Dallas police detain man at No Kings protest in downtown Dallas
Thousands march in Dallas, Fort Worth, Frisco at No Kings rallies
A track-and-field Olympian and former national record holder’s medals and trophies were swiped from a public storage facility in Texas — and he’s pleading for the thieves to return the prized possessions.
Roy “Robot” Martin, 57, revealed “legacy” was stolen out of a Dallas public storage unit late last month after the facility had already been dealing with a string of break-ins, according to Fox 4 Dallas.
“They’ve been having some break-ins. This time when they hit my storage, they took everything,” the superstar sprinter told the outlet.
“All my clothes. All my memorabilia. Everything that I made history that I was going to give to my grandkids to let them enjoy, somebody just took it.”
The “Robot’s” storage unit was among three that were burglarized on the same day, according to the outlet.
The Texas native kept his awards and honors in the unit due to a lack of space at his house.
“At the time, I lived around the corner. And I put my stuff in here. And where I moved to, it was just not enough room to keep everything. So I felt safe because it’s on the inside of a secured facility,” Martin shared.
The former Olympian said losing all his belongings from his days of competing has left him shattered.
“Your stomach turns. Your gut hurts,” he told the outlet. “And it’s like why me? I mean, what’s the purpose of it?”
As police investigate who may have broken into his units and others, Martin pleaded for whoever stole his prized possessions to return them.
“Please bring it back. No questions asked. Just bring it back, and all is forgiven,” he stated.
“It means the world to me. That’s my legacy. That’s my history. If I want to tell my story, it was in that storage right there.”
Martin started making waves in the Track and Field community in the mid-1980s while he attended Roosevelt High School in Dallas.
He was a three-time state champion and set the national record for the 200-meter sprint at the Track and Field Championships in Austin during his senior year.
“My senior year, I set the national record. Ran the 19.74 in the 200 meters. And that stood for 33 years until Noah Lyles broke it in 2014,” Martin shared.
“And then my biggest accomplishment was when I made the Olympic team as a junior in high school, the only one in history who can say that.”
The track phenom narrowly missed his chance to run for the USA Track and Field team at the 1984 Olympics in Los Angeles, finishing fourth in the 200-meter race during the trials.
Martin was named Track and Field News “High School Athlete of the Year” in 1984 and 1985 — making him the first male athlete to win the award twice.
He later enrolled at Southern Methodist University, where he helped the team win the 1986 NCAA track and field championship, running a 43.5-second relay carry that secured the Mustangs a dramatic victory.
Following SMU’s championship run, his coach Ralph White told The New York Times Martin was the “best pure sprinter I’ve ever seen…” explaining he was “better than” two-time Olympic gold-winning sprinter and former Super Bowl champ and Dallas Cowboys receiver Bob Hayes.
Martin made his Olympics debut in 1988 in Seoul, South Korea, but finished sixth in the 200-meter dash semifinals.
He retired from sprinting after his first appearance in the Olympics.
In 2013, he was inducted into the Texas Track and Field Hall of Fame and in 2019, the Dallas Independent School District Athletic Hall of Fame.
But now the history he “earned” that he once cherished is gone.
“I earned all that. Everything I accomplished, I earned it. And that was my history. Now, my history is gone,” he told Fox 4.
U.S. Sen. Ted Cruz warned on Saturday that Democrats would dismantle Republican victories and try to impeach President Donald Trump if they win control of Congress in November.
Speaking to the Conservative Political Action Conference in Grapevine, Cruz said Republicans have gained historic victories, from a sweeping crackdown on immigration to changes in the tax policy, since Trump took office in January 2025.
Democrats, Cruz said, “want to tear this country down.”
Cruz was among a slate of Texas lawmakers and politicians to address CPAC, one of the most influential conservative gatherings in the country, on the final day of the conference. They sought to frame Texas as both the nation’s leader and its ideological brainchild.
Cruz portrayed the Republican party as a group of blue-collar workers and populists, blasting Democrats as coastal elites who are out of touch with the average American.
Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, pauses as he shares his remarks during the final day of the Conservative Political Action Conference, on Saturday, March 28, 2026 at Gaylord Texan Resort and Conference Center in Grapevine.
Shafkat Anowar / Staff Photographer
The senator did not mention Democrat James Talarico, a Texas state representative who is running to flip the Senate seat currently held by incumbent John Cornyn. Instead, he singled out California Gov. Gavin Newsom, who he joked “should be named Texas realtor of the year.”
“Nobody in history has sold more homes in the state of Texas than Gavin Newsom,” Cruz said.
Cruz is considered a potential Republican contender to run for president in 2028; Newsom is one of the leading contenders on the Democratic side.
In his address Saturday, Cruz repeatedly praised Trump — who skipped CPAC this year for the first time in a decade — on foreign policy, jobs and economic prosperity and national security.
“The world is safer when the president is strong and our enemies are afraid,” Cruz said.
Republicans could face a difficult landscape in November, with the party in power typically losing seats in the House of Representatives and often the Senate in midterm elections. A Reuters/Ipsos poll in March found Trump’s approval rating fell to 36%, the lowest number since he returned to the White House in January 2025.
In a statement, the Democratic National Committee’s rapid response director Kendall Witmer said rising gas prices, the Iran war and Trump’s tariffs have soured voters on Republicans.
“Donald Trump has broken one promise after another — and even his own supporters are fed up,“ Witmer said. ”Trump told Americans he would lower prices, create jobs, and put an end to forever wars — and he’s delivered on none of it.”
A group of attendees watch as Senator Ted Cruz, R-Texas, speaks during the final day of the Conservative Political Action Conference, on Saturday, March 28, 2026 at Gaylord Texan Resort and Conference Center in Grapevine.
Shafkat Anowar / Staff Photographer
Former U.S. Rep. Mayra Flores, who represented South Texas, said Republicans will lose in November if they do not make inroads with Latino voters, who she called the “future of the Republican party.” Flores urged the Trump administration to hire a Hispanic outreach coordinator.
“There is no future for the Republican party if we do not invest in the Hispanic community,” Flores said to little applause. “We are people of faith, family and hard work.”
U.S. Rep. Keith Self, a McKinney Republican, said the GOP must ban Sharia, the moral code laid out in Muslim scripture. Like many at the conference, Self warned that Sharia was seeping into Texas and the country, posing a risk to Americans.
Texas Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick has said “preventing Sharia law” in Texas will be among his major priorities for the next legislative session.
“Sharia has no place in America,” Self said, calling it a “religion of the sword.”
In previous statements, the Texas chapter of the Council on American-Islamic Relations has accused state leaders of a “publicity stunt” and “inventing imaginary threats.”
One speaker after another stressed the importance of Texas to the country’s future. On Friday, Trump ally Steve Bannon called Texas the “crown jewel of the union.”
“Where Texas goes, so goes the nation,” Bannon told the crowd to cheers. “And where the nation goes, so goes the world.”
FORT WORTH, TX — When she’s not on the court, Texas forward Justice Carlton is baking cookies.
If you’re wondering if they’re good, just ask her teammates.
“They’re the best thing I’ve ever tasted,” senior Sarah Graves said.
What started as baking for her teammates and managers for fun has grown into a full-fledged business: J’s Rollin In Dough.
After hours of practice on the basketball court and in the weight room, Carlton spends six hours a day baking cookies to fulfill her orders – or sometimes, simply for fun.
“Anytime that I get out of practice around 5 I’m so happy because I just go home and bake,” Carlton said.
Carlton’s love for baking dates back to her childhood.
“My mom worked over the summers, so when we were out of school it was so boring,” she said. “But the Easy-Bake Oven and the cake pop machine saved my life.”
Over winter break, she and her mom began discussing the possibility of creating a business of her own. They decided she could use her NIL money to form a limited liability company and obtain her food handlers license, so she did just that.
In just three months of business, she’s received more than 100 orders and has gained nearly 1,200 followers on Instagram. She takes orders through a form linked in her Instagram bio.
“It’s funny to see athletes do other things they are passionate about because they put the same focus and intensity into it,” Graves said. “And I can tell she has that for baking.”
Watch March Madness on Fubo
Last month, Carlton baked a batch of cookies for the “College Gameday” staff in hopes of gaining some media attention. The following month, the SEC Network staff ordered a batch at the SEC tournament and tried the cookies on live TV.
“I used basketball as my platform, which (associate director of communications Jeremy Rosenthal) really helped me do,” she said. “I’ve just kind of been getting my name out there, so that’s been something that’s really fun.”
The flavors offered are chocolate chip, cookie monster, cookies n’ cream, red velvet, brown butter salted caramel snickerdoodle and her newest flavor, sugar cookie. She also takes requests.
“She made a banana pudding cookie recently,” freshman Aaliyah Crump said. “I think that one was my favorite.”
While many of her orders come from her teammates, she recently received an order from the Longhorns football team for a team party and for a neuroscience class celebration.
In the future, Carlton hopes to move her business outside of the kitchen and onto the streets.
“I’ve put all my sales money aside and I want to start a food truck,” she said. “I think I would do something like a Crumbl Cookies on wheels.”
For now, Carlton has turned the oven off while she and the Longhorns prepare to face Kentucky in the Sweet 16 on March 28.
Ansley Gavlak is a student in the University of Georgia’s Carmical Sports Media Institute.
IOC addresses execution of 19-year-old Iranian wrestler Saleh Mohammadi
Clovis shooting leaves one dead, four injured
Tennessee Police Investigating Alleged Assault Involving ‘Reacher’ Star Alan Ritchson
YouTube job scam text: How to spot it fast
Boy who shielded classmate during school shooting receives Medal of Honor
How to buy Houston vs. Texas A&M 2026 March Madness tickets
Record Heat Meets a Major Snow Drought Across the West
Schumer gambit fails as DHS shutdown hits 36 days and airport lines grow