Austin, TX
Lina Hidalgo criticizes Texas’ abortion ban after study estimates thousands of rape-related pregnancies | Houston Public Media
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One of the Houston area’s top elected officials criticized Texas Gov. Greg Abbott and other state leaders after a recent study published in a peer-reviewed medical journal estimated that more than 26,000 Texas women became pregnant by rape after abortion was banned in the state, which offers no exceptions for cases of rape or incest.
The study, published Wednesday in the Journal of the American Medical Association, examined rape-related pregnancies in the 14 U.S. states that have implemented total abortion bans since a U.S. Supreme Court ruling in 2022 overturned the landmark Roe v. Wade decision from 1973. Texas was estimated to have the most rape-related pregnancies among those states, accounting for about 40% of the total.
“When the Texas legislature passed its abortion ban with no exceptions for rape or incest, Governor Abbott vowed to ‘eliminate all rapists from the streets,’” Harris County Judge Lina Hidalgo said Thursday night in a statement released by her office. “What our state leaders have done instead is create a public health emergency in communities across Texas, including Harris County.”
The study, the findings of which were first reported locally by the Houston Chronicle, used FBI crime reports as well as survey results from the Bureau of Justice Statistics and U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Researchers used prior rape-related pregnancy rates to estimate the number of rape survivors who had become pregnant, determining state-level data by factoring in the number of months in which their abortion bans were in effect (16 months in Texas’ case).
Dr. Samuel Dickman of Planned Parenthood of Montana, the study’s lead author, noted that rapes typically are underreported and that “such highly stigmatized experiences are difficult to measure accurately in surveys.”
“Our estimates have limitations,” he wrote in the study.
A total of 519,981 estimated rapes were associated with 64,565 pregnancies during the 4- to 18-month period during which abortion bans had been in effect in the 14 states, five of which offer exceptions for rape or incest. An estimated 5,586 rape-related pregnancies occurred in those five states, compared to an estimated 58,979 in the other nine states, the study found.
After the June 2022 Supreme Court ruling, 10 or fewer legal abortions per month occurred in each of the 14 states with abortion bans, according to the study, which says that suggests that “rape exceptions fail to provide reasonable access to abortion for survivors.
“Survivors of rape who become pregnant in states with abortion bans may seek a self-managed abortion or try to travel (often hundreds of miles) to a state where abortion is legal, leaving many without a practical alternative to carrying the pregnancy to term,” Dickman also wrote in the study.
Hidalgo, in her statement, indicated that Texas’ abortion law should at least make exceptions for rape and incest.
“I know firsthand that surviving rape is one of the most traumatic things a person can experience,” she said. “At its core, rape and sexual assault are about taking away a woman’s agency. Denying that woman the option of an abortion is cruel and only adds more trauma. We have to change this, and it begins with leaders who prioritize women’s wellbeing over politics.”
Austin, TX
Texas Rangers arrest two in 2023 crash that killed two Texas college students
POLK COUNTY, Texas — Nearly three years after a deadly crash that claimed the lives of two Texas college students, Texas Rangers have made two arrests in connection with the case, bringing long-awaited movement for the families who’ve been demanding justice.
The crash happened in January 2023, killing 19-year-old Graylan Spring, a former Vandergrift High School athlete, and 18-year-old Micah McAfoose of Houston. Both were Stephen F. Austin State University students. Investigators say their vehicle collided with an 18-wheeler that was turning left onto a highway from a side road in Polk County.
Spring’s mother, Krista, says her family hasn’t been able to properly grieve since that day. “Honestly, we haven’t even given our time to mourn the death of our son because we went from the death to the injustice immediately,” she said.
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On Wednesday, Texas Rangers arrested Marlin Kendall Hughes, the owner of the trucking company, and Antonio Sandoval Jr., the truck’s driver, on charges of tampering with evidence.
According to an affidavit signed by Ranger Joshua Benson, Hughes called Sandoval after the crash and asked if the truck had a dash camera system. When Sandoval confirmed it did, Hughes told him to bring it to him. By the time the camera was turned over to authorities, Spring says, the footage had been erased. “Someone didn’t want us to see what was on that video,” she said.
Spring said the family is grateful for the progress made this week, but still wants full accountability. “We’re thankful for the arrests made; that’s just one step in the right direction. Praise the Texas Rangers for their investigation,” she said.
Polk County District Attorney Shelly Bush Sitton confirmed her office is reviewing the case with the Rangers. “I don’t have any information on the case yet,” she said. “I’ve talked to the Rangers. They’re bringing it in. We’ll be sitting down and going through it with them and making a determination of how to proceed,” Sitton said.
Both Hughes and Sandoval were released on bond Thursday morning.
Graylan Spring’s legacy lives on through organ donation and the Graylan Spring Foundation, which supports student athletes.
“I don’t know if we’ll get the results that we truly want in the end, but that’s what we’re seeking,” his mother said. “True justice is indictments.”
Austin, TX
Half-naked woman was allegedly tortured and chained in Texas backyard for months by five ‘friends’ who didn’t ‘like her anymore’
A half-naked woman was allegedly tortured and chained up in the backyard of a Texas home for months — leading to the arrest of five people who allegedly starved and shot at the defenseless victim with BB guns.
The Austin Police Department responded to a home on the south side of the city at around 9 a.m. on Oct. 30 after a 911 call was made regarding a woman screaming for help and handcuffed to metal exercise equipment in the backyard, according to a press release.
Officers arrived to find the unnamed woman suffering from severe injuries, naked from the waist down, and shackled to a punching bag stand.
The first responders quickly sprang into action and attempted to free the woman, but “due to the conditions of the restraints,” they had to call in the Austin Fire Department to bring special equipment to cut through the metal.
“The woman showed signs of physical distress and had visible injuries consistent with prolonged restraint,” police said.
As they worked to free the woman, five adults inside the home noticed what was happening and tried to flee, but were immediately caught and detained.
Police also found two small children living at the home who were placed in the care of Child Protective Services for safety and support.
The suspects — Michelle Garcia, 51, Crystal Garcia, 21, Mache Carney, 32, Juan Pablo Castro, 30, and Maynard Lefevers, 21 — had allegedly held the victim captive for months, police said.
The victim told investigators that she’d been friends with Michelle Garcia, but stated that the group “at some point, they decided they no longer liked her,” and the five decided to keep her as a captive, according to an affidavit obtained by the Austin American-Statesman.
She said she was forced to live outside for weeks and beaten whenever she tried to flee. It’s unclear when the victim was taken captive and exactly how many months she was held.
Detectives said the woman was fed just one plate of food a day and shackled to a metal exercise stand — sometimes with both wrists locked behind her.
Michelle Garcia allegedly told investigators she limited the woman to one meal a day because she thought the victim had gotten “chunky.”
However, investigators said the woman appeared severely malnourished.
The victim also said that the night before being found, her pants slipped down and she “got in trouble.” She was then shot with a BB gun, cuffed to a backyard stand and left there half-naked overnight as “punishment” while temperatures plunged into the 40s, the affidavit revealed.
During her captivity, she sustained extensive injuries, including open wounds, severe swelling of the wrists, loss of tissue from her hands and feet, widespread scarring from BB gun pellets, and significant facial trauma.
After being transported to a local hospital, doctors determined her injuries matched weeks of torture and restraint. Scans also found a BB was lodged in her right eye.
Castro allegedly told police he shot the woman with an electric rifle-style BB gun because he “didn’t want to touch her.”
He also allegedly admitted that when he would get home from work, he would grab the BB gun from his closet, and “chase her around the yard,” expressing that he “f–king hates her,” according to the affidavit.
One of the children found at the home — a four-year-old boy identified as Castro’s son — said his dad shot the woman whenever she was “bad,” and that his mom, Carney, usually stood by and watched.
All five suspects were arrested and charged with aggravated kidnapping, aggravated assault, injury to the elderly or disabled, and unlawful restraint. They are all currently locked up at the Travis County Jail on $305,000 bail.
Carney and Michelle Garcia return to court on Nov. 18 and 21, while Crystal Garcia, Castro, and Lefevers are set to appear on Dec. 15.
The case remains under investigation.
Austin, TX
Prop Q’s defeat could push Austin City Council to tighten reins on its spending
Austin voters soundly rejected Proposition Q, the controversial city-backed plan to raise more than $100 million in property tax revenue to pay for homeless services and other city projects.
Taken at face value, the measure was simple: It asked Austinites to voluntarily increase their city property tax bills to pay for what the city deemed essential services. But that was a tall order for some.
The measure was a lightning rod in a typically sleepy off-year election cycle, with more than 100,000 voters casting ballots on Election Day alone.
Now, Prop Q’s failure could push Austin City Council to temper its spending habits.
Save Austin Now, the primary political opponent of the measure, organized a broad coalition of Austin voters to reject Prop Q. The political action committee argued it would make Austin less affordable for property owners, workers, renters and businesses.
At a campaign watch party Tuesday night, Austin attorney Adam Loewy, who gave $10,000 to the campaign and donated a billboard to Save Austin Now, said the measure’s failure proves “enough is enough,” and that citizens want City Council members to pare back spending. Loewy cited recent expenses on a $1.1 million logo and recent trips abroad by council members, among other expenses.
“The spending must stop. We do not need more taxes, and this City Council needs to get the message to get their house in order,” he said. “Quit with the million dollar logos. Quit with the trips to Japan. Quit with wasting the taxpayer money.”
Mayor Kirk Watson agreed, to a point, saying council members “need to give voters reason to trust us.” Watson said the rejection is a clear mandate to reexamine the costs and needs of city-funded programs.
“We should meet the voters’ mandate with a coherent, straightforward budget process that focuses on basic services and basic budgeting,” he said in a statement Tuesday. “At a time when people are losing faith in all levels of government, including local government, as evidenced by the election outcome, our city government needs to show it can act in a thoughtful, structured way.”
Council Member Marc Duchen, the lone vote against the tax rate election plan, said the rejection was “a referendum on trust” in a statement and echoed Watson’s call for a clear-headed appraisal of spending at City Hall.
“My colleagues and I have an opportunity to restore our constituents’ faith in local government, and I hope we seize it,” he said.
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