The Fort Hood shooter made his first courtroom appearance Tuesday, but a trial, the military court decided, won’t happen until October.
The Brief: June 2, 2010
Tickets for 10-Year-Olds
With the rise of get-tough juvenile crime policies across Texas, the municipal courthouse has become the new principal’s office for students who fight, curse their teachers or are generally “disorderly” — even in elementary schools. Campus police in the Austin, Houston and Dallas ISDs, among others, write thousands of citations per year, with young students tickted egularly and minority students targeted disproportionately. Fines of $250 or $500 are not uncommon, court officials say.
Redrawing the Lines
Redistricting is a highly partisan exercise, but there’s likely to be more at work than mere politics in 2011. Shifts in the state’s population and demographics will play a large part in shaping where new congressional and legislative boundaries are set.
Troop Trauma
The expected deployment of 1,200 National Guard troops to the border has angered border advocacy groups, which fear the militarization of their communities will damage the local economy and impact their way of life.
TribBlog: Hutto Detention Center Back in the Spotlight
The Hutto immigration detention center is under scrutiny again after a guard at the private facility was accused of sexual assault.
TribBlog: Still Not Racing to the Top [Updated]
Gov. Rick Perry wasn’t interested in federal “Race to the Top” money before — and he isn’t now, either.
TribBlog: “We Texans” Will Party
Debra Medina may have been shut out of the Republican Party of Texas’ 2010 Convention in Dallas, but her new advocacy group will still celebrate in the city next weekend.
The Brief: June 1, 2010
Still months away from a BP solution that works, Dallas’ Parkland Hospital under investigation … again, Fort Hood shooter headed to a courtroom and Texas’ textbooks don’t hold the clout most thought they did.
I’m From the Border
What does it mean to be a Texan? For some of us, it’s where we live now. For historian David Romo, it’s where he grew up. Romo’s roots in Mexico are a vital part of who he is, as he explains in Texas Monthly’s special “Where I’m From” issue, on newsstands now, and in a companion radio piece that airs on June 4 at 3 p.m. on Austin public radio station KUT-FM and at kut.org.



