Texas
Judge Jack’s removal from Texas foster care case hurts kids
This month, the full 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals upheld its decision to remove U.S. District Judge Janis Graham Jack from a 14-year lawsuit against the Texas foster care system. The refusal to rehear the case also threw out Jack’s most recent finding of contempt against the state agencies involved.
It was an unfortunate outcome. Jack has been resolute and effective. Her orders prodded the state to spend more than $150 million reforming the foster care system — and the system has improved.
The original lawsuit was filed in 2011 on behalf of children stranded in the state’s foster care system. It named the governor and the chief executives of the Health and Human Services Commission and Department of Family and Protective Services as defendants.
As the case progressed, it revealed dire problems with investigations, placements, providers, staffing and caseloads. It also revealed the state’s recalcitrance toward court oversight, which occasionally drew Jack’s ire.
In its ruling, the 5th Circuit cited snippets of Jack’s courtroom remarks as proof that she was no longer impartial and should be removed from the case. In a strongly worded dissent filed Feb. 11, Judge Stephen A. Higginson disagreed.
“I worry that we have concluded, from Judge Jack’s assiduous effort in the face of structural friction and intense factual complexity … that Judge Jack is not suited to preside over this case for precisely the reasons that she is suited to preside over this case.”
He also argued that, while the foster system had improved, one group of children still needs the court’s diligent protection. These youngsters are in permanent managing conservatorship; they will never be reunited with their families. They have intellectual and developmental disabilities, often are medically fragile and are exceptionally vulnerable to abuse and neglect.
His concerns were validated in the court monitors’ most recent report about deaths among these foster children. One case, involving an 11-year-old child with autism, is horrifying.
The boy, identified as O.R., had been placed in a residential treatment center in Greenville with a decade-plus history of serious violations. O.R. died during an outing with 19 other residents of the center to see the R-rated action movie Gladiator II.
Staff claimed the boy had been fine and walked into the movie theater on his own. However, law enforcement officers reviewed the theater’s security video and saw that the boy had been unable to walk unassisted, fell to the ground beside the ticket counter and had to be half-carried to a seat. He was dead by the time the movie was over.
Treatment center residents told investigators the boy had been screaming in pain that morning, hadn’t eaten any meals and had slept most of the day. A preliminary medical examiner’s report revealed the boy had a twisted intestine that had caused a bowel obstruction, a serious medical emergency.
O.R. was one of the foster children Jack worked to protect. We hope the next jurist assigned the case is as relentless in that effort as she has been.
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Texas
Sweep in the heart of Texas: Twins beat Rangers again
A day off at the pool — and a little sunburn — didn’t stop the Minnesota Twins’ momentum.
Brooks Lee hit a three-run homer as Minnesota scored multiple runs in the first inning for the third consecutive game, and the Twins went on to complete a series sweep of the Texas Rangers with a 9-3 win Thursday.
Minnesota has won four games in a row and scored 25 runs in the three-games series in Texas. The two teams had a rare, mid-series day off on Wednesday with the England-Croatia World Cup game being played in Arlington.
“We’re locked in every day,” Lee told Audra Martin on the team’s broadcast. “Yesterday, taking time off, lay out by the pool, get a little burnt and then right back to it. We did a good job getting focused. I feel like we do that with rain delays, too, just lock back in and we’re doing it.”
Lee’s 12th homer capped a four-run first off Jack Leiter (3-7). Trevor Larnach made it 6-0 in the fourth with a two-run shot to straightaway center that just cleared the extended glove of leaping Alejandro Osuna. Larnach’s third hit was an RBI single in the fifth, and Ryan Kriedler hit a two-run homer in the eighth.
Joe Ryan (5-3) struck out seven but needed 97 pitches to get through five scoreless innings while allowing three singles. Leiter was done after the fourth, and has given up 17 runs while losing three starts in a row.
The Twins never trailed in the sweep that extended their winning streak to four, matching their longest this season. Their 14-5 record at Globe Life Field is the best for any American League opponent since the ballpark opened in 2020.
Wyatt Langford, Ezequiel Duran and Justin Foscue hit solo homers for the Rangers, who have lost five of six games. They are 0-15 when giving up multiple runs in the first inning.
Twins DH Josh Bell, who was born in nearby Irving and grew up in the area, had an RBI single before Lee’s homer. Bell hit a three-run homer in the first inning of the series-opening 4-2 win Monday, and had an RBI single for a 2-0 lead in the first of a 12-2 win on Tuesday.
“We’re just passing the baton each time,” Lee said of the offensive output. “Our guys are hot. They feel good and they came out swinging today. It was awesome to see. We’ve done that for a while now.”
Up next
Twins rookie left-hander Connor Prielipp (2-4, 5.26 ERA) starts Friday at Arizona. The Diamondbacks are scheduled to start right-hander Michael Soroka (8-3, 3.11).
Texas
Tornadoes ripped through cities, Tropical Storm Arthur floods parts of Texas and Louisiana
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Texas
DPS trooper killed in Texas Panhandle crash, agency says
A Texas state trooper was killed in a crash in the Panhandle, becoming the 244th Texas Department of Public Safety officer to die in the line of duty since 1823, according to the agency.
Sergio Romero, 27, died Wednesday after a semi-truck pulled in front of him as he attempted a traffic stop around 4 p.m. on U.S. 287 in Childress County, DPS said.
In a statement, Col. Freeman F. Martin praised Romero’s courage, integrity, and service.
“Today, we grieve the loss of one of our own,” Martin said. “… Our hearts break alongside his family, friends, fellow troopers, and all who loved him. We will never forget the ultimate sacrifice he made in service of his fellow Texans.”
Romero previously served with the Hall County Sheriff’s Office before joining DPS as part of Class B-2025 in Childress, the agency said.
He is survived by his wife, Francisca, and their two young sons.
Funeral arrangements are pending. The crash remains under investigation.
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