Dallas, TX
Women who sued Texas over abortion law share stories in Dallas
Women who sued Texas over abortion law speak
On Monday, three women who sued the state for the right to get an abortion held a panel discussion at the First Unitarian Church of Dallas.
DALLAS – A key issue in the upcoming presidential election centers around abortion and a woman’s right to choose.
Texas is one of several states that have passed a strict abortion ban, with medical exceptions that opponents argue are confusing.
On Monday, three women who sued the state for the right to get an abortion held a panel discussion at the First Unitarian Church of Dallas.
“My babies had a condition where their brains were not developed, and it was 100 percent fatal,” said Hollie Cunningham.
Cunningham, Amanda Zurawksi and Lauren Miller were three of the original plaintiffs in Zurawski v. The State of Texas. The first-of-its-kind legal challenge sought to provide clarity for doctors and patients experiencing medical emergencies in Texas.
The woman participated in a roundtable to share their experience battling for reproductive freedom in Texas.
“The infuriating part is that as we come together and scream louder and louder about these bans, politicians in Texas still aren’t doing anything,” said Miller.
Miller recalled having to fly to Colorado while she was extremely ill.
PREVIOUS COVERAGE: Dallas woman shares abortion story to Congress
Lauren Miller of Dallas shared her story about traveling to Colorado to get an abortion due to Texas’ ban.
She needed an abortion in order to save her twin son’s life.
“We went through security and I remember just staring down at the terrazzo floors at Love Field, rolling my shoulders forward, sucking my stomach in, because I was visibly pregnant at that point, hoping no one would see us and pull us out of line and ask why I was going to Colorado,” she said.
The discussion is part of a national bus tour by the reproductive rights group Free and Just. They call the tour the “Ride to Decide.”
The women say they’re concerned about a potential national abortion ban, depending on who is elected president on November 5th.
“Abortion is healthcare and reproductive rights are human rights,” said Zurawksi.
The stop in Dallas is the first on the tour.
They’re trying to steer clear of politics, but that is tough to do.
“There is an election this year and if this is an issue that speaks to you, that you really care about, educate yourself on the candidates who are pro-choice and show up and vote for them,” said Zurawksi.
The “Ride to Decide” tour is headed to Austin and San Antonio next where local women will continue to share their personal stories in hopes of regaining access to abortion care and reproductive rights.
Dallas, TX
Woman arrested in Dallas food delivery turned ambush shooting in March, officials say
A 31-year-old woman has been arrested in the Dallas food delivery turned ambush in March, where a man was shot moments after opening his door to an order he said he never placed, officials said.
Dallas police said a man was ambushed at his front door on March 1, around 4:15 p.m. in the 1800 block of Sedona Lane. According to the report, a delivery driver walked a bag of food to the front door while a suspect in dark clothing waited just out of sight near the garage. As soon as the door opened, the suspect rushed in and began shooting.
Dallas police said the suspect made the food order to lure the victim to answer the door and shot him. The victim, who has not been identified, was critically injured.
Officials said the suspect has been identified as Marquita Rice, 31. Rice and the victim are known to one another.
On May 26, U.S. Marshals and the Wake Forest Police Department found Rice in Wake Forest, North Carolina. She was arrested and is in custody at the Wake County jail pending extradition to Dallas County. She is charged with aggravated assault – family violence with a deadly weapon.
She is being held on a $1 million bond.
Dallas, TX
Dallas set to vote on potential City Hall renovations
Dallas City Council will vote on potentially renovating City Hall after a vote on redeveloping the building was blocked by a judge on Tuesday. FOX 4’s Lori Brown has more from the residents who showed up to the meeting.
Posted
Dallas, TX
3 Dallas educators among FIFA World Cup volunteers
When the FIFA World Cup kicks off in North Texas on June 11, thousands of volunteers will be working to ensure it all goes well.
Cecilia Nipp, Angel Chinuntdet, and Phoebe Butler will be three of them as host city ambassadors stationed at the FIFA Fan Festival at Fair Park throughout the matches. All three of them are educators at Ursuline Academy in Dallas.
“The whole point is to make the visitors feel welcome to the city and to our area. I’m just so excited that I was picked to be part of it. And I get to do it all with some of these great ladies that I work with,” Chinuntdet said.
Butler agrees, and as she put it, she’s excited about the ‘hype’.
“I just get more hyped being around hyped people,” Butler said.
The three said the in-person interview was fun, but also a little nerve-racking. They considered it an elevator pitch of sorts, proving to local World Cup organizers they were perfect for the job.
“They asked me a lot about myself. It was like a job interview. It was funny, at one point, they even asked me what I would say to someone at the Fan Fest if they asked me where to go eat or what the fun things were to do around town. I, of course, told them about some good barbecue spots. I’m also a huge Argentina fan, so I had to tell them about that, seeing as though they are also coming here [for group stage play],” Butler said.
While Chinuntdet and Butler are getting the opportunity for the first time, this isn’t Nipp’s first rodeo. She was a volunteer at the 1994 World Cup when it was at the Cotton Bowl in Dallas.
“When I found out I had been selected again, I wanted to run up and down the hallways,” Nipp said. “I was just trying not to scream. But yes, I was just so happy.”
She said it’s not just exciting for her, but also for the students at Ursuline, because many of them have a close relationship with the country of Jordan.
“Here at Ursuline, we have a sister school in Jordan. Jordan is coming [in group play], so that’s exciting because we have friends in that country, and so we’re happy for them,” Nipp said.
In addition to the FIFA Fan Festival, other volunteer roles include: Host City Ambassador, Media Operations, Fan Operations, Hospitality, Competition Management, Access Management, Ceremonies, and airport duties.
33,000 people applied before registration closed in September 2025. Then, nearly 12,000 showed up for the tryouts (in-person interviews). From those, a little more than 5,000 official volunteers were sent official offers. The Dallas market has the second-largest number of volunteers of the 16 host cities, only behind New York/New Jersey.
The majority of the volunteers are local, like Nipp, Chinuntdet, and Butler, but according to local World Cup leaders in Dallas, there were some volunteers who were chosen from across the nation and the world.
“We held 91 in-person, role-specific trainings in March with all volunteers,” Dallas FIFA World Cup 2026 Director of Communications Joe Trahan said. “Each person had to attend at least one of those sessions. Each volunteer also went through e-learning training session modules that included subjects about human rights, sustainability, safety, security and how to manage stressful situations.”
Each volunteer has also had the opportunity to attend venue-specific trainings for their assigned roles.
“Each volunteer is required to work a minimum of eight shifts. Generally, the length of shifts is between four and six hours each,” Trahan said.
Dallas Stadium in Arlington will host nine matches featuring the Netherlands, Japan, England, Croatia, Argentina, Austria, and Jordan in group stage play.Dallas Stadium will also host a semi-final match.
-
Lifestyle2 minutes agoWhy the ‘Summer House’ scandal is everywhere : Pop Culture Happy Hour
-
Technology11 minutes agoA warrantless wiretap law is about to expire — but surveillance networks aren’t actually ‘going dark’
-
World18 minutes agoChristian leaders hold emergency summit in Jerusalem to confront global rise in antisemitism
-
Politics21 minutes ago‘Severe’ Pentagon lockdown sparks emergency response as hazmat teams sweep area
-
Health26 minutes agoSecret to weight loss may be hiding in your gut, new study suggests
-
Sports33 minutes agoSeven-time NBA champion Robert Horry advises Caitlin Clark to protect herself on the court
-
Technology36 minutes ago12 biggest Apple WWDC 2026 takeaways you need to know
-
Business41 minutes agoCommentary: The right-wing attack on science reaches a nadir, but it could get worse