LATEST NEWS

Texas lawmakers reach $18 billion deal on property tax cuts


By NBC

Published: Jul. 11, 2023


AUSTIN, TX. (NBC) - After weeks of quarreling, the Texas House and senate say they have agreed in principle on an 18-billion-dollar plan that will “Deliver the biggest property tax cut in Texas History.”

The offices of Texas Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick and house speaker Dade Phelan released a joint statement Monday morning saying they’ve come up with legislation that will not only reduce the school property tax rate and increase the homestead exemption, but it will also include relief for small businesses.

Patrick and Phelan said the legislation is expected to be filed in the senate and passed later in the week.

From there it’s headed to Republican Governor Greg Abbott’s desk, who said in a statement that he looks forward to this legislation reaching his desk so he can sign it into law.

Migrant girl in federal custody dies at El Paso Children’s Hospital

by: Fernie Ortiz

Posted: Jul 11, 2023

EL PASO, Texas (KTSM) — A 15-year-old migrant girl who was in federal custody died at an El Paso hospital on Monday, federal officials said.

The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services’ Administration for Children and Families announced Tuesday that the Guatemala girl was an unaccompanied minor under the care of HHS’s Office of Refugee Resettlement (ORR).

In a statement to KTSM, an HHS spokesperson said that since she was turned over to HHS from border authorities, the girl had been hospitalized in the Pediatric Intensive Care Unit at El Paso Children’s Hospital for a “significant, pre-existing illness.”

“On July 7, 2023, the child’s condition began to deteriorate, and the child was declared deceased on July 10, 2023, at 9:25 am EDT as a result of multi-organ failure due to complications of her underlying disease,” the statement said.

Officials said the child’s mother and brother were present at her bedside in the days leading up to and at the time of her passing.

“Our heart goes out to the family at this difficult time. ORR is working with them to provide comfort and assist with arrangements as appropriate,” the agency said in a statement.

Treasury Under Secretary targets illicit fentanyl trade on border visit


By Roger Uvalle

Published: Jul. 11, 2023

LAREDO, Tex. (KGNS) - The U.S. Treasury Department is ramping up efforts to combat the illicit fentanyl trade.

On Tuesday, July 11, Under Secretary of the Treasury for Terrorism and Financial Intelligence, Brian E. Nelson, took action. As part of his visit to the U.S. Southwest border region, Under Secretary Nelson arrived in Laredo, marking a historic occasion as the first TFI Under Secretary to make such a visit.

Under Secretary Nelson’s presence underscores the Treasury Department’s commitment to disrupting the global fentanyl supply chain. During his time in Laredo, he engaged in briefings on Customs and Border Protection (CBP) operations at Bridge #2, gaining insights into the ongoing efforts to address the fentanyl threat. Discussions also took place regarding cargo processing and inspections at the World Trade Bridge.

“What CBP partners are learning here is when they see a person or organization bring in fentanyl or other illicit drugs, is to begin to work together to trace the entire network which is the work the treasury is really looking to do, going after the supply chain, the precursors, the money launderers, all of the entities and people that support the flow of these drugs,” said Under Secretary Nelson.

Following his visit to Laredo, Under Secretary Nelson’s next stop is San Antonio, where he, alongside other officials, will host a public-private information exchange. This collaborative initiative aims to enhance risk identification and provide critical information to combat money laundering, narcotics financing, and other financial crimes.

Remains of Laredoan missing in Korean War finally returning home

By Alex Cano

Published: Jul. 11, 2023


LAREDO, Tex. (KGNS) - After 73 long years, the remains of Army Sergeant Cresenciano Garcia, Jr., a Laredoan who served in the Korean War, are finally repatriated. Garcia, just 22 years old then, was reported missing in action during a battle south of Kunu-ri, South Korea, in December 1950.

Due to the circumstances of the battle, Garcia’s remains could not be immediately recovered. As a result, he was officially declared dead in February 1951. In 1954, five sets of remains were sent to Japan and subsequently interred in Hawaii in 1956.

Fast forward to 2019, when those remains were exhumed, and this past April, one of them was confirmed through extensive analysis to belong to Garcia. After decades of uncertainty, his burial is set to take place on October 14th, bringing closure to his family and honoring his sacrifice.

Garcia’s case is just one of over 7,000 Americans still unaccounted for from the Korean War.



Mexico rated among world’s most dangerous countries

by: Julian Resendiz

Posted: Jul 11, 2023 

EL PASO, Texas (Border Report) – The violence in Juarez that has claimed 16 lives in the past two days is neither surprising nor going to stop any time soon, security experts say.

Police reported the first in a string of 16 homicides shortly before midnight on Sunday, as two individuals broke into a home and gunned down a man who was sleeping. An attack at a gas station in the southern tip of the city left three men dead and two other people injured by gunfire on Monday afternoon. A body wrapped in a blanket was left on a sidewalk in the Aztecas neighborhood early Tuesday.

Juarez police have not disclosed a motive in any of the killings, which bring the number of homicides to 600 for the year. In nine out of 10 cases, they end up classifying the deaths as drug-related.

That’s not unique to Juarez. Drug-related massacres are becoming standard fare in a country that essentially allows drug cartels free reign in dealing with internal discipline – or killing each other off – in exchange for not targeting the general population, security experts say.

“If you leave certain things alone, we’re not going to mess with you. Don’t mess with the areas that are revenue-generating. It’s almost like a tradeoff. That’s the strategy of appeasement,” said Victor M. Manjarrez Jr., director of the Center for Law and Human Behavior at the University of Texas at El Paso. “Mexico (in the 2000s) went after the kingpins, and it resulted in a lot of violence. This is almost the opposite approach.”

But those unwritten rules can be fragile, as violence is ramping up and at times affecting bystanders in cities bordering the United States and in tourist destinations such as Cancun, Puerto Vallarta and Tulum, experts say.

The historic violence President Felipe Calderon’s failed “kingpin” strategy brought to Mexico has been eclipsed by the number of homicides during President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador’s “hugs, not bullets” tenure, according to the Mexican government’s own statistics.

And the cartels are no longer content with trafficking drugs such as fentanyl and methamphetamine to the United States. They have expanded into extortion, large-scale gasoline theft, illegal logging, migrant smuggling, kidnapping and, most notably, developing a domestic drug-consumer market that can imperil locals and visitors alike.

That’s why a Virginia-based security consultancy firm has classified Mexico as one of the most dangerous countries in the world.

Mexico is one of only three nations in the Western Hemisphere the firm has labeled as “high risk” because of ongoing criminal activity or civil unrest. The other two are Haiti, which Global Guardian labels a “failed state,” and Venezuela, where crime, political upheaval and corruption make the country off-limits to most Americans and foreign travelers. Only countries at war like Sudan and Ukraine received a higher risk rating.

“The gang warfare has gotten out of control […] no one group is in charge in Haiti. You end up with multiple actors competing for territory, control of revenue, criminal activities, drug and human trafficking,” said Michael Ballard, director of intelligence for Global Guardian. “In Venezuela, there is so much corruption, there’s so much lawlessness.”

In Mexico, drug cartels are in control of rural areas in states like Michoacan, Guerrero and Sinaloa and are fighting each other for smuggling routes into the United States. “Most of the violence is driven by competition for those drug revenues,” Ballard said. “Some groups may not own the actual meth, cocaine or fentanyl but they control the routes they are coming through and are able to extract a toll, so to speak, and maybe you have some folks who don’t want to keep paying this tax and that’s when you get the fighting and the shooting.”

This fight for control of drug shipments, crossing points and even highways from the border of Guatemala to the border with the U.S. is expanding to other countries.

Ballard agrees that areas previously thought of as off-limits to organized criminals are no longer sacred.

“We are starting to see some of these unwritten rules of engagement sort of being disregarded in some of these locations. Just a couple of years ago in Cancun there was a jet ski incursion on the beach with rival drug dealers targeting each other. One tourist was shot and injured. I don’t think anybody was killed but that was sort of a wake-up call that these cartels are not playing by the rules that they used to,” he said.

The cartels’ expansion into domestic drug sales are also making tourist areas a little bit more dangerous for tourists.

“You go to Cancun, you want to make sure you stay in the resort property. Tulum is the most obvious example where you see violence erupt as people are fighting for the street retail sales of the drug trade, folks who are selling drugs to tourists,” Ballard said. “That’s a change we’ve seen in the past couple of years. […] We are not saying don’t go to Mexico; we are saying, be careful if you do.”