Texas
Katy man leads Texas troopers on high speed chase while recording video posted on YouTube

A 23-year-old Katy man is out on bond after he fled from Texas state troopers three completely different occasions, twice at excessive speeds and as soon as on foot.
In Allen Lynch’s most up-to-date pursuit on Feb. 4 on the Katy Freeway, he documented every step of escaping and hiding in a video posted on YouTube.
“You’ve been stopped due to your expired temp tags,” a state trooper is heard saying within the video.
It appeared as a routine site visitors cease, and the state trooper requested him for his license.
“Go forward and step out with me as nicely,” the trooper stated.
However Lynch instantly took off and sped down the Katy Freeway, shortly altering lanes and swerving round different vehicles.
In accordance with DPS, the trooper terminated the pursuit.
“So y’all, I acquired away,” Lynch stated on the YouTube video.
He stored the digicam rolling after he parked and hid out for what he stated was as much as 4 hours.
“They gotta catch me first. They gonna must catch me first, man. I ain’t finna go to jail, ya really feel. I ain’t finna make their job simple,” he stated within the YouTube video. “Their job is to catch us. Our job is it run away.”
DPS wrote on Twitter: “Bragging about evading from Troopers on social media is one approach to get regulation enforcement consideration in Harris County.”
Bragging about evading from Troopers on social media is one approach to get #lawenforcement consideration in Harris County.
Two felonies for evading = authorized hassle.
Fortunately nobody was harm throughout these crimes. pic.twitter.com/CGGMyeWSkY
— TxDPS – Southeast Texas Area (@TxDPSSoutheast) February 10, 2023
Lynch was arrested on Feb. 7 for 2 counts of evading with a automobile and one rely of evading.
State troopers first tried to cease him on Sept. 2 as a result of his short-term plates have been folded up and couldn’t be learn, in keeping with courtroom paperwork. Troopers reported smelling marijuana after they walked as much as his automobile. When requested to exit the automobile, he sped off then, too, in keeping with paperwork. That pursuit reached speeds of 120 miles per hour however was terminated.
When state troopers re-located him on Sept. 7, he ran away on foot. State troopers have been capable of totally see the short-term tag, however after they ran it, there was no return, “indicating that it might be fraudulent,” paperwork state.
“That’s just like the third time they tried me bro, they preserve making an attempt me,” Lynch stated within the YouTube video of the Feb. 4 chase.
Lynch additionally confirmed tire harm to his Impala after the Feb. 4 chase within the YouTube video.
“So I made it again house,” he later stated within the video from a mattress. “No person attempt none of that stuff at house, trigger it’s not secure.”
Court docket data present a choose set his bond at $20,000, which he posted on Feb. 10.
Extra fees might be filed, in keeping with DPS.
Copyright 2023 by KPRC Click2Houston – All rights reserved.

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Texas
Bill that would have banned Texas minors from social media misses key deadline
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A bill that would have banned minors from having a social media account has missed a deadline to pass in the Texas Senate.
House Bill 186, filed by Rep. Jared Patterson, R-Frisco, sailed through the House 116-25 in May, but never received a vote in the Senate several days after a slew of teenagers spoke against it during a Senate committee hearing. The contents of the bill could still be attached to another as an amendment or as part of a budget stipulation, but it is unlikely this late into the legislative session, which ends Monday.
The proposal, the most far-reaching of the bills filed to address online dangers this session, would prohibit minors from creating accounts on social media sites, such as Twitter, TikTok, Facebook, Snapchat and more, and require users to verify their ages. Companies would have to comply with the ban by April 2026.
The bill would also allow parents to request the deletion of their child’s existing social media account, and a company must comply within 10 days.
The potential failure of the social media ban for minors comes as a surprise, considering Texas lawmakers have made regulating social media a priority this legislative session.
Gov. Greg Abbott has already signed Senate Bill 2420, which restricts children from downloading apps, into law and emphasized his support of protecting children’s online presence.
“Safety and online privacy for Texas children remains a priority for Governor Abbott, which is why he signed SB 2420 into law. Texas will empower parents to have more control over the online content their children can access,” said Andrew Mahaleris, his press secretary, when asked about Abbott’s support of HB 186.
Under HB 186, any website that allows users to curate and create content is considered a social media website and is cut off from minors. News and sports websites will be safe.
Lawmakers are also considering House Bill 499, by Rep. Mary González, D-Clint, which would require social media platforms to have a warning label about the association between a minor’s social media usage and significant mental health issues.
As of June 2024, 10 states, including Texas, have passed laws restricting children’s access to social media, according to the Age Verification Providers Association.
Studies show that 95% of youth aged 13 to 17 report using social media, with more than a third stating they use social media “almost constantly.”
Two years ago, the American Federation of Teachers and the American Psychological Association, among other national organizations, called out social media platforms for undermining classroom learning, increasing costs for school systems, and being a “root cause” of the nationwide youth mental health crisis.
Several social media platforms and application management companies have noted that the state’s measures to protect children are too far-reaching and will have an impact beyond their intended scope.
An Apple spokesperson said that while they share the goal of strengthening kids’ online safety, the current proposals coming out of Texas will require them to retain sensitive, personally identifiable information for every Texan who wants to download an app.
Most social media platforms and online applications ask for age verification before signing up, but Texas is looking for more intensive measures, according to the Age Verification Providers Association, such as requiring a license or outright banning minors until they can prove they are older than 16 or 18.
Congress is considering the Kids Online Safety Act, which does not require app marketplaces to collect and keep sensitive data, such as passports or driver’s licenses, from all users to verify age. Apple supports the federal legislation’s approach over Texas’.
The outright ban on social media for minors has also garnered criticism from many on social media, including prominent conservative accounts such as Ian Miles Cheong, Laura Loomer, and Libs of TikTok, who have denounced the bill for excluding video games from the ban completely and for leaving a loophole open for video applications like YouTube and TikTok due to the bill’s wording.
“Let people parent their children how they see fit. Parents are more than capable of controlling their children’s screen time. Stop nanny state legislation. This is what Democrats do, not Republicans,” said Loomer in a post on X, formerly known as Twitter.
The social media ban, even if passed via another bill, is expected to face challenges in court, as some argue that it violates the First Amendment.
“It’s going too far. It’s sweeping adult speech into it without realizing that by adding an unnecessary hurdle, it affects everyone,” said Kathleen Farley, a First Amendment lawyer for the Washington, D.C.-based Chamber of Progress.
She said that, just like video games, social media, and online applications already have a voluntary ratings system that parents can access before any minor can access a website or application, and anything more stringent is usually considered too broad a restriction for the courts.
“I think all of this shows a need for people to be better educated on the current parental controls that exist in app stores. There are already ratings and ways to prevent children from downloading certain apps,” she said. “The fact that this legislation is being pushed is either that people don’t know about it, or it’s too hard to use.”
Disclosure: Apple and Facebook have been financial supporters of The Texas Tribune, a nonprofit, nonpartisan news organization that is funded in part by donations from members, foundations and corporate sponsors. Financial supporters play no role in the Tribune’s journalism. Find a complete list of them here.
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Texas
Apple hits back at Texas online safety law: ‘Better proposals’

Apple has criticized a Texas bill mandating age verification for app store users, insisting that “better proposals” exist to protect children online.
Texas Governor Greg Abbott signed the bill into law on Tuesday, requiring Apple and Google to verify the ages of app store users and obtain parental consent for minors to download apps or make in-app purchases.
Why It Matters
Over 80 percent of Americans support parental consent for minors who want to create a social media account, according to a 2023 Pew Research poll, and more than 70 percent back age verification before use of social media.
In June 2024, Surgeon General Vivek H. Murthy, who had regularly cautioned that excessive social media use among adolescents was linked to a higher risk of anxiety, depression, and body image issues, urged Congress to mandate warning labels on such platforms, alerting users to the potential mental health risks associated with them.
What To Know
Apple and Google, which own the two largest app stores in the U.S, had opposed the bill before it was signed, arguing that the law would require widespread data collection, even from Texans downloading non-sensitive apps that concern the weather or sports scores.
“If enacted, app marketplaces will be required to collect and keep sensitive personal identifying information for every Texan who wants to download an app, even if it’s an app that simply provides weather updates or sports scores,” Apple said in an official statement, according to Reuters.
Meta, which owns Facebook and Instagram, had argued that implementing age restrictions should occur at the app store level instead of in each app.
Getty Images
Apple and Alphabet, Google’s parent company, have recommended alternative solutions, such as providing age-range data only to apps that pose risks, rather than to every app accessed by a user.
Texas follows Utah, which passed a similar law earlier this year. At the federal level, the proposed Kids Online Safety Act (KOSA) advanced in the U.S. Senate but has stalled in the House.
Florida has also taken action against large tech companies over children accessing their sites, with the state suing Snapchat for failing to prevent kids under 13 from accessing harmful content.
What People Are Saying
Apple said in a statement: “If enacted, app marketplaces will be required to collect and keep sensitive personal identifying information for every Texan who wants to download an app, even if it’s an app that simply provides weather updates or sports scores.”
In 2024, Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg said during a U.S. Senate hearing that parents should not “have to upload an ID or proof they are a parent in every single app that their children use. The easier place to do this is in the app stores themselves.”
Casey Stefanski, Executive Director, Digital Childhood Alliance, said: “The problem is that self-regulation in the digital marketplace has failed, where app stores have just prioritized the profit over safety and rights of children and families.”
What Happens Next
The Texas law will take effect on January 1, 2026. Another pending Texas bill would prohibit social media usage by anyone under 18, though it has not yet passed the state legislature.
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