The Supreme Court justice on being the first Latina on the court, whether the all-Republican high court is too one-sided and whether Texas has seen enough tort reform.
Criminal Justice
Get the latest Texas Tribune coverage on criminal justice, including crime, courts, law enforcement, and reforms shaping the stateโs justice system.
Crime, Guns and Money
When the state’s concealed handgun statute was approved 15 years ago, lawmakers argued it would help citizens defend themselves โ but residents of low-income, largely Democratic nieghborhoods aren’t applying for gun permits as often as those in wealthier, more-conservative areas, according to a Texas Tribune/San Antonio Express-News analysis.
An Obama Gun Rush?
In the two years since Barack Obama was elected president, many Texas gun owners โ afraid of losing their Second Amendment rights โ have stocked up on weapons and ammo. Texans have also sought a record number of concealed handgun licenses. Coincidence?
A Place to Shoot
In a pattern that’s playing out in San Antonio and other major metro areas in Texas, residents in low-income neighborhoods aren’t taking advantage of the state’s concealed-carry law as often as residents living in wealthier, more conservative areas.
T-Squared: A Partnership With the Express-News
Coming this Sunday: the latest collaboration between the Trib and one of the state’s venerable newspapers.
Ana Yaรฑez-Correa: The TT Interview
The executive director of the Texas Criminal Justice Coalition on how criminal justice austerity measures demanded by state leaders would affect Texas prisons, poor people accused of crimes and the counties responsible for overseeing overcrowded jails.
The Weekly TribCast: Episode 48
Our topics this week include the renewed debate over concealed handguns on campus, the advantages of not debating or talking to the press and the hotly contested battle between Congressman Chet Edwards and Republican Bill Flores in CD-17.
TribBlog: Jail Official’s Indictment Dismissed
A judge in Nueces County today dismissed a criminal indictment against Texas Commission on Jail Standards Executive Director Adan Muรฑoz, who was charged in connection with his release of information about a jailhouse suicide. Open government advocates have called the indictment outrageous.
TribBlog: We Are Family
In the shadow of a projected $21 billion budget shortfall, lawmakers told juvenile justice agencies that they must start budgeting like a cash-strapped family.
A Burning Issue
The Innocence Project of Texas will launch a campaign today not only to exonerate Sonia Cacy, a woman who experts say was wrongly convicted of setting fire to her uncle, but also to overhaul of the use of “junk science” in the prosecution of criminal cases.

