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Pint-sized point guard Rori Harmon is Texas Longhorns’ heart and soul

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Pint-sized point guard Rori Harmon is Texas Longhorns’ heart and soul


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AUSTIN, TX —  Rori Harmon spent all of the fourth quarter in an unusual spot, on the bench. Her Texas Longhorns were putting the finishing touches on a blowout win in the second round of the NCAA Tournament, so Harmon sat for the better art of nine minutes.

But then, head coach Vic Schaefer summoned Harmon back to the scorer’s table with less than one minute remaining.

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Harmon went in for an encore to deafening applause. When the beloved senior point guard subbed out again a few seconds later, she and Schaefer held each other in a long embrace.

In her final home game at Moody Center, Harmon had nine points, six assists and five steals in Texas’ 100-58 win against Oregon, which guaranteed the Longhorns their fifth trip to the Sweet 16 in the last six seasons. They will play next week in Fort Worth, but Sunday was Harmon’s swan song in Austin.

After the final buzzer, the player who defines this era of Texas basketball clutched a microphone at center court and bid the crowd farewell. Fans chanted her name before she could speak.

“I hope to see y’all in Fort Worth,” said Harmon, whose Longhorns will play the winner of No. 5 seed Kentucky vs. No. 4 West Virginia in Fort Worth on Saturday. “Thank you so much. Hook ‘em! I love you guys!”

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When Schaefer was at Mississippi State, he maxed out his use of the school’s charter plane on multiple trips from Starkville, Mississippi, to Houston to recruit Harmon. His effort proved worthwhile as Harmon has become the cornerstone of Schaefer’s first recruiting class at Texas and, in the last five seasons, the heart and soul of the Longhorns’ program – not just because of what she does on the court, but because of who she is off it.

The diminutive point guard plays and leads with Texas-sized conviction, a resolve strengthened through adversity. After two stellar college seasons, Harmon tore the ACL in her right knee and was sidelined for a year and a half. The injury nearly broke her emotionally but, in the end, gave her a reason to demand even more from herself.

When Harmon returned to the court for the 2024-25 season, it was with a new perspective that deepened her commitment to her team and allowed her to lead with vulnerability.

“When you go through something as traumatic as that where it takes you out of the game for a really long time, you become more grateful about things,” she said. “You really just want to enjoy the process. I know wins are a lot and very important, wins and losses are very important, but at that moment I just really wanted to come back and enjoy playing with my teammates again.”

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Harmon will leave Texas as the program’s all-time leader in career assists and steals after she broke a pair of 40-year-old school records this season. Her 952 career assists (and counting) rank her 10th all-time in Division I history. She is only Division I player to reach 1,500-plus points, 900-plus assists, 600-plus rebounds and 350-plus steals. Legendary Texas coach Jody Conradt attended Harmon’s final postgame press conference at Moody Center following Sunday’s win.

Harmon’s last rodeo is coming, but she cannot indulge in nostalgia just yet. Not while her quest to win a national championship remains alive.

“I’ve been through a lot here at the University of Texas. I’ve seen plenty of different teams come and go here at this program for women’s basketball, but to win a national championship would really be the icing on top of the cake,” Harmon said. “It would be a surreal feeling, I’m sure, when all your work that you’ve done from your freshman year to now pretty much all paid off.”

The Longhorns got devastatingly close last season, when they made the NCAA Tournament as a No. 1 seed but lost in the Final Four to No. 2 seed South Carolina, the eventual national runner-up.

Texas was awarded a No. 1 seed again in this season’s tournament, and Longhorns players are determined there will be no distractions or regrets. They all remember the feeling of falling short last year. They are playing with an edge sharpened by a singular focus.

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“The edge comes from Rori Harmon,” Schaefer said. “She isn’t ready for it to be over.”

‘She’s our glue’

When Schaefer thinks about how to summarize Rori Harmon, he comes up with the word “reliable.”

No matter the situation or opponent, the Longhorns can count on Harmon to show up with the same defensive toughness and competitive spirit. Twelve games into her junior year, Harmon’s tore her right ACL and threatened to derail that consistency.

“I remember her asking me, ‘Why did this happen?’” recalled Rori’s father, Rodney Harmon. “But I told her, ‘If you come back, you can be a testimony for other people.’”

Following surgery on her knee, Harmon rehabbed for the better part of a year and missed the entire 2023-24 season. The Longhorns gave the starting point guard role to then-freshman Madison Booker, who had never played the position, while Harmon coached from the sideline.

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That adversity accelerated Harmon’s growth as a leader, said Texas associate head coach Elena Lovato.

“That part of her journey is going to be the true game-changer for her,” Lovato said. “It was really cool to see how she didn’t really stay stuck in her own feelings. Right after surgery, she had already turned the page and she was worried about helping Booker navigate being a point guard for Coach Schaefer.

“So I think Booker being a freshman and being thrown in that fire enabled Rori to see things from another perspective and I think that kind of escalated her growth in that leadership role.”

Lovato, who helped Schaefer recruit Harmon at both Mississippi State and Texas, said while Harmon always possessed an intricate understanding of basketball, her breakthrough occurred when she improved her communication with teammates off the court.   

This season’s Longhorns team is incredibly close because players let their guards down around each other. Lovato attributes that in large part to Harmon, who she said became more of an open book following her ACL injury.

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“Building trust and relationships with her teammates, it’s kind of helped her have an even larger voice, not only on the floor but managing egos in the locker room and all that,” Lovato said. “I think she has so much to offer because she did have such a high basketball IQ, but people don’t care what you know until they know that you care.”

Leadership to Harmon means holding herself and her teammates accountable while setting the tone with her energy and consistency. She’s had that responsibility since she was a freshman point guard on the varsity team at Cypress Creek High School, but she’s not a naturally outspoken person. It comes easier to her now at 23 than it did when she was 18.  

“I’ve always been able to lead by example throughout my whole life because I was always very disciplined and I worked hard in everything that I did,” Harmon said. “But at some point, I had to realize I had to start speaking more and not just showing and leading by example.”  

Sometimes, that’s challenging her teammates, like when she piped up during a film session this season to remind the Longhorns the program’s standard for defense is to hold opponents below 60 points. Often, it’s reading her teammates’ emotions and offering them whatever encouragement they need in that moment.

When Texas center Kyla Oldacre transferred into the program from Miami prior to the 2024-25 season, she expected Harmon to be like some of the other top players she’d encountered: stuck-up and egotistical. That couldn’t have been further from reality.

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“She’s such a huge leader in how she carries herself and carries everyone,” Oldacre said. “I call her a sister. She just goes through each individual and lifts them up, and we can lift her up. Even just how she brings us together, she’s our glue, basically.”

Harmon’s lasting legacy at Texas

Harmon’s teammates call her “The Menace” because she’s such a pest on defense. Her playing style has endeared her to Longhorns fans and coaches, and even to members of opposing teams.

“You can’t help but love her, really,” Oregon coach Kelly Graves said the day before his team lost to Texas in the NCAA Tournament. “She’s the one that makes ’em go. I think they are who they are because of her in large fashion. You’re always on attack with her, at both ends of the floor. For 94 feet, you’re on attack. She’s either in your shorts defensively or she’s looking to attack and create for others.”

When Harmon was barely old enough to read and write, she begged her father to let her dribble a basketball up and down the driveway with her brother, who was three years older. She modeled her game after Allen Iverson because she admired how he used his speed to counter being undersized. Whether Harmon played a good game or a bad game, she always woke up the next morning itching to get back on the court.

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“I’m not running away from it – the pressure, mistakes,” Harmon said. “I’m not necessarily afraid of failure. Like obviously I don’t want to fail, but I’m not afraid to fail, because I know there’s plenty of opportunities to try again and do better.”

Her Texas teammates shake their heads at how Harmon scrutinizes her own play during practices and film sessions. She isn’t trying to be harsh, just objectively analytical, but sometimes it comes across like Beethoven criticizing his symphonies.

“We watch film from last year and she’ll be like, ‘Oh my gosh, how did y’all tolerate me? I was so slow last year,’” Texas forward Justice Carlton said. “I’m like, uh, not to me. The standard that she has for herself is just insane.”

To Harmon, the explanation is simple: She hates losing more than she loves winning. She’s felt that way since she first picked up a basketball at age 4, which is why she is so disciplined in her preparation and why she plays so hard.

Schaefer often tells his players, “Play with emotion, but don’t play emotional.” While Harmon will celebrate a teammate’s play when she is on the bench, she rarely reacts when she’s on the court. She believes that when she keeps her composure, it permeates the rest of the team.

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“It’s good to have a high standard,” Harmon said. “That’s what makes players great, is when they’re hard on themselves. The growth that comes with that is how you respond to your own mistakes, and I think I’ve responded really well.”

Harmon is so entwined with Texas women’s basketball that it’s difficult to imagine one’s future without the other, but time keeps ticking whether counted in 30-second shot clock possessions or by another measure.   

The Longhorns are set up for continued success next season with returning players including three-time All-American Booker and rising star Aaliyah Crump, as well as an incoming recruiting class ranked No. 1 in the nation.

Harmon has a shot to be selected in the 2026 WNBA Draft on April 13. The Longhorns haven’t had a player drafted since 2021, when Charli Collier was taken by the Dallas Wings as the No. 1 overall pick.

Harmon and her family will carry an everlasting appreciation for the Texas teammates, coaches, fans and administrators who stuck by her through times challenging and triumphant.

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“They have made us feel like this was home,” Rodney Harmon said. “It’s going to be sad to move to the next level. It’ll be sad to leave them, but I’m not sad to go where I think she’s going to be going.”

In one of Schaefer’s first recruiting phone conversations with Rori Harmon nearly 10 years ago, he told her, “I want you to be able to leave a legacy here.”

“That’s honestly stuck with me every single day,” Harmon said. “And my loyalty remains here and to him, so I’m super grateful I play with so many great teams along the (way). I feel like we got better each year.”

On the heels of scoring a Texas NCAA Tournament record 40 points against Oregon, Booker said that meeting Harmon solidified her decision to commit to Texas.

“I wanted to play with a good point guard, and that was Rori Harmon,” Booker said. “I didn’t realize what hard work was until I’d seen Rori Harmon in the gym every day before practice, after practice, getting shots up. I feel like she’s pushed me and I think our journey here together is just a sisterhood. I have her back, she has my back for sure. I’m going to miss playing with her.”

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Harmon will leave Texas as one of the most decorated players in program history, and said she hopes her legacy also includes how she treated people and how hard she competed.

Adding a national championship would make it even sweeter, she acknowledged, but not just for her.

“You don’t necessarily do this stuff for yourself, you know?” Harmon said. “You do things for other people. You do it for your team. You do it for the program. You do it for your coaches who work hard. You do it for your head coach who barely gets sleep to get us prepared to win games.”

There are more sleepless nights ahead. The clock has not run out on Harmon’s career just yet, and she’s prepared to soak in every last second.



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Can data center project help Texas town pay for repairs?

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Can data center project help Texas town pay for repairs?

The Waco Bridge is a nonprofit local news organization supported by The Texas Tribune, reporting on Waco government, education and community. Sign up for the Bridge’s free newsletter here.

Audio recording is automated for accessibility. Humans wrote and edited the story. See our AI policy, and give us feedback.

Jim Wallingsford drove his white Chevy truck one morning last month down North Walnut Street in Lacy Lakeview, dodging potholes on his way to inspect a repair project on a sewer lift station.

As public works director for this Waco suburb of 8,000 residents, Wallingsford is always triaging the city’s needs: Cracked and cratered streets, aging pipes and pump stations and the old water tower, which needs a $1 million facelift.

The Connally Lift Station under repair on April 16. The lift station pumps sewage from deeper underground to a higher elevation. “You know the shape that our streets are in, our water and sewer mains are in the same shape. We replace when we can and repair when we have to,” Wallingsford said. Justin Hamel/The Waco Bridge/CatchLight Local/Report for America

“I want to be a good steward of the City of Lacy Lakeview with the money I’m given to spend,” he said. “So I give everything a weighted scale and I base it off of the likelihood and consequences of failure.”

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Out of two water towers in Lacy Lakeview, this one needs significant repairs, including a new catwalk and paint. In the meantime Wallingsford said “I wouldn’t send anyone up there.”
Out of two water towers in Lacy Lakeview, this one needs significant repairs, including a new catwalk and paint. In the meantime Wallingsford said “I wouldn’t send anyone up there.” Justin Hamel/The Waco Bridge/CatchLight Local/Report for America

Lacy Lakeview, population 8,000, is typical of many small Texas towns that lack the resources to keep up with streets and pipes that are wearing out. Most of that infrastructure in Lacy Lakeview was installed more than 50 years ago. And the longer maintenance is deferred, the faster it deteriorates.

Water from the City of Waco is pumped into the storage tank on the right, before being pressurized with compressed air from the smaller tank, and pumped into the Lacy Lakeview’s water system.
Water from the City of Waco is pumped into the storage tank on the right, before being pressurized with compressed air from the smaller tank, and pumped into the Lacy Lakeview’s water system. Justin Hamel/The Waco Bridge/CatchLight Local/Report for America

Mayor Chuck Wilson has pointed to the city’s maintenance backlog to justify the pursuit of a data center. He wants to partner with Infrakey to develop and annex a proposed $10 billion data center north of town near Ross.

That development represents tax base that would increase Lacy Lakeview’s tax base enough to increase city tax revenues from $6.5 million to $50 million a year. But the project has drawn a backlash from neighbors of the Infrakey site, as well as from some Lacy Lakeview residents, who just elected data center opponent Amy Gage to the City Council.

Cars often crash into raised manhole covers along Route 77 in Lacy Lakeview. The city would replace or relocate the manholes with additional tax revenue from the proposed Infrakey data center.
Cars often crash into raised manhole covers along Route 77 in Lacy Lakeview. The city would replace or relocate the manholes with additional tax revenue from the proposed Infrakey data center. Justin Hamel/The Waco Bridge/CatchLight Local/Report for America

As Wallingsford sees it, the city needs new development, or the existing taxpayer and utility ratepayers will be on the hook for improvements.

“Everything that we purchase is going up, literally,” he said. “The only other solution is that we have to have a rate increase just to be able to keep up.”

Wallingsford said a dump truck will be the first pieces of equipment replaced once more funding is secured. “We’re going to have to get at least one dump truck,” Wallingsford said. “ I’d like to get two in this next year’s budget because, you know, these dump trucks are 25 years old.” The current maintenance outweighs the cost of the current fleet.
Wallingsford said a dump truck will be the first pieces of equipment replaced once more funding is secured. “We’re going to have to get at least one dump truck,” Wallingsford said. “ I’d like to get two in this next year’s budget because, you know, these dump trucks are 25 years old.” The current maintenance outweighs the cost of the current fleet. Justin Hamel/The Waco Bridge/CatchLight Local/Report for America

Wallingsford stopped his truck at the Meyers water pump station, which was under repair after it was observed to be leaking.

“The consequence of them failing is pretty high but their issues aren’t critical and they continue to operate,” he said. “The city only needs one pump to operate and we have three, so there’s a backup.

The Meyers Pump Station in Lacy Lakeview is outdated and in need of upgrade as of April 16. The pumps leak, even when they aren’t running.
The Meyers Pump Station in Lacy Lakeview is outdated and in need of upgrade as of April 16. The pumps leak, even when they aren’t running. Justin Hamel/The Waco Bridge/CatchLight Local/Report for America

“At the end of the day when something fails, we go back and work off of the plan.”

Wallingsford, a former city of Waco staffer, said utility infrastructure like this typically has a 50-year lifespan, and the ideal practice in public works is to set aside 2% of the system’s cost each year for replacement.

“I haven’t worked for a city that’s ever done that,” he said.

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Even more visible is the wear and tear on Lacy Lakeview’s 30 miles of city streets. Asked which ones need to be repaved, he didn’t hesitate.

“All of them,” he said. “They all need to be done. I’d say we have about 15 critical streets” that need to be repaved.

South Barbara Street is the first street on the list to be repaired in Lacy Lakeview in 2026. The city currently has a 30-mile backlog of streets that need significant work.
South Barbara Street is the first street on the list to be repaired in Lacy Lakeview in 2026. The city currently has a 30-mile backlog of streets that need significant work. Justin Hamel/The Waco Bridge/CatchLight Local/Report for America
A view down Avenue B at its intersection with South Barbara Street shows the contrast of before and after. Avenue B was rehabilitated last year using the city’s “zipper” recycling machine, while South Barbara Street, seen at center, awaits its fix.
A view down Avenue B at its intersection with South Barbara Street shows the contrast of before and after. Avenue B was rehabilitated last year using the city’s “zipper” recycling machine, while South Barbara Street, seen at center, awaits its fix. Justin Hamel/The Waco Bridge/CatchLight Local/Report for America

The city is now repairing and reconstructing streets using a $9.5 million bond issue that voters approved in 2024. To save money, the city is using its own workers and equipment to grind up and recycle pavement, which is then compacted and resealed.

Among the most critical projects is Walnut Street, which is being reconstructed along with replacement of water, sewer, fiber optic and gas utilities under the street. That project is to be completed in February 2027.

Wallingsford explained: “That is what our guys do probably eight months out of the year. They use this zipper machine here to eat up the old asphalt. Then we compact it with a rolling machine over there, and then we come back and chip seal the existing roads. It’s a cheaper way of getting the potholes out of the roads and giving the citizens a smoother surface to drive on.” The equipment was purchased in a bond election to save the city money by paying outside contractors to repave the city’s streets. Previously the maintenance department was only able to fill potholes.
Wallingsford explained: “That is what our guys do probably eight months out of the year. They use this zipper machine here to eat up the old asphalt. Then we compact it with a rolling machine over there, and then we come back and chip seal the existing roads. It’s a cheaper way of getting the potholes out of the roads and giving the citizens a smoother surface to drive on.” The equipment was purchased in a bond election to save the city money by paying outside contractors to repave the city’s streets. Previously the maintenance department was only able to fill potholes. Justin Hamel/The Waco Bridge/CatchLight Local/Report for America

This article first appeared on The Waco Bridge.



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Houston-area raids expose Texas loophole allowing illegal game rooms to reopen, costing taxpayers

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Houston-area raids expose Texas loophole allowing illegal game rooms to reopen, costing taxpayers


HARRIS COUNTY, TX – On a February afternoon, 2 Investigates showed up to a North Harris County strip mall.

Minutes earlier, deputies raided what law enforcement described as an illegal gaming room operating in plain sight. The operation to shut down the room ended quickly, as one person was arrested and more than 80 gaming machines were seized. The scene was littered with evidence, including cash and a firearm.

However, what 2 Investigates uncovered was a bigger component after the raid: this was not a new location.

“We’ve been here a couple of times,” said Lt. Jeffrey Lee with Harris County Constable Precinct 4, referring to the same location being raided in September of last year.

Law enforcement officials, from investigators to prosecutor, we spoke with over the course of our investigation say these operations have become increasingly common across the Houston area and Texas.

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“It’s extremely common. We run these operations numerous times,” Lee said.

Why authorities say these operations matter

Every member of law enforcement, from the courts to the streets, we spoke with during our months-long investigation made it clear that illegal gaming rooms create more than just gambling concerns.

“At its base, these gaming operations prey on the vulnerable members of our community-those on a fixed income, older people-promising these huge payouts that never materialize,” said Lee, who went on to add, “At its wider angle, these are funding operations for much more serious criminal enterprises like human trafficking, drug trafficking, and things like that.”

Criminal defense attorney Rick Detoto, who has experience with these cases, said the locations for these rooms can also become magnets for violent crime

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“They are targets.” Detoto went on to add, “There is a lot of cash there, their security is minimal at best, and they go in there and they rob them and people get shot and there are capital murders and aggravated robberies and all kinds of stuff that come out of those game rooms.”

Houston police raid Lucky J Social Club in Midwest Houston, arrest several in illegal gambling bust

In February, an illegal game room in Southwest Houston was the site of the shooting death of a security guard during a robbery.

A raid is underway in Harris County of an illegal game room (KPRC 2026)

The “8-Liner” loophole

At the center of the gaming controversy are machines commonly known as “8-liners.” These are not unfamiliar machines for Texans, as many can be found inside gas stations, convenience stores, or small strip mall businesses. Under Texas law, certain gaming devices may legally operate if they are considered entertainment-only machines and do not provide illegal cash payouts. In some cases, stores may offer small prizes or store credits instead.

However, critics and elected leaders have asked for clarification from the state, saying some operators exploit a gray area in the law centered around whether a machine is considered a “game of skill” or a “game of chance.”

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What is the difference between a game of skill and a game of chance?

As Detoto explained, “A game of chance [is] you press a button and there is a computer program that randomly picks the numbers or the fruit or whatever and you win, compared to a game of skill where it’s based on memory or perception or your timing, where you are kind of playing a game and you have to remember things. That’s the loophole that these people are exploiting, and it’s allowing some of these games to be legally put into these stores.”

Warrants executed at 20 locations around Hitchcock believed to be involved in illegal gambling operation

Investigators say some operators allegedly go beyond the legal boundaries by offering cash payouts either privately or openly. 2 Investigates found one machine advertising as much in Fort Bend County.

Detoto said the machines are becoming more common throughout everyday neighborhoods, including his. “I’ve started to notice them every time I get gas,” he said. “I go in to get a Coke or something to drink, water-there are three 8-liners there that weren’t there before.”

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A raid is underway in Harris County of an illegal game room (KPRC 2026)

Raids, auctions, and recycled machines

Authorities say shutting down illegal game rooms can become expensive for taxpayers due to investigations, raids, manpower, and evidence storage. However, another issue emerged during our investigation: many confiscated machines are not destroyed after they are seized. Instead, there are law enforcement jurisdictions that auction them off.

Investigators confirmed to us that some of those machines seized by other agencies eventually make their way back into circulation because they’ve been made available again, “We do see reintroduction of machines and the equipment that come from these game rooms back in again,” Lee said.

Lee’s constable office does not engage in the practice of auctioning off machines.

How did Detoto describe the system? “It’s a revolving door of law enforcement seizing the machines, waiting until a case gets resolved, selling them, making a profit for the asset funds, and doing it over again.”

Multiple sources interviewed for this story questioned whether current enforcement efforts are actually deterring illegal operations.

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Detoto said criminal prosecutions tied to 8-liners are relatively rare.

“I’ve never seen, in my experience, anyone go to jail for these 8-liners.” The Houston-based defense attorney added, “The prosecutors don’t have the time to deal with these cases. They are not the most important case on their docket.”

Lee agreed that stronger oversight and penalties may be needed: “There is room for improvement with regards to the oversight, the laws, and the stuff that concerns these gaming rooms-that we could actually enact some stiffer penalties to discourage this behavior.”

When 2 Investigates asked whether Texas lawmakers need to do more, Lee responded: “We would like to see some improvements, yes.”

A police officer seizes an illegal gaming machine in north Harris County, Texas (KPRC 2026)

Calls for legislative change

Texas State Senator Bob Hall, who represents Senate District 2, said the current system leaves too much room for abuse. “We need to do more to make sure that we can shut down and stop the operation of the illegal game rooms,” said Hall, who added, “There is no question about that.”

During an interview at his Dallas-area office, Hall acknowledged that changing the law could prove to be difficult. “It will be a challenge because it will depend on our local law enforcement doing its job the way it should be done,” Hall said.

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Bottom line for Hall regarding a problem hiding in plain sight? “There is no reason for a gambling machine to exist in Texas.”

Copyright 2026 by KPRC Click2Houston – All rights reserved.



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A French revolution in Texas

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A French revolution in Texas


The oil and gas industry is king in Texas, but it still doesn’t have enough power to save Republican incumbents.

The state’s largest oil producers couldn’t stop hard-right activist Bo French from winning the Republican runoff Tuesday for a seat on the Texas Railroad Commission — despite pouring money into the campaign of incumbent Jim Wright. An oil and gas fundraising advantage also wasn’t enough to keep four-term Sen. John Cornyn from losing his Senate primary to Texas Attorney General and MAGA darling Ken Paxton.

The twin losses are animating Democrats, who see an opening for a spot on Texas’ powerful oil and gas regulatory commission — and for a Senate seat that could help decide which party controls the chamber come 2027.

“While Republicans are facing their nightmare scenario… Democrats are one step closer to winning a Senate majority,” said Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand (D-N.Y.), chair of the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee.



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