Texas
Texas man beats 6-year-old neighbor with bat, leaving child unconscious

A 6-year-old Texas boy has been lying unconscious in a hospital bed for more than a week after his 39-year-old neighbor allegedly broke into his home and beat him with a baseball bat.
The young child named Jeremy suffered brain swelling and multiple skull fractures after Daniel Logan attacked him with the bat around 5 a.m. on Sept. 11 in Georgetown, TX, according to police and a local report.
Logan was arrested and charged with injury to a child and aggravated assault with a deadly weapon against a family member — both first-degree felonies — after he allegedly struck his own mother with the bat as well, the Williamson County Sheriff’s Office said.
His wife was the one who called 911 after her mother-in-law walked out of the child’s house dripping blood and screaming “that Daniel was killing everyone inside,” according to the arrest affidavit obtained by the Austin American-Statesman.
She told a detective who arrived at the adjacent homes on Rock Mill Loop that she woke up to loud banging noises and realized her husband was not inside their house, but their backdoor was open, the local outlet reported.
She walked out the backdoor and noticed a hole in the picket fence that divides her and her husband’s property from Jeremy’s family’s property and then saw that the family’s glass door off their back patio had been shattered, according to the affidavit.

The alleged attacker’s wife then heard her mother-in-law and Jeremy’s mother screaming from inside the neighbors’ house.
Then Logan’s mother walked out covered in blood and screaming for help.
His mother later told a detective from her hospital bed that she saw her son go into the neighbors’ home armed with a baseball bat.

She watched him go upstairs and followed him to the second floor — where she found little Jeremy “slumped on the floor of an upstairs bedroom,” authorities said.
Her son had gone back downstairs and she followed him again — pleading with him to stop when he turned around and whacked her in the face with the bat, according to the arrest document.
The Williamson County Sheriff’s Office did not release a motive for the horrific attack against the child and the boy’s father told the Austin American-Statesman that he was unable to comment on whether he knew his son’s attacker because there is an open investigation into the violence.
The sheriff’s office instead called the incident a “random act.”
A GoFundMe campaign created for Jeremy and his parents has raised more than $200,000 for his medical care.
Jeremy’s father Arthur posted an update on his son to the fundraising page earlier this week.
“Jeremy remains in critical care, but he continues to show movement in all his limbs and is responding,” he wrote alongside a past photo of the boy.
He said his son was very active before he was beaten.
“He spoke fluent Chinese and was studying Chinese characters, played piano and was a role model, a hero to his younger brother,” Arthur said. “He is awesome.”

Texas
Houston-area midwife arrested for providing illegal abortions in first criminal case under state ban: Texas AG

A Houston-area midwife has been arrested for allegedly providing illegal abortions, the first such arrest under Texas’ near-total abortion ban.
Maria Margarita Rojas, 48, who identified herself as “Dr. Maria” is charged with the illegal performance of an abortion, a second-degree felony, as well as practicing medicine without a license, Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton announced.
CLINTON-ERA LAW ‘WEAPONIZED’ BY BIDEN AGAINST PRO-LIFERS MUST GO, PENCE GROUP URGES HOUSE GOP
Abortion rights protesters participate in nationwide demonstrations following the leaked Supreme Court opinion suggesting the possibility of overturning the Roe v. Wade abortion rights decision, in Houston, Texas, U.S., May 14, 2022. (REUTERS/Callaghan O’Hare)
“In Texas, life is sacred,” Paxton said in a statement. “I will always do everything in my power to protect the unborn, defend our state’s pro-life laws, and work to ensure that unlicensed individuals endangering the lives of women by performing illegal abortions are fully prosecuted.”
“Texas law protecting life is clear, and we will hold those who violate it accountable,” he added.
Rojas allegedly operated a network of clinics in the Houston suburbs of Waller, Cypress and Spring. The clinics “unlawfully employed unlicensed individuals who falsely presented themselves as licensed medical professionals,” Paxton’s office said.
FDA CHIEF COUNSEL WHO DEFENDED ABORTION PILL ACCESS UNDER BIDEN RESIGNS TWO DAYS INTO JOB

Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton speaks at a news conference in Dallas on June 22, 2017. (AP Photo/Tony Gutierrez, File)
Rojas herself is accused of performing illegal abortions in the clinics, in violation of the Under the Texas Human Life Protection Act of 2021.
Abortions are banned in Texas, except in certain circumstances to save the life of a pregnant woman. Texas holds abortion providers, not patients, criminally responsible for illegal procedures, Paxton’s office said.
Waller County District Attorney Sean Whittmore referred the case to Paxton’s office.
“In Waller County, we respect all life,” Whittmore told Fox News Digital. “We expect people to follow the law in the state of Texas.”
Fox News Digital has reached out to the clinics where the alleged abortions were performed.

Cesar Franco prays the Rosary with pro-life and aniti-abortion supporters gathered with the Tradition Family Property organization to sing and pray Wednesday, Feb. 28, 2024, in protest to an apparent pro-abortion statue installed in Cullen Family Plaza on the campus of University of Houston. (Kirk Sides/Houston Chronicle via Getty Images)
CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP
In addition to the arrest, the Healthcare Program Enforcement Division of the Attorney General’s Office filed for a temporary restraining order to shut down the clinics.
Texas
These are the proposals lawmakers hope will save Texas’ water supply. Track them here.
:focal(0x197:3500x2274)/static.texastribune.org/media/files/9c35b3883c705663a20ccf875b8cd126/Ralls%20Drought%20TTh%20TT%2021.jpg)
Subscribe to The Y’all — a weekly dispatch about the people, places and policies defining Texas, produced by Texas Tribune journalists living in communities across the state.
This article is part of Running Out, an occasional series about Texas’ water crisis. Read more stories about the threats facing Texas’ water supply here. It will also be updated through the legislative session as bills advance.
Texas’ water supply is full of uncertainties.
Leaking water pipes and deteriorating infrastructure plague the state’s water systems. Prolonged droughts and record-setting heat waves are depleting the state’s rivers. And a growing population is adding more stress to the system every day.
One state figure estimates there could be a severe shortage of municipal water by 2030 if there is recurring, record-breaking drought conditions across the state, and if water entities and state leaders fail to put in place key strategies to secure water supplies.
State lawmakers have proposed several possible solutions. Their proposals range from committing to annual funding for water projects to tapping into new sources, like oil and gas wastewater that comes from the ground during extraction, and making sure the quality of drinking water is safer.
There are a number of steps to the legislative process, however, and they all have to take place before a bill can go into law. There are 10 bills the Tribune is tracking — some of them have moved quickly in the legislature, while others have failed to pick up steam. Here are the steps of the process we are tracking:
Bill has been filed: This is the very first step in the process. A bill is written and introduced in one of the two legislative chambers, the Texas House or state Senate.
In the works: Bills are assigned to committees where a panel of lawmakers vet the bill and take testimony from the public. Bills must be approved by at least one committee before the full chamber votes on it. Both chambers have to approve a bill for it to become law. A bill may also go to a conference committee to reconcile any differences between the chambers on the bill before it’s passed.
Passed the House: The bill received a majority vote of approval by state representatives. If it is a House bill, it must go to the Senate next for approval. If it has already passed by the Senate, then it is sent to Gov. Greg Abbott.
Passed the Senate: The bill received a majority vote of approval by state senators. If the bill starts in the Senate, it will go to the House for approval. If it’s already been passed by the House, then it is sent to Abbott.
Signed into Law: Bills signed by Abbott become law. If there is a bill left unsigned but was not vetoed by Abbott, then it automatically becomes law.
Vetoed or failed: A legislative proposal failed by missing a key deadline or did not make it out of the original committee for a floor vote. Abbott could also veto any bills sent to him.
Here are the bills to follow:
Senate Bill 7 — A priority bill that establishes an administrative framework for how water projects — including building of infrastructure that would transport water across the state and fixing leaking pipes — would be funded under the Texas Water Development Board. The bill would also establish the Texas Water Fund Advisory Committee for oversight and the Office of Water Supply Conveyance Coordination to improve regional and statewide water infrastructure connectivity.
Bill has been filed.
Senate Joint Resolution 66 — A constitutional amendment to dedicate $1 billion to the Texas Water Fund for up to 16 years beginning in 2027. The annual stream of state tax dollars and insurance premium taxes would help cities and local water agencies buy more water and repair aging infrastructure. It calls for 80% of the appropriated money to go to the New Water Supply for Texas Fund — prioritizing desalination projects and pipelines transporting water from the water-rich regions of Texas to arid, drought-stricken areas. The other 20% would go to fixing aging infrastructure. The bill would expire in 2043.
In the works. Bill has been referred to a Senate committee on finance.
House Bill 16 — A sweeping priority bill that touches on water funds, flood plans, and the development of infrastructure to transport water into a water supply system. The bill would also create the Texas Water Fund Advisory Committee to oversee operations on each fund and report to the Texas Water Development Board.
In the works. Bill has been referred to a House committee on natural resources.
House Joint Resolution 7 — A constitutional amendment to dedicate $1 billion to the Texas Water Fund for up to 10 years. The annual stream of state tax dollars would help cities and local water agencies buy more water and repair aging infrastructure. It gives the Texas Water Development Board full discretion over the $1 billion, allowing it to distribute the money as it sees fit.
In the works. Bill has been scheduled for a public hearing.
House Bill 1501 — Directs the Texas State University Meadows Center for Water and the Environment to study how Texas can develop seawater desalination plants along the Gulf Coast. Desalination is the process of removing salt from seawater or salty groundwater so it can be used for drinking water, irrigation and industrial uses. The study will examine international desalination plants in Israel and Australia to identify best practices and challenges, including financial barriers and explore ways to dispose of brine — highly salty and concentrated liquid — including its potential use in nuclear energy production. The findings must be reported by Jan. 1, 2027.
In the works. Bill has been referred to a House committee on natural resources.
House Bill 310 — A bill that directs the Texas Water Development Board, the state agency that oversees water supplies and projects, on how to allocate money from the Texas Water Fund. The board would ensure a portion of the money is used for water infrastructure projects and prioritized by risk or need. It would go to rural areas with less than 20,000 people, and areas with at least 20,000 residents but no more than 150,000. It also calls for money to be spent on a statewide public awareness campaign about water.
In the works: Bill is pending in a House committee on natural resources.
Senate Bill 1145 — Authorizes the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality to issue permits for land application of produced water — wastewater that comes out of the ground during the extraction of oil and gas production — and develop standards that prevent pollution of surface and groundwater.
Passed the Senate: The House has received the bill for review.
House Bill 2080 — A bill that calls for the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality to appoint a panel to review the duties of a groundwater conservation district. This would happen if someone files a petition with the TCEQ requesting an inquiry about a conservation district. If the petition is not dismissed, the commission would appoint a review panel of five members.
Bill has been filed.
House Bill 2114 — This bill aims to prevent conflicts of interest by barring engineering firms involved in state or regional water planning from also constructing reservoirs. It specifically applies to feasibility reviews assessing costs, timelines, land acquisition, and economic impacts. One example of a case is the $7 billion Marvin Nichols Reservoir, which groups estimate would flood over 66,000 acres of northeast Texas forest. A feasibility review released last year found no major obstacles to the project. The firm that conducted the review, Freese and Nichols Inc., is also set to build the reservoir.
Bill has been filed.
House Bill 1400 — Creates a new fund to support scientific research that will expand knowledge about the quality, quantity and threats to the state’s groundwater resources. It will be administered by the Texas Water Development Board.
In the works. Bill has been scheduled for a public hearing.
We can’t wait to welcome you to the 15th annual Texas Tribune Festival, Texas’ breakout ideas and politics event happening Nov. 13–15 in downtown Austin. Step inside the conversations shaping the future of education, the economy, health care, energy, technology, public safety, culture, the arts and so much more.
Hear from our CEO, Sonal Shah, on TribFest 2025.
TribFest 2025 is presented by JPMorganChase.
Texas
Fire sends dark smoke plume into Dallas sky

A large plume of dark smoke was seen over Dallas Sunday afternoon due to a fire behind a recycling plant, Dallas Fire-Rescue said.
CBS News Texas
Dallas Fire-Rescue said crews were called to the area near 4141 Singleton Drive just before 4 p.m., reporting heavy fire and “a thick column of black smoke.”
No further information is available as firefighters work to extinguish the blaze.
This is a developing story.
-
News1 week ago
Gene Hackman Lost His Wife and Caregiver, and Spent 7 Days Alone
-
Politics1 week ago
Republicans demand Trump cut American legal association out of nominee process
-
Politics1 week ago
Agriculture secretary cancels $600K grant for study on menstrual cycles in transgender men
-
News1 week ago
States sue Trump administration over mass firings of federal employees
-
News1 week ago
Trump Seeks to Bar Student Loan Relief to Workers Aiding Migrants and Trans Kids
-
News6 days ago
Grieving Covid Losses, Five Years Later
-
World6 days ago
Ukraine accepts 30-day ceasefire in US talks: What it means for Russia war
-
News6 days ago
Unruly Passenger Swallows Rosary Beads on American Airlines Flight