Austin, TX
Austin mother of daughter killed 17.5 years ago uneasy as killer’s parole hearing approaches
AUSTIN, Texas – The daughter of an Austin woman was shot to death 17-and-a-half years ago. The killer’s parole hearing is coming up, and the mom is anxious.
“I feel like he needs to stay in prison,” Jennifer Crecente’s mother Elizabeth Crecente said.
Jennifer Crecente and Justin Crabbe dated on and off for about two and half years. They broke up when Crabbe was in jail for a misdemeanor, but once he got out, he went back to her.
“Pretty immediately he’d ask Jennifer to help him with money and help him with his GED and help him get to drug testing, so even though they were not dating in the beginning of 2006, that theme of you’re the one who needs to save me, only you can save me, was just immediately there,” Crecente said.
Crecente said Crabbe emotionally abused her 18-year-old daughter and on February 15, 2006, it turned deadly when Crecente was leaving Crabbe’s house in the neighborhood.
“They walked back toward the wooded area, and he stabbed her in the arm at some point. My guess is to make her go with him, but she did not know that in that wooded area, he had hidden a sawed-off shotgun loaded with bird shot. He made her get on her knees, and he shot her in the back of the head, and it was close range,” Crecente said.
Crecente’s body was discovered in the woods by a neighbor walking his dog. Crabbe wasn’t arrested right away.
“The first interrogation was a couple of days after he killed her, and he went into the station with blood on his body. Yeah, he wasn’t a smart criminal,” Crecente said.
Investigators said video footage from a sporting goods store showed Crabbe with someone purchasing ammunition for the gun. Court documents said Crabbe admitted to having his hands on the gun when it went off, and he didn’t check to see how badly Crecente was injured. Instead, he ran away and threw the gun.
Crecente’s mother was devastated as Jennifer was her only child.
Jennifer Crecente pictured with her mother, Elizabeth, in 2003. Photo courtesy: Elizabeth Crecente
“She was bright and when she laughed, you could not help but laugh with her because she would just throw her head back and laugh and her face would turn all red. She had an amazing laugh. She was witty, she was wickedly intelligent. She was something else. She really was, she was a force,” Crecente said.
Crecente said she tried to get help for Jennifer, but the resources weren’t available.
“There really are a lot of minimizations of dating abuse when you’re that young. I heard ‘you need to just let her work this out on her own,’” Crecente said.
But it didn’t work out.
“I just felt like it was so far from reality that people wanted to talk to me about hope. It’s just so painful and like that is not for me, I will never have hope, so I just wanted to call myself on that and face it head on, so that’s part of the name,” Crecente said.
Crecente said hope is part of the name of the foundation she started in honor of her daughter, Jennifer’s Hope.
Crecente is now helping others and continuing Jennifer’s legacy.
Justin Crabbe emotionally abused 18-year-old Jennifer Crecente. On February 15, 2006, Crecente was killed by Crabbe. Photo courtesy: Elizabeth Crecente
“Jennifer wanted to be a criminal psychologist, so she wanted to help people like Justin. I think she really had a passion for helping people,” Crecente said.
Crecente said she now helps people being abuse and the abusers.
“They deserve help as well, and they deserve some hope as well that they don’t have to go down that road,” Crecente said.
But Crabbe did. On August 1, 2007, Crabbe entered a plea deal for 35 years in prison and waived all his rights to appeal. After 17-and-a-half years, Crabbe is eligible for parole this year.
“I’m worried because he had talked so many times about murdering me,” Crecente said.
Crecente said he needs to stay put in prison.
“I knew Justin for 2.5 years and there was at no point anything that said to me that he wanted change. I don’t know if he’s capable of change. I don’t really think so,” Crecente said.
Crecente plans to meet with the parole board in the next two months and ask to put off Crabbe’s eligibility for parole by five years.
If you or someone you know is in a domestic violence situation, call 1-800-799-SAFE (7233) or text “START” to 88788.
To send letters for the parole board, email BeJennifersVoice@gmail.com.
Austin, TX
N. Texas QB wows in first start since 9th grade
After years of waiting for his chance, Drew Mestemaker got one shot to be a starting quarterback and made the most of it.
The North Texas walk-on hadn’t started a game at quarterback since his freshman year of high school in Austin, Texas, where he later started at safety and was an all-district punter.
But with Mean Green starting quarterback Chandler Morris transferring to Virginia, Mestemaker made his first start in four years against Texas State in the SERVPRO First Responder Bowl on Friday. And he had a day, racking up 448 total yards, going 26-of-41 passing for 393 passing yards and two TDs and adding nine carries for 55 yards, including a 70-yard TD run.
That run — the second longest by an American quarterback in a bowl game — cut Texas State’s lead to two points, 30-28, with 1:49 left, after which Mestemaker went to the sideline and started throwing up into a trash can.
The freshman’s magic ended when he was intercepted with 12 seconds left, and Texas State held on for its second straight First Responder Bowl win.
Still, North Texas, which had the country’s No. 3 passing offense this season, came away with an incredible story and a potential star.
“That’s the first football game he started at quarterback since the ninth grade, which is just wild to me,” Mean Green coach Eric Morris said of Mestemaker, who backed up current Louisville freshman quarterback Deuce Adams at Vandegrift High in Austin. “To see him go out there and compete the way he did, I mean the kid, he has some traits.”
Morris, who played receiver at Texas Tech under Mike Leach and was later Kliff Kingsbury’s offensive coordinator in Lubbock when Patrick Mahomes played there, had high praise for Mestemaker.
“I’ve been around some good ones, been blessed to be around a lot of NFL guys in my career, and he has some traits that are just as good or better than some of those guys playing on Sundays right now,” Morris said. “I think you saw the athleticism, the accuracy, the decision-making. I wouldn’t be surprised if in 15 years, Drew Mestemaker’s playing football still.”
Bobcats quarterback Jordan McCloud, who previously played for South Florida, Arizona and James Madison before transferring to Texas State ahead of this season, surpassed 10,000 career passing yards by throwing for 307 and a touchdown in Friday’s win, fending off an opponent who entered with 69 career passing yards in Mestemaker.
“Hats off to North Texas and Coach Morris,” Bobcats coach G.J. Kinne said. “Their backup quarterback came out and played lights out. The last couple of weeks have been the craziest I’ve been a part of in college football.”
North Texas was without top wide receiver DT Sheffield (66 catches, 822 yards, 11 TDs), who transferred to Rutgers, and the Mean Green came in as 13.5-point underdogs. Mestemaker, who had attempted five passes in four appearances as a backup this season, was tasked with picking up for Chandler Morris, who threw for 3,774 yards and 31 touchdowns this season but then left for the Cavaliers last month.
Mestemaker did that and then some:
• His 393 passing yards were the second most in First Responder Bowl history, trailing only Case Keenum’s 532 in 2011.
• His 448 yards of total offense tied Baylor’s Sawyer Robertson for the most by any FBS player this bowl season.
• His 393 passing yards were the most in North Texas bowl history and the most ever for a true freshman in his UNT debut.
“The offense never wavered,” said receiver Damon Ward Jr., who has fought through 12 surgeries since 2019 at North Texas and ended his career Friday. “I’ll remember the resiliency and the brotherhood we have. … Drew took command of the offense. He learned all our schemes and took advantage of his opportunity.”
North Texas recently landed its own quarterback transfer in former Albany star Reese Poffenbarger, who threw for 3,603 yards and 36 touchdowns in 2023 and backed up Cam Ward at Miami this season.
Kinne, however, was impressed by what he saw of Mestemaker as QB1.
“Look, that guy’s athletic, he’s big, obviously you saw the run at the end of the game. I mean I think it’s going to be tough to beat that kid out moving forward,” he said.
Eric Morris agreed, saying after the game that he’s intrigued to see what Mestemaker can do going forward for his team.
“Just watching it right there, he can definitely lead our football program,” he said.
Austin, TX
Lakeline Mall shooting: APD release video of suspect
CEDAR PARK, Texas – Austin police are still searching for the suspect involved in a shooting at Lakeline Mall on Thursday.
Police said on Jan. 2, around 3:55 p.m., officers responded to an incident inside Lakeline Mall in Cedar Park.
The suspect and a victim left the mall immediately after the shooting.
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Initially, police said, there was no indication of any injuries. However, it was later determined a victim had minor injuries and self-reported to the hospital after leaving the mall.
A photo and video of the suspect has been shared by police. They described the suspect as a Hispanic man in his late teens to early 20s. He was last seen wearing a black hoodie, dark pants, and dark shoes.
If you have any videos, photos, etc., Austin police are asking people to share them by scanning the QR code below.
Anyone with any information should contact APD’s Aggravated Assault Unit at 512-974-5245. You may submit your tip anonymously through the Capital Area Crime Stoppers Program by visiting austincrimestoppers.org or calling 512-472-8477. A reward of up to $1,000 may be available for any information that leads to an arrest.
The Source: Information from the Austin Police Department
Austin, TX
ERCOT says grid is prepared for freezing temperatures
AUSTIN, Texas — Snow shovels may not be needed next week, but Spectrum News meteorologist Dan Robertson says northeast Texas down to San Marcos should prepare for colder weather.
“In this particular case, the freezing temperatures will mainly be overnight, early morning, and each afternoon most of the state will rise a little bit above freezing,” said Robertson.
Officials with the Electric Reliability Council of Texas expect the grid to be adequate in a winter storm. However, there is a 50 to 80% chance of rolling blackouts if a storm lasts several days.
ERCOT said in a statement that it is “closely monitoring the winter weather conditions moving into Texas next week. Grid conditions are expected to be normal.”
“One of the things that we don’t really know for sure is how long this is going to last, these polar air masses being very dense and heavy. They tend to get into the area and then just hang around until something comes along to push them out,” said Robertson.
In correlation with low temperatures, ERCOT forecasts show an increased energy demand early next week. Energy expert Ed Hirs predicts the power plants will remain operable, but at a cost to consumers.
“If a few of these plants don’t show up, then the price across the grid will go from, say, $50 a megawatt hour to $5,000 a megawatt hour, or in wholesale terms for the consumer, it will go from 5 cents a kilowatt hour to $5 a kilowatt hour,” said Hirs.
Competitive pricing for consumers is why the Rio Grande Electric Co-op, which owns power lines across 18 Texas counties, wants to connect its New Mexico consumers to the Texas power grid.
“Connect to ERCOT, then we have a bigger pool to, you know, find better pricing, a better source,” said Theresa Quiroz, CEO at Rio Grande Electric.
ERCOT and the Public Utilities Commission of Texas, which regulates the grid, oppose the out-of-state connection.
In a filing, PUCT warns that Rio Grande Electric’s request could trigger federal oversight and “disrupt the jurisdictional status quo for ERCOT and the utilities operating in ERCOT that the PUCT regulates.”
“We can’t leave our members out in the dark,” said Quiroz.
In November, Rio Grande Electric asked the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission to determine whether connecting its New Mexico customers to ERCOT would require federal regulation.
“In our filing we talk about hypothetical projects that could come to fruition if, you know, the FERC matter gets resolved and they give us permission to move forward. Now, once we get that, then we go to the Public Utility Commission with an actual project that they can review, dissect and inform us which direction we need to go in,” said Quiroz.
But energy experts warn federal oversight may be unavoidable if ERCOT can’t keep the power on this winter.
“I would expect that President Trump is going to make an effort to throw ERCOT under federal oversight and regulation, simply because this is a huge national security issue for this country,” said Hirs.
As the freezing weather moves closer, power plants are required to weatherize equipment, and Texans are advised to weatherize their homes.
“The main thing is to make sure that your heating ventilation system is well-functioning and is ready to be tested over the next seven days or so,” said Robertson.
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