a man with injuries. He later died at the scene. He was identified as Luke Bradburn.

The investigation revealed that Bradburn drove and crashed a car that belonged to 20-year-old Maximillian Salinas. After the crash, Bradburn and the other people in the car left and went to the Cambria Hotel. 

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Salinas went to the hotel and shot Bradburn.

On Jan. 6, Salinas was arrested and charged with murder.

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Anyone with information is asked to contact the Austin Police at 512-974-TIPS. You may submit your tip anonymously through the Capital Area Crime Stoppers Program by visiting austincrimestoppers.org or calling 512-472-8477.

The Source: Information from the Austin Police Department

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Austin, TX

Austin activists hold anti-ICE protests following the death of Renee Good in Minneapolis

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Austin activists hold anti-ICE protests following the death of Renee Good in Minneapolis


Chants of “shame” and “ICE out of Texas” rang through the street as Austin-area activists joined thousands across the nation in protesting the killing of Renee Nicole Good, who was fatally shot Wednesday by an Immigration and Customs Enforcement officer in Minneapolis.

The protest was held in front of the U.S. Department of Homeland Security building in Pflugerville.

Good, 37, was shot in her SUV while attempting to drive away from several ICE officers who ordered her to exit her vehicle.

Scarleth Lopez with the Party for Socialism and Liberation, the organization that led the protest, said the videos of the shooting in Minneapolis were “sickening.”

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“Trump has lied and and said that Renee was a terrorist. She was a mother. She was an innocent bystander,” Lopez said. “We must organize to stop these people from kidnapping and murdering.”

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Spray painted messages appeared outside of a U.S. Department of Homeland Security building in Pflugerville

Elizabeth Bope, a retired Pflugerville ISD teacher, said the claims from federal and state lawmakers that Good was attempting to strike the ICE agent with her vehicle inspired her to attend the protest.

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Such claims were posted online by Vice President J.D. Vance and Texas Sen. Ted Cruz. Attorney General Ken Paxton reposted a statement from DHS on X, formerly known as Twitter, that said the ICE agent “relied on his training and saved his own life.”

“It’s beyond really any words that they killed this woman for no reason, but also that they’re lying about it,” Bope said. “I’m not even a radical left person, I’m just a regular old Democrat.”

Other key Texas leaders, including Gov. Greg Abbott and Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick, have not commented on the shooting.

A group of protesters holding yellow signs reading "ICE Out of our Communities" gather during a night time protest.

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Protesters gathered and held signs during a protest against ICE.

Doug Tickner, who said he works for a home building company in Austin, said he felt it was important to show up in person for Good.

“I don’t really think of Minneapolis as being that far from here, and it’s not like what happened in Minneapolis was some sort of one off unique event,” Tickner said. “This is part of a pattern, and I feel folks better wake up and realize that this is becoming more and more serious.”

The news that federal immigration officers shot and wounded two people in Portland, Oregon, broke hours before the protest.

The gathering in Pflugerville is among the first of four anti-ICE demonstrations planned across the Austin area over the next few days.

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Earlier on Thursday, protesters gathered at the intersection of 45th Street and Lamar Boulevard during rush hour. A protest on Friday will be held at the Capitol and another will be held Saturday at City Hall.

Protesters bang on the outside of a building built of metal.

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KUT News

Protesters bang on the outside of the U.S. Department of Homeland Security building in Pflugerville.

State and federal leaders are now sparring over who should conduct an investigation into the Minneapolis shooting, according to NPR.

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Minnesota’s Bureau of Criminal Apprehension, which was originally asked to conduct a joint investigation with the FBI, said in a statement it was later told the investigation would be led solely by federal authorities.





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