Texas
T-Squared: A promotion for Bobby Blanchard
Monday marks Bobby Blanchard’s six-year anniversary at The Texas Tribune, a milestone that doesn’t embrace his first experiences right here as a fellow in 2014 and 2015.
As director of viewers, Bobby has helped oversee the doubling and diversification of the Tribune’s viewers — a core aim of the strategic plan we introduced in 2018.
I’m more than happy to announce that Bobby has been promoted to chief viewers officer and a member of the Tribune’s senior administration group. On this new function, he’ll work intently with me, CEO Evan Smith (and his successor) and the remainder of the group to achieve objectives round engagement, membership, newsletters and repair journalism.
Over the previous decade or so, viewers engagement positions have flourished as newsrooms have acknowledged how far more lively journalists should be in surfacing our work, figuring out new audiences and incomes their belief. Abilities like search-engine optimization and deft use of social media stay important, however viewers work has grown far past that.
For instance, beneath Kassie Kelly’s management, our membership program is approaching 10,000 members who make pledges of as much as $1,000 a yr. Additionally beneath Bobby, Allyson Waller has reinvigorated our newsletters, and María Méndez has produced unbelievable journalism instantly attentive to readers’ most vital data wants. John Hernandez joined us not too long ago as our assistant director of viewers and has already made a huge impact together with his considerate management.
We may even submit a brand new viewers producer function; that rent will work intently with John and viewers producer Natalie Martinez on day-to-day distribution of our journalism off platform. Jessica Priest, because the engagement reporter for the ProPublica-Texas Tribune group, additionally continues to report back to Bobby.
As a member of the senior administration group, Bobby will lead our strategic response to the viewers research not too long ago carried out for us by Magid, the analysis firm, which was stuffed with insights about our present and potential viewers and recognized key areas of alternative for us to succeed in much more Texans. Bobby’s participation within the Tribune’s senior administration group will formalize what we already know: Bobby is instrumental to the whole lot we obtain right here and a giant a part of the Tribune’s future.
Texas
Subpoena showdown: Will Robert Roberson testify at Texas lawmakers' hearing?
Texas death row inmate Robert Roberson is being called to testify at a state House committee hearing Friday at noon, as ordered by a new subpoena issued this week.
But whether the condemned man will be produced in person is unclear, after the state’s attorney general’s office filed a motion late Thursday allowing the prison to disregard the subpoena pending a hearing to resolve the motion. The office also resisted in October with a similar subpoena for a hearing with state lawmakers.
The new hearing requires the Texas Department of Criminal Justice to transport Roberson from his prison north of Houston to the state Capitol in Austin.
In a statement issued Thursday, the office of Attorney General Ken Paxton said, “In addition to presenting serious security risks, the subpoena is procedurally defective and therefore invalid as it was issued in violation of the House Rules, the Texas Constitution, and other applicable laws.”
Paxton said in October that there were safety concerns with having Roberson brought before lawmakers and cited a lack of a state facility near Austin that could temporarily house him. The state had said he could testify virtually.
In response, the House Committee on Criminal Jurisprudence offered a compromise that its members could meet with Roberson in prison, saying they were uncomfortable with the video option, given his autism and unfamiliarity with the technology. The meeting, however, never materialized.
A Department of Criminal Justice spokesperson said Wednesday that it “doesn’t have a comment at this time” on whether it would abide by this latest subpoena.
The decision by House committee lawmakers to issue a second subpoena comes after the attorney general’s office challenged the initial one. The original subpoena was an unusual legal gambit that set off a flurry of litigation that put Roberson’s execution on hold mere hours before he was to be executed on Oct. 17. He would have been the nation’s first person to be executed for a “shaken baby” death after long maintaining his innocence. His 2-year-old daughter, Nikki, died in 2002.
The House committee members said they still want Roberson to be able to testify in his case as it relates to a 2013 “junk science” law that allows Texas inmates to potentially challenge convictions based on advances in forensic science.
“Robert’s testimony will shed important light on some of the problems with our ‘junk science writ’ process, a legal procedure Texas lawmakers expected to provide reconsideration in cases like this one,” committee chair and state Rep. Joe Moody, a Democrat, and committee member and state Rep. Jeff Leach, a Republican, said in a statement. “His perspective will be especially valuable as a person on the autism spectrum whose neurodivergence profoundly influenced both his case and his access to justice on appeal.”
Last month, the Texas Supreme Court sided with state officials that lawmakers could not use their subpoena power to effectively halt an execution, but said the committee members could still compel Roberson to testify.
The attorney general’s office has not set a new execution date.
Meanwhile, the lawmakers and Paxton have sparred publicly over Roberson’s case, with each accusing the other of “misrepresenting” details that led to his conviction in his daughter’s death and releasing their own reports in recent weeks rebutting each other’s claims.
Doctors and law enforcement had quickly concluded Nikki was killed as a result of a violent shaking episode, but Roberson’s defense says new understanding of so-called shaken baby syndrome shows that other medical conditions can be factors in a child’s death, as they believe it was in Nikki’s.
Texas
Sunny weekend ahead for North Texas, rain expected early next week
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Texas
Freezing start forecast in North Texas for the first day of winter before rain on Christmas Eve
NORTH TEXAS — It was another cold start to the day with temperatures near or below the freezing line; however, the cold didn’t last long: highs in the afternoon topped out in the 60s.
Another freezing morning will also be expected Saturday morning due to a dry front moving across the area. It’s important to remember to bring indoors pets and plants as well as to protect your pipes.
A beautiful weekend is in store for North Texas, with plenty of sunshine and highs in the 50s. Saturday is the official start of Winter Solstice, which is the shortest day and longest night of the year. The high will be 56, which is where DFW normally sits.
The upper-level high-pressure system retreats to the west and a low takes power at the start of the next week. This will cause a big pattern shift, meaning rain will be back in the forecast for Monday and Tuesday.
Conditions look to significantly improve during the afternoon on Wednesday.
Chances for rain return at the end of the next week thanks to another front.
Enjoy Mother Nature’s gift of a beautiful weekend.
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