Texas
2022-23 Central Texas high school football highlights, scores: Week 6
AUSTIN, Texas – Highschool soccer season is in full swing within the Austin space!
Under you will discover an entire rundown of Central Texas highschool soccer highlights and scores from Week 6 of the 2022-23 season.
Bowie Bulldogs take down Austin Excessive Maroons
Georgetown bounces again towards Hendrickson after shedding district opener
Thursday, Sept. 29
LASA 0
Crockett 63
Connally 28
Rouse 48
Bowie 51
Austin Excessive 14
Georgetown 70
Hendrickson 28
Navarro 44
Eastside Memorial 6
Texas
Student, 18, killed after being shot multiple times outside Texas high school, suspect in custody: officials
An 18-year-old student is dead after being shot five to six times by another student outside Bowie High School in Texas.
In a press conference, Arlington Police Chief Al Jones and Arlington ISD Superintendent Dr. Matt Smith said that the shooting happened at the local public school around 2:50 p.m. Wednesday near a portable building outside.
The school was placed on lockdown just as students were about to be let out for the day.
When School Resource Officers arrived at the scene, they found the 18-year-old male student lying unresponsive on the ground with apparent gunshot wounds.
The student was immediately taken to a nearby hospital, but died while at the hospital.
Officers say the 17-year-old suspected shooter tried to run away from the school, but police found him near the campus and arrested him. He will be charged with murder once he is booked into Arlington City Jail, police said.
Families were told to reunite with their kids at a district building miles away from the campus hours after the shooting occurred.
Arlington police said they will share more information about the incident when it becomes available.
Chief Jones said the community “cannot tolerate this kind of violence.”
“Our hearts are with the entire Bowie High School community tonight,” Jones said. “We, as a community, cannot tolerate this kind of violence. Not in our neighborhoods and not in our schools. Violence is never the right answer. We will continue to work in lockstep with our partners at Arlington ISD to ensure our schools are safe spaces where students can learn.”
In a statement, Dallas ISD shared their condolences with the school district.
“Our deepest condolences to Bowie High School and the Arlington ISD community,” Dallas ISD said. “Sending thoughts, prayers, and heartfelt support during this difficult time.”
Texas
Tarrant County DA wants Crystal Mason’s illegal voting conviction reinstated
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Tarrant County District Attorney Phil Sorrells wants Crystal Mason’s illegal voting conviction reinstated, his office announced Thursday.
Mason, a Tarrant County resident, was acquitted of an illegal voting charge last month. Sorrells’ office is now asking the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals to overturn the ruling that cleared her.
Mason was convicted of illegal voting in March 2018 and sentenced to five years in prison for casting a provisional ballot in the 2016 election while on supervised release for federal tax evasion.
“This office will protect the ballot box from fraudsters who think our laws don’t apply to them,” Sorrells’ office said in a statement.
The office argues the Second Court of Appeals did not give proper deference to the trial court’s guilty verdict and reweighed the evidence in favor of Mason when it overturned her conviction.
Sorrells’ office adds Mason was fairly convicted based on testimony from election staff that she understood she was not eligible to vote.
Mason has maintained she did not know she was ineligible to vote.
“It is disappointing that the state has chosen to request further review of Ms. Mason’s case, but we are confident that justice will ultimately prevail,” Tommy Buser-Clancy, senior staff attorney at the ACLU of Texas, said in a statement. “The court of appeals’ decision was well reasoned and correct. It is time to give Ms. Mason peace with her family.”
Though it had initially upheld her conviction, the Tarrant County-based Second Court of Appeals overturned it last month after the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals instructed the lower court to “evaluate the sufficiency” of the evidence against Mason.
Initially, the court found that Mason’s alleged knowledge that she was on supervised release, and therefore ineligible to vote, was sufficient for an illegal voting conviction. But in instructing it to reevaluate the case, the Texas Court of Criminal Appeal ruled the lower court “erred by failing to require proof that [Mason] had actual knowledge that it was a crime for her to vote while on supervised release.”
The yearslong saga began in 2016 when Mason,on advice from a poll worker, submitted a provisional ballot during that year’s presidential election after she discovered her name was not on the voter roll.
Her ballot was rejected because she was not eligible to participate in elections while still on supervised release for a federal tax fraud conviction. She was arrested a few months later.
The case against Mason hinged on an affidavit she signed before casting her provisional ballot that required individuals to swear that “if a felon, I have completed all my punishment including any term of incarceration, parole, supervision, period of probation, or I have been pardoned.”
A trial court judge convicted her of illegally voting, a second-degree state felony at the time, after a poll worker testified he watched Mason read, and run her finger along, each line of an affidavit. Mason, however, said she did not read the entire affidavit. At trial, a supervisor from the probation office overseeing her release testified that no one from that office had informed her she was still ineligible to vote.
In its 2022 ruling instructing the lower appellate court to reevaluate the case, the Court of Criminal Appeals held that Texas election law requires individuals to know they are ineligible to vote to be convicted of illegal voting. The law had been clarified by lawmakers in 2021 with additions to the election code stating Texans may not be convicted of voting illegally “solely upon the fact that the person signed a provisional ballot,” and instead required other evidence to corroborate they knowingly tried to cast an unlawful vote.
Tickets are on sale now for the 2024 Texas Tribune Festival, happening in downtown Austin Sept. 5-7. Get your TribFest tickets before May 1 and save big!
Texas
Humid, cloudy Thursday ahead of stormy weekend in North Texas
NORTH TEXAS — We’re tracking more showers and storms, even for your weekend.
As we move through your Thursday, expect mostly cloudy skies in North Texas. A few isolated showers and storms are possible, but most areas will remain dry for much of this day. It will be warm and breezy with high temperatures in the upper 70s and lower 80s.
Then, late tonight, heads up. A few strong to severe storms are possible overnight into Friday.
In fact, Friday is a Weather Alert. We’re tracking a few strong to severe storms in parts of North Texas Friday morning into the afternoon. Storms that develop could produce large hail and damaging winds. An isolated tornado cannot be ruled out. We’ll watch the storms closely.
Otherwise, expect mostly cloudy skies Friday. It will be warm and windy with highs in the lower 80s.
Let’s stay weather aware this weekend. We’re tracking several round of showers and storms, some of which could be strong to severe.
If you have any outdoor plans on Saturday, pay attention to the forecast. Scattered showers and storms are in the forecast, especially by afternoon. However, the highest storm chances will arrive Saturday evening and night into Sunday. Storms that develop could again produce large hail, damaging winds and even an isolated tornado.
High temperatures will be in the low 80s this weekend.
An isolated shower or storm is possible on Monday. Highs will be in the mid 80s.
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