Last night, at approx 10pm, a citizen was washing his Jeep Wrangler when he was approached by six young males. At least one brandished a weapon and demanded the vehicle from the citizen. This took place at a carwash near Bammel.
One of the males fled in the initial vehicle 1/4
they were in and the other 5 males fled in the Jeep. @HCSOTexas deputies located the stolen Jeep and a fairly short pursuit took place. When the Jeep was n/b on Imperial Valley it crossed the intersection of Remington Valley. The Jeep was traveling at a high rate 2/4
of speed and lost control.
The Jeep struck a tree. Four occupants were thrown from the vehicle; a fifth was entrapped in the Jeep and pieces of the vehicle needed to be cut to remove him.
Two of the four that were ejected died on scene and the other three were transported 3/4
to hospital. Of the three hospitalized, one is critical and the other two are in serious condition.
Patrol did not locate the initial vehicle the suspects were possibly in.
The crash remains under investigation. #HouNews 4/4
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It’s important for us to run a safe, effective, and efficient jail operation. Running the largest jail in Texas is an immense challenge. We operate at or near full capacity on a regular basis. Outsourcing is not a preferred solution; we’re already sending hundreds to a 1/10
facility in Louisiana and still the need persists. Now we will be sending hundreds more to a facility in West Texas. I’m grateful to Commissioner’s Court for providing the necessary funding. This is not a decision any of us take lightly. The case backlogs in our local courts 1/2
are well documented. Commissioner’s Court has made significant investments to tackle the backlog from various angles, but those efforts have not yet produced desired results. I see a glimmer of hope, but simply not fast enough. The hope comes from some data points that are 2/10
Our HCSO jail is full. Harris County law enforcement does a great job of proactive policing, but offenders must be tried swiftly and prosecuted to the fullest. If found guilty, they need to be sent to prison quickly, sending a message that persons will be held accountable. 1/5
Also freeing space for other offenders to be incarcerated Long delays only keeps our local jail full, which operationally isn’t sustainable. We have limited capacity resulting in us having to temporarily outsource defendants to other jails, but that is not a long-term fix. 2/5
Court dockets need to move faster. I support being flexible w some non-violent/non-person defendants that pose no apparent threat to the community, but let’s also draw the line with serious, violent, repeat offenders, they need to stay in jail period. Everyone deserves their 3/5
A common suggestion is that having defendants in jail during a pandemic may actually be safer: isolated & can be quarantine. I want to share some thoughts regarding the challenge: (1)-it’s impossible to practice social distancing and heightened hygiene when 8,000 people are
detained in a close space. #COVID19 is extremely contagious and spreads through the air and from contaminated surfaces. When one person tests positive, there will be dozens more within a day or two. If even 20% of the jail population is infected, and that is a conservative
estimate, it will overwhelm the jail’s limited resources. (2)-we do not have the space or facilities to adequately quarantine people who test positive, nor do we have the medical facilities to respond to a serious case of #COVID19. Anyone who requires hospitalization, as 10% of
This individual had the means to post a bond. Research shows that when cash is the primary determinant on who gets in and out of jail, it doesn’t make us safer. Decisions should be guided by effectively assessing “risk” and research. With money involved, too many folks that may
not be a high risk, sit in jail, while high risk offenders can pay their way out of jail. This is why we should move to an “intentional system of detention”; we currently do not have that. Nobody wants any defendant to be released pretrial only to further their criminal careers
while we are trying them for any particular charge. In a model bail system, based on intentionality, such a person would likely be held without bail period. But when we look at the details, we see that it is not so easy simply because TX is currently in-between systems. I
IMO, we need increased dialogue to address the impacts of a traumatized society. Pause for a moment and reflect on this: the vast majority of us are walking around with some form of trauma. We have lived through events that have traumatized in unimaginable ways.
Mass killings, natural disasters, attacks in schools and places of worship. Inner-city violence and the 90,000 children in our county each year that have a patent locked up in our local jail. Certain films now require increased police presence.
Do you think survivors in El Paso might be harboring some trauma? What about our first responders that experience firsthand traumatic and horrifying incidents daily? Surely there’s an impact to our collective psyche. I don’t have the answers, but perhaps we start today on