Texas
Texas white supremacist gang leader gets life in prison for girlfriend’s brutal beating
MONTGOMERY COUNTY, Texas (KTRK) — Right after being sentenced to life in prison, a known gang leader fired back at his victim during her impact statement in Montgomery County.
Tyler Clark, 31, was convicted by a jury of aggravated kidnapping and assault of a family member with a previous conviction on Wednesday.
The jury sentenced him to life in prison Thursday for the assault charge and 30 years in prison for the kidnapping charge.
Prosecutors Shanna Redwine and Brittany Hansford said Clark kidnapped his victim from Harris County, drove her to a park in Kingwood, and left her. During that time, Clark was abusing the victim.
The victim said she had injuries all over her body. Her face was beaten to the point that she was unrecognizable.
Man accused of kidnapping and assaulting girlfriend arrested after standoff in Porter
Clark was on the run following the attack and ended up in a standoff with law enforcement.
About five months prior to the beginning of their relationship, Clark was released from prison, where he served time for a previous assault case involving another former girlfriend.
During the trial, prosecutors put four other women on the stand who said they were abused by Clark during their relationship with him.
“One of the things that the defense had argued was that putting him in prison for life was throwing him away,” Hansford said. “My argument, what I was explaining to the jury, was it’s not about throwing a person away. It’s about protecting the community, because we have seen the amount of violence he has shown to all kinds of different people, people who are supposed to love him, that he loves. It’s about the fact that we don’t know how many more victims are in the future. It’s about protecting them more than it is about throwing him away.”
Defense attorneys told jurors during closing arguments that Clark could be rehabilitated and vowed to change his life.
Jurors asked two questions during their deliberations, which lasted about an hour and a half, before deciding on a sentence.
The victim in this case took the stand to give her victim impact statement and was interrupted by Clark. He refused to be quiet when told by the judge and said he had just been sentenced to life.
The victim said Clark’s behavior should be an indicator to the jury that they made the correct decision.
For more on this story, follow Mycah Hatfield on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram.
Texas
Colin Allred courts Black voters in the final days of his bid to unseat Sen. Ted Cruz
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In the final days of his uphill bid for the U.S. Senate, Dallas Congressman Colin Allred is working overtime to lock down the backbone of the Democratic party: Black voters.
In the past five days, Allred, who is running to unseat Republican incumbent Ted Cruz, has campaigned in Houston along with Vice President Kamala Harris, the party’s presidential nominee; Beyoncé, the international pop star and Houston native; and Raphael Warnock, Georgia’s first Black senator.
On Tuesday night, Allred finished a five-day swing through Houston with a rally at Texas Southern University, a historically Black college, where he was introduced by Warnock, who rose to prominence as the senior pastor at Ebenezer Baptist Church, Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.’s former congregation.
Allred portrayed Cruz as an absentee senator who fled the state for Cancun while millions of people suffered during a winter freeze in 2021. He criticized Cruz for trying to overturn the results of the presidential election in 2020 and for supporting policies that he said have led to the near-total abortion ban in Texas.
Allred’s rally also featured Samantha Casiano, a Texas woman who had to give birth to a baby her doctors said would not live longer than a day because of a rare and fatal condition that prevents a child’s brain and skull from forming properly. Her daughter only lived for nearly four hours after she was born.
“We’ve got a senator who’s too small for our state and we’ve got one week to do something about it,” Allred told the crowd of a few hundred as speakers encouraged attendees to participate in block walks and phone banks. “We gotta make sure that we get out the vote.”
Allred is the underdog in the race against Cruz, a two-term Republican senator, in a state that hasn’t elected a Democrat to statewide office in 30 years. So his hopes of making the race competitive rely on running up the tally with the core of the Democratic base, a large chunk of which is Black voters.
Je’Von Tone, a 22 year-old student at the campus, said he had been waiting for Allred to visit the university since the start of the campaign. He was excited that Allred brought Warnock with him and was making an appeal to Black and young voters.
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“This race is going to be very, very close especially for people who are in my age group, because we tend to have the lowest turnout,” Tone said. “So he’s going to make every last push that he can to make any stops that he can go to: schools, church, homes, block-walking, phone-banking and any get-out-the-vote efforts he can do.”
During his time in Houston, Allred shared the stage with Harris and Beyoncé at a packed event with more than 20,000 people at Shell Energy Stadium on Friday; hosted a 10,000 Black Men of Greater Houston Rally on Saturday; and presided over roundtables with Black business leaders Tuesday.
Those recent events have projected a sense of urgency for an Allred campaign that ran under the radar and tried to appeal to moderate Republican and independent voters for much of the race. Now, his campaign is running a full-court press to turn out the Democratic base.
Candice Matthews, the chair of the Texas Coalition of Black Democrats, said Allred has been in touch with her group throughout the race and has solid name recognition among Black voters. But the appearance at Texas Southern was a strategically smart move, she said.
“This is an excellent step, coming to an HBCU, showing the students that they matter,” she said.
She’Deja Martin, a 20-year-old student at the rally, said she wanted to learn more about Allred. She planned to vote for him because she disliked Cruz but said she had just learned about the Democratic candidate in the last week. She thought Allred’s stop at the school would help him among her fellow students.
“[But] it may have helped to come a little sooner because a lot of people have already voted,” she said.
In recent days, Allred has started more openly making appeals to Black voters. Last week, in a fundraising text message to supporters, he noted he would be the state’s first Black senator and said that “Black Americans have long faced far too many obstacles like discrimination and the racist voter suppression laws that Texas Republicans like Ted Cruz have championed.”
During the roundtable with Black business leaders, Allred was joined by former City Council Member Dwight Boykins and state Sen. Borris Miles of Houston, who represents a majority African American district. Miles offered his help in the final days of the election.
“We’re just here in the fight,” he said. “We’re trying to get you across the line.”
Boykins said Allred was visiting Houston at a crucial point. Most voters are only now deciding who they will vote for and their choice in the Senate race will likely follow their pick in the presidential election. Allred running TV ads and visiting major cities will help his name recognition when voters are making that choice.
“I think his name ID is strong enough in the commercials he’s running, believable enough, to get him where he’s trying to go,” Boykins said.
Also on Tuesday, Allred held a roundtable with women who have been impacted by the state’s near-total abortion ban and their physicians, where he promised to codify Roe v. Wade into law if he is elected.
Allred will head to the Rio Grande Valley on Wednesday, where he will look to shore up support from another core base for his party: Hispanic voters.
Disclosure: Texas Southern University – Barbara Jordan-Mickey Leland School of Public Affairs has been a financial supporter 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.
Texas
North Texas hero saves two lives after spending 20 years in prison
An Ellis County man was in the right place at the right time and saved someone’s life – and then six weeks later, he did it again.
In August, Jacob Bell saved a drowning swimmer at Lake Waxahachie, and then in early October, he pulled a man from a burning car after a crash.
Long before any of this, Bell was sentenced to 35 years in prison. He made the decision to change his life, and because of that, he was able to save two others.
“Makes me feel like a hero,” Bell told NBC 5.
If anyone has earned the right to say that, it’s Jacob Bell. This month, the North Texan was driving a truck in rural Comanche County when he encountered a crash scene.
“Caught on fire, it was upside down next to another telephone pole,” said Bell.
Moments earlier a driver had crashed off the road and their car had broken out in flames. Bell told NBC 5 that instinct took over.
“For me, I didn’t even think about it,” said Bell. “I knew I could physically get him out of there, and I was going to do it.”
He smashed in the car window and was able to pull out the driver, a 72-year-old man who wasn’t breathing.
“I felt for a pulse, I pulled him out and kind of got him on the ground and felt for a pulse, I couldn’t feel anything,” said Bell. “I started CPR on him. And after maybe five or 10 seconds, I could feel a faint pulse.”
At the scene, the man started to breathe again. Suffering from smoke inhalation, Bell was taken with the driver to the hospital in Fort Worth.
NBC 5 spoke with the man rescued, who said he was still suffering from broken ribs but will recover.
“It’s been pretty amazing, the randomness of it,” said Bell.
Bell wasn’t just talking about this rescue. Six weeks earlier, he was on a boat at Lake Waxahachie when he saw a teen girl struggling in open water. He jumped in and saved her, swimming the girl back to shore.
Bell also recovered the body of 21-year-old Lincer Lopez, who had fallen beneath the waves.
“I’m still dealing with a lot of that,” said Bell. “The fact that Lincer lost his life that day is still heartbreaking.”
Bell said he’s still been working through feelings of anxiety after these traumatic incidents, but he was proud of both acts of heroism – because only a few years ago, they would have seemed impossible.
“I got charged with a burglary in 1996, and they gave me 35 and a half years,” said Bell.
Jacob Bell spent 20 years in prison and could have still been there today. He committed to changing his life, leaving prison six years ago, and now has a wife and child. After all this, maybe the most important rescue Bell made was himself.
“Spent most of my life thinking that I was just a nobody, and a castaway, never was going to get my self-worth back,” said Bell. “And this has really shown me that it’s possible to give back and to feel good about yourself, and that means something.”
Texas
FULL LIST: Texas general election results for November 5, 2024
HOUSTON – Texas voters head to the polls on Nov. 5, 2024, to cast their ballots in the general election.
This election will decide key offices and seats at the national, state, and local levels, including the presidential race, U.S. Senate, congressional seats, state legislative positions, and various judicial roles.
In this election, voters will select their representatives across party lines, determining which candidates will assume office. The candidate with the majority of votes in each race will secure the position.
Polling stations will be open from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. on Election Day.
Visit the Decision 2024 page of Click2houston.com for complete election results and news.
Decision 2024 General Election
Copyright 2024 by KPRC Click2Houston – All rights reserved.
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