Anderson Concedes Harris County District Attorney’s Race

Anderson’s statement to her supporters at the Houston Police Union Headquarters was short. She said the DA’s office will not significantly change, even as its leadership changes.
Anderson’s statement to her supporters at the Houston Police Union Headquarters was short. She said the DA’s office will not significantly change, even as its leadership changes.

Democrat Kim Ogg’s win in the Harris County District Attorney’s office is Republican Devon Anderson’s loss.

 (Houston Public Media)

Incumbent District Attorney Devon Anderson conceded the hotly-contest race just before ten Tuesday night.

“Thank you. It has been my honor to be district attorney. I feel that we have changed the landscape of criminal justice, and what we have done is going to last for many, many years to come,” she said.

Anderson’s statement to her supporters at the Houston Police Union Headquarters was short. She said the DA’s office will not significantly change, even as its leadership changes.

Kim Ogg making a champagne toast with supporters at her election night party at the Heights, Houston.
New DA, Kim Ogg making a champagne toast with supporters at her election night party at the Heights, Houston.

“Prosecution is a calling. It’s a calling to seek justice, and it does not change with who the district attorney is. So please keep doing what you’re doing. Please keep making us proud every day. Please keep fighting for justice,” she said.

Anderson came under fire after trial prosecutors in her office had jailed a rape victim in general population for almost a month to ensure she would testify against her attacker.

Harris County Online Sex Solicitation: Investigation Lands 25 Child Predators in Jail

Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton today announced the arrest of 25 suspected child predators following a joint operation led by the Harris County Sheriff’s Office High Tech Crime Unit (HTCU) and assisted by the attorney general’s Fugitive Apprehension Unit (FAU).

Over a three day period, the sting operation targeted adults in southeast Harris County who used the Internet and social media to solicit minors. Twenty-five suspects were apprehended after traveling to locations where they expected sex with a child. According to authorities, several persons arrived armed, and one man showed up with his 2-year-old son.

“This effort demonstrates the strength and effectiveness of law enforcement when it works together to crack down on child predators,” Attorney General Paxton said. “I commend everyone involved in the operation who helped identify and capture the predators before they could victimize children in Texas or elsewhere.”

Eight members of the Internet Crimes Against Children Task Force joined the HTCU and FAU in the operation: the Houston Police Department, Katy ISD Police Department, Deer Park Police Department, Department of Homeland Security, Harris County Precinct 1 Constables Office, Waller County District Attorney’s Office, Webster Police Department, and Cypress Creek EMS.

HTCU Chat Operation Mug Shots

To view the list of the 25 individuals charged with online solicitation of a minor click here: https://www.texasattorneygeneral.gov/files/epress/HTCU_Chat_Operation_Mug_Shots.pdf?cachebuster:16

Attorney General Paxton urges all parents to talk to their children about Internet safety

Houston prepares for Zika’s potential arrival this summer

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JOE PALCA  |  NPR Health  – On March 10, Rep. Sheila Jackson Lee held a news conference at the Good Neighbor Healthcare Center in the part of Houston she represents. The mayor and a bevy of other state and local officials stood behind her.

“What we’re doing here today is having an intense briefing on the Zika virus with health professionals, working with the mayor and the city of Houston, the state and the country, to formulate the kind of partnership that can respond immediately,” said Jackson Lee, a Democrat.

Then she stepped aside, as the mayor, the assembled health officials and civic minded clergy all delivered a version of the same message: The Zika virus is coming to Houston, and we’d better get ready.

To get a better idea why Houston is at particular risk, I met up with Peter Hotez. He’s dean for the National School of Tropical Medicine at the Baylor College of Medicine.

Hotez says there are three elements that put Houston at risk for a Zika outbreak. The first is the steady influx of people from other countries.

“Houston is a gateway city,” says Hotez. “We’re on the coast; we’re not far from the Panama Canal. We’re an immigrant hub.”

There’s also a major international airport. “Every day there are hundreds and thousands of people coming from all over the world to Houston,” he says. At least some of those people are likely carrying Zika, according to Hotez, whether they know it or not.

The second element is mosquitoes. In the summer, Houston is awash in Aedes aegypti. That’s the mosquito that can transmit Zika.

The third element is economic. “I think one of the missing narratives that we’ve not heard about Zika is that this is a disease of poverty,” says Hotez.

To show me what he means, we drive to a neighborhood called the Fifth Ward, just a few miles from the gleaming skyscrapers of downtown Houston. The area near the corner of Worms and New Orleans Streets is dotted with small, dilapidated wooden homes. There are few, if any, grocery stores or restaurants nearby.

Hotez says there are often piles of trash here, trash where water can pool and provide breeding grounds for Aedes aegypti.

Hotez points to a pile of tires. “What happens, the water pools inside the tire well,” he says. “But the other thing that happens is that as the water sits for a time, some of the leaves get into that, and it kind of creates an organic soup that the mosquito larvae absolutely love. So as we move into the spring and summer months, these will be teeming with thousands of Aedes aegypti mosquitoes.”

If these mosquito should happen to bite someone infected with Zika, and then bite someone else nearby, that second person will become infected. This is how the virus can spread through a neighborhood.

Now if you’re in a home with window screens and air conditioning, that’s one thing. But there aren’t many homes like that around here.

“We’re only a few feet from a house which has no window screens,” says Hotez, “So it’s the proximity of a house with no window screens, next to the discarded tires, next to the standing water that creates the perfect mix” for spreading the virus.

Elderly man becomes latest Zika virus case confirmed in Houston

Hotez says the point is American cities like Houston have quite a high concentration of poverty. He says it’s the poor who are the most exposed to mosquitoes, and therefore most vulnerable to mosquito-borne diseases.

City, county and state officials say they’ll do all they can to pick up trash where mosquitoes can breed. They say federal health officials are keeping watch at Houston’s international airport to make sure travelers who do show up with Zika are identified and treated.

But they’ll need residents’ help, both in clearing trash and seeking medical attention if they think they’ve been exposed to the virus.

Hotez says these efforts may not stop Zika from hitting Houston, but he hopes they will at least minimize its impact.

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