Dallas, TX
Dallas set to exonerate man wrongfully executed for murder 70 years ago
Wednesday is expected to be one of the most significant moments in the history of the Dallas County Commissioners Court: evidence will be presented and a resolution is expected to pass declaring that a man arrested for murder by Dallas Police and later executed in the Texas death chamber was, in fact, innocent of the crime.
What happened to Tommy Lee Walker in 1956 may seem like a long time ago, but it has never been forgotten by many in Dallas’ Black community.
Looking into his eyes in a film from inside a Dallas courtroom, you can only imagine what was going through the mind of Walker.
His unbroken stare into the camera appears to look for reason and fairness that too often didn’t exist in 1956.
The 1956 arrest and execution of Tommy Lee Walker
“The said warden is hereby directed and commanded to pass and cause to be passed through the body of you Tommy Lee Walker, a current of electricity of sufficient intensity to cause the death of you, Tommy Lee Walker,” a judge is heard saying in the film.
A judge sentenced the 21-year-old to death in the electric chair for a murder that overwhelming evidence shows he didn’t commit.
“It’s not difficult to fathom what happened; they grabbed the first ‘Negro’ they saw,” said Dallas County Commissioner John Wiley Price.
Price said that period in the city’s history was scarred by racial injustice.
How hysteria led to a wrongful conviction
It was in Northwest Dallas near Love Field in 1953 when a 31-year-old woman was brutally murdered at night while walking to a bus stop.
There were no witnesses, no evidence left behind, just racial hysteria and unfounded claims that it was committed by a Black man.
“The Klan was basically rampant here,” said Price.
Walker lived across town from the murder scene near a park close to Baylor Hospital.
9 witnesses confirm Walker’s innocence
He was among countless young Black men rounded up for questioning, with some in the white community demanding justice even at the cost of arresting the wrong man.
“That’s kind of what happened here, I guess,” Price said. “From all the evidence that has come to light, that is exactly what happened, and I guess. And you know what, the real travesty of this? Mr. Walker had an alibi.”
Nine people confirmed Walker’s alibi that on the night of the murder, he was with his pregnant girlfriend, who gave birth to their son the next day.
Still, he was arrested 4 months after the crime.
Walker said that after hours of threats and promises, he was coerced into giving a false confession that he immediately tried to recant.
He professed his innocence to the judge after he was convicted and sentenced to death by an all-white jury.
“I feel that I have been tricked out of my life,” Walker said. There’s a lot of other people who have been convicted for crimes they committed and was turned loose. I haven’t did anything, and I’m not being turned loose.”
Walker’s funeral was attended by 5,000 people, and it’s taken 70 years for Dallas to face what, in all likelihood, was a terrible injustice.
“The last thing he said before he was executed was, ‘I’m innocent,’” said Price.
Dallas County commissioners to consider symbolic exoneration
On Wednesday, Price said the Dallas County Commissioners’ Court will have evidence of the case presented during a special meeting and then decide whether to pass a symbolic resolution exonerating a man who paid the ultimate price for being wrongfully accused of murder.
“We think it’s appropriate; we may be the first court in the country to do this. Of course, the community wants this. You can’t move on until you heal that sore that you know is out there,” Price said.
Price said Walker’s now 72-year-old son will be there to hopefully see with his own eyes the justice his father’s eyes seemed to desperately search for but could not find on that day in 1956.
Dallas, TX
Impact: How Jeffery Simmons’ extension could affect Quinnen Williams
What Drake London’s new deal could mean for George Pickens
Falcons WR Drake London is now the NFL’s third-highest paid wide receiver in AAV, signing a four-year, $141 million extension with $100 million guaranteed and $35.26 million per year.
London, who is 25, is the same age as Cowboys wide receiver George Pickens, and both are heading into their fifth seasons in the NFL. Pickens too was seeking a long-term contract, but the Cowboys told him and his representation that would not happen this offseason, and he instead signed his $27.3 million franchise tag that keep shim under contract for the 2026 season.
Pickens’ one-year deal on the tag makes him the 17th highest-paid wide receiver in the league in AAV. Should Pickens go out and post a year similar to his 2025 campaign where he had more than 1,400 receiving yards and nine touchdowns, a deal similar to London’s may be in the ballpark of what Pickens could seek. For reference, CeeDee Lamb is the league’s fifth-highest paid WR at $34 million annually. If Pickens surpasses him and is closer to London’s $35 million per year mark, he and Lamb would become the highest-paid WR duo in NFL history, surpassing the Bengals’ Ja’Marr Chase and Tee Higgins, who currently combine for $69 million per year. – Tommy Yarrish
Dallas, TX
Dallas Man Convicted of Distributing Fentanyl
The Texas Department of Public Safety, the Drug Enforcement Administration, and Garland Police Department conducted the investigation. Assistant U.S. Attorneys Abby Policastro and Marissa Aulbaugh prosecuted the case.
“This verdict should send a clear message to drug dealers that we will dismantle any effort to peddle deadly fentanyl in our community,” said U.S. Attorney Ryan Raybould. “I want to thank our law enforcement partners for their dedicated collaboration in taking thousands of fentanyl pills off the streets of Dallas.”
Dallas, TX
1 Dallas Cowboys Training Camp Battle That Could Make Or Break 2026 Season
If the Dallas Cowboys want to get over the hump and back into the playoffs in 2026, they’ve got to see a massive improvement in the defense.
Owner Jerry Jones was brutally honest with just how much the Cowboys were held back by their defense in 2025, and the numbers very clearly spell that out.
How does a Cowboys team that ranked top 10 in passing, rushing and points on offense still miss the playoffs?
Well, Dallas also ranked 30th in total yards allowed, 32nd in passing yards, 23rd against the run and 32nd in points against, that’s how. That putrid showing rightly cost Matt Eberflus his job, which set the stage for Dallas to hire Christian Parker.
It also set the stage for a total overhaul of the defense, with Dallas making many additions to that side of the ball, including at corner, where the Cowboys were bad on the boundary and in slot last season.
Fow now, we’re more focused on the boundary competition, as the Cowboys appear set to roll with Caleb Downs in the slot.
Cowboys’ CB competition is crucial for 2026
The Cowboys won’t have much hope for a playoff appearance if the cornerback play doesn’t improve. Of the 10 teams that landed in the bottom 10 in passing yards allowed last season, only two of them made the postseason.
Of course, the pass-rush played a part in that, and while Dallas has made multiple additions to that group this offseason, there really aren’t any guarantees with Rashan Gary, Malachi Lawrence or Donovan Ezeiruaku.
If that trio fails to improve a pass-rush that was tied for the seventh-fewest sacks in the NFL in 2025, the cornerbacks become even more crucial.
DaRon Bland and Shavon Revel did not play well in 2025, and while the former appears safe for now when it comes to a starting job on the outside, his leash could be short if he struggles again.
Revel, on the other hand, isn’t locked into a starting job on the boundary and is competing with Durant and Caelen Carson. It’s also worth keeping an eye on who finishes in second in that battle because that player could replace Bland if he struggles or gets hurt again.
There is hope Revel can bounce back now that he’s another year removed from the torn ACL he suffered in his final year in college and can enjoy a full offseason, but we’ll have to see it first before we can believe it.
“It’s very beneficial,” Revel said of having a normal offseason. “Just because I can clean up a lot of things, a lot of errors I didn’t see last year, or I did see last year, that I could clean up this year.”
“My knee is 100%, so now it’s time to focus on situational ball and I’ve got to see what I need to fix or get better at,” Revel added.
When training camp kicks off next month, we’re going to be locked into watching the battle at cornerback because it could very well make or break Dallas’ entire 2026 campaign.
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