Dallas, TX
Dallas hair salon shooting suspect indicted on 7 counts of aggravated assault
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The person accused of capturing three girls at a northwest Dallas hair salon in an assault authorities say was a hate crime has been indicted on a number of felony fees.
A Dallas County grand jury handed up indictments Tuesday morning in opposition to Jeremy Theron Smith, 37, on seven counts of aggravated assault. Police say Smith shot three girls of Korean descent on Could 11; 4 different folks within the constructing have been unhurt.
Police allege Smith entered the salon within the 2200 block of Royal Lane with a .22-caliber rifle and fired 13 occasions earlier than fleeing in a purple van. A witness noticed a part of the van’s license plate, which led authorities to Smith.
Smith was arrested a number of days after the assault and remained in custody Tuesday on the Dallas County jail, with bail set at $700,000.
Smith’s lawyer, Don Guidry, didn’t instantly reply to a request for remark.
Bias will increase potential sentence
Dallas County District Lawyer John Creuzot mentioned the grand jury discovered Smith not solely dedicated aggravated assault, however did so with a racial bias. Creuzot mentioned the bias element will increase the potential punishment on every depend — normally two to twenty years for aggravated assault — to 5 to 99 years or life in jail.
Following the capturing, Dallas police Chief Eddie García backtracked on earlier statements when he declared the assault a hate crime.
“It’s a hate crime,” García mentioned then. “Nevertheless that manifests itself, I’m not right here to say. I can inform you I do know our neighborhood sees it as a hate crime, and I see it as a hate crime.”
Dallas Mayor Eric Johnson mentioned in an announcement on the time that it was a “chilling and deeply disturbing” conclusion.
“I would like our metropolis’s Asian American neighborhood — which has appallingly confronted rising vitriol lately — to know that the Metropolis of Dallas and the folks of Dallas stand with them,” Johnson mentioned.
‘Delusions’ about Asian folks
In accordance with an arrest-warrant affidavit, Smith’s girlfriend advised police he had been admitted to a number of mental-health services due to his delusions about Asian folks, by which he believes “the Asian mob is after him or making an attempt to hurt him.”
The girlfriend mentioned the delusions began about two years in the past after Smith was concerned in a automotive crash with an Asian man.
Smith had additionally been fired from a earlier job for “verbally attacking” his boss, who was Asian, his girlfriend advised authorities.
García mentioned the salon assault could have been linked to 2 different shootings concentrating on Dallas’ Asian neighborhood.
On April 2, somebody shot into three Asian-owned companies within the 2200 block of Royal Lane, and witnesses mentioned the shooter fled in a purple van. Nobody was injured.
The day earlier than the salon capturing, somebody believed to be driving a purple van fired into an Asian-run enterprise in east Oak Cliff. Nobody was harm in that capturing both.
It was unclear Tuesday whether or not fees had been filed in these instances.
‘Nightmare. Trauma. Insomnia.’
Within the months because the capturing, the victims and their households have grappled with trauma; ache, worry and nightmares have disrupted their lives and their companies.
John Park, a doctor in New York, mentioned his mom, who has not been publicly recognized, was one of many three girls wounded on the salon. She was shot in her gluteal space, whereas one other sufferer was shot within the arm and the third was injured in each of her toes.
Park mentioned earlier than the assault, his mom was an energetic one who loved {golfing}, gardening and going out to eat along with her mates at Korean eating places, and would often volunteer at nursing properties along with her different son. After the capturing, nonetheless, Park mentioned she has displayed signs of post-traumatic stress dysfunction, together with being unable to sleep, and what he believes are indicators of melancholy.
The lady shot within the arm, who requested to be recognized as M.J., was a head designer on the salon, however mentioned her accidents had brought about immense ache, stopping her from utilizing her proper arm.
“Extra painful factor is the sensation that why this occur to me,” she mentioned. “Nightmare. Trauma. Insomnia.”

Dallas, TX
Federal agents detain three outside Dallas immigration court in stepped-up enforcement

Plainclothes federal agents took at least three individuals into custody outside a Dallas immigration courtroom Friday.
It’s part of a stepped-up enforcement effort from the Department of Justice to remove undocumented individuals more quickly.
NBC-5 reporters witnessed one individual detained outside a courtroom in the Earle Cabell Federal Building in downtown Dallas, and two others told a Telemundo 39 reporter that their relatives were detained as well.
Another 15 individuals were seen taken into custody over a two-day period last week, according to our content partners at The Dallas Morning News.
Guadalupe Ontiveros says her nephew, Evin Villanueva Herrera, 18, arrived at the federal courthouse Friday for a hearing in his immigration case.
But instead of receiving a next court date, an attorney withthe Department of Homeland Security filed a motion to dismiss.
Ontiveros said she then watched plainclothes agents take her nephew, who arrived in the U.S. from Honduras, into custody moments after leaving the courtroom.
“I convinced him to come (to court) because it was the right thing to do, but the judge granted him an appeal, and as soon as we walked out the court doors, they took him,” Ontiveros said.
It’s a legal process called expedited removal, allowing the federal government to remove undocumented individuals who have arrived in the U.S. in the last two years and don’t have an active asylum claim.
The practice, once confined to a geographic radius near the border, now applies across the U.S., according to Eric Cedillo.
“They (DOJ) have the legal ability to do what they’re doing,” Cedillo said
The Dallas-based immigration attorney who did not have any connection to the cases at the federal building Friday, said while individuals have thirty days to appeal, they must do so in custody and by mail.
He added that the stepped-up enforcement, seen in several cities across the US, has led to growing concern for those who arrived in the U.S. within the last two years, even among individuals who filed legitimate asylum claims within a year of arrival.
“It is having that effect of instilling fear in those individuals who are asking those questions of what can I do to protect myself,” Cedillo said.
A request for comment from Immigration and Customs Enforcement was not immediately returned Friday.
Dallas, TX
Jim Schutze: A tree hugger’s lament for Dallas industry

Park advocates notched a victory before the Dallas City Council this week; an industrial developer took a hit; and I’m trying to figure out why I, a tree-hugger from way back, am not smiling.
The loser of the day was businessman and political consultant Brandon Johnson, on the short end of a narrow vote he needed to build a concrete batch plant in a heavily industrial zone near Walnut Hill Lane and Interstate 35E in northwest Dallas. The winners were advocates for nearby MoneyGram Soccer Park, 120 acres containing 19 soccer fields and a pavilion built with city money 10 years ago.
Not actually having gone to med school, I was nevertheless persuaded by testimony that it’s bad for kids to engage in vigorous athletic activity in a place where they are likely to suck in large amounts of what scientists call inhalable particulate matter — what I would call concrete dust.
So, the vote was no to particulates, yes to kids. So why no smile?
Start with this: The place the city chose for this park 10 years ago was already surrounded by heavy industry. In more recent overarching land-use policy decisions, the city has reaffirmed that this zone, about midway between downtown Dallas and the northwest city limits, is where industry is supposed to go. So putting a 120-acre athletic park smack in the middle of it 10 years ago was a monumentally foolish thing to do, equivalent to installing slides, swings and a merry-go-round in the median of a downtown freeway.
Some advocates for the park found sympathy from some council members this week when they accused the surrounding industrial users of environmental racism. They even suggested the solution must be to run off the industrial users, who possess long-range and even permanent legal permission to be where they are. This would be the equivalent of protecting the kids on the merry-go-round by tearing down the freeway.
In spite of my huggerdom, I always balk and even recoil when I hear a certain narrative stubbornly repeated around town in which industry is painted as a bad thing, an enemy of the people. I’ve lived here more than half of a very long life, but I’m a kid from the Great Lakes region at a time when it was the steaming, bustling industrial hub of the western world. Yeah, a while back.
I grew up among hardworking people who gathered in from around the world to work in those industries. With their good wages they bought new brick houses, sent kids to college and retired with great health care and, believe me, they did not do it by riding merry-go-rounds.
Environmental racism is real, there and here. This city has been witness to despicable cases of environmental racism, as in West Dallas, where noxious polluters were jammed in cheek-by-jowl with poor and mainly minority neighborhoods. Permanent damage was done to generations of children.
That’s a true and terrible story, a sin that cannot be plowed under with the lead-contaminated soil left behind by polluters like the infamous RSR lead smelter, closed in 1984 only after a heroic battle led by citizen activist Mattie Nash.
So how on this good earth could this city government, whose sole ultimate purpose is to protect us, have placed 19 soccer fields in the middle of a legally defined industrial area?
I assume MoneyGram paid good money for those naming rights, but if the park is to stay where it is, then another name would better suit the tradition it represents. In its present location, the park should be renamed RSR Smelter Park.
At the risk of being drummed out of hugger ranks forever, I can’t help pointing out another aspect of this vote: the powerful effect it will have on future location and investment decisions by industry. This is how factories wind up in Mexico.
We ought to be able to agree on this much. We never want kids to breathe in inhalable particulate matter if we can help it. But if we can resolve that problem, then industry is a good thing, not bad.
Industry provides employment, which is even more important than soccer. Employment puts food on the table. No food on the table, no soccer. And industry provides massive support to the tax base. Oh, that — the money to pay for $31 million soccer parks.
Hugger be damned, I just don’t believe the city council did the right thing this week. The right thing would have been for the city to admit its mistake 10 years ago and sell the park to industry, kind of like taking the merry-go-round out of the freeway. Put the money toward building a new soccer park somewhere safer. And name it Mattie Nash Soccer Park.
But did I actually say, “admit its mistake?” Yes, well. There you have it.
Jim Schutze is a longtime Dallas journalist and author of the recent novel “Pontiac.”
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Dallas, TX
Remains of Dallas infant found at Louisiana linen warehouse, police say

The remains of an infant from Dallas were found in Louisiana earlier this week, according to police.
The Shreveport Police Department said officers responded to a call around 5:30 a.m. Tuesday in reference to a body that was found at an Alsco Uniforms building.
Alsco employees told police they initially thought they found a doll wrapped in linens before they realized it was a small child.
According to police, the remains belonged to an infant who was stillborn in Dallas on May 3. The child’s funeral service was held at Golden Gate Funeral Home & Crematory in Dallas on May 17 and was scheduled for cremation.
Police said that the infant’s remains were mistakenly transported along with soiled linens to the Alsco Uniforms facility in Shreveport, about 190 miles east of Dallas.
“This is a deeply distressing situation,” said Shreveport Police Chief Wayne Smith. “Our thoughts are with the family of the child as this investigation unfolds.”
Police said no foul play is suspected and the investigation is ongoing.
The Texas Funeral Service Commission is also investigating.
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