If Rick Green wins his runoff against Debra Lehrmann on Tuesday, Democrats will be licking their chops โ but do they really have a shot of occupying their first Texas Supreme Court seat in more than 10 years?
Criminal Justice
Get the latest Texas Tribune coverage on criminal justice, including crime, courts, law enforcement, and reforms shaping the stateโs justice system.
TribWeek: In Case You Missed It
Grissom on her two hours in Juรกrez, Grissom, Ramshaw and Ramsey on four of the runoffs on Tuesday’s ballot, Ramshaw on the religious experience that is voting for Dallas County’s DA and an energy regulator’s play for a job at the entity he regulates, Mulvaney on the Texas Senate’s biggest spenders, Aguilar on whether โ as U.S. officials claim โ 90 percent of guns used in Mexican crimes really flow south from Texas, M. Smith on the continuing Texas Forensic Science Commission follies, Stiles on how inmates spend their money behind bars and how counties are responding at Census time, Hamilton on the creative accounting and semantic trickery that allows lawmakers to raise revenue without hiking taxes when there’s a budget shortfall, and Hu on Austin’s first-in-the-nation car-sharing program. The best of our best from April 5 to 9, 2010.
TribBlog: Back on the Short List
Supporters may tout her as a Chicago justice for a Chicago president, but Diane Wood โ said to be in serious consideration as a replacement for the retiring John Paul Stevens โ got her start in Texas: as an undergrad and a law student at UT-Austin.
Whose Guns are They?
U.S. officials claim that most firearms used in crimes in Mexico are flowing south from Texas โ with Houston, Dallas and the Rio Grande Valley as the top sources.
The Inquisition
Ninety minutes of back-and-forth on Wednesday between a House committee and representatives of the Texas Forensic Science Commission โ but not its chairman โ covered the besieged agencyโs nonexistent enforcement power, lack of written procedural guidelines, and public records policy. Oh, and the late Cameron Todd Willingham.
The Senate’s Biggest Spenders
The 31-member body spent nearly $16 million last fiscal year on travel, staff and office expenses, according to records from the office of the Secretary of the Senate. Overall spending by individual senators ranged from $206,000, by Sen. Joan Huffman, R-Houston, to $637,000, by Sen. Rodney Ellis, D-Houston.
2010: Lubbock or Leave It
Low voter turnout means that in a downballot statewide race like that between Debra Lehrmann and Rick Green the winner could be decided by chance โ whose name comes first, or whose name sounds the friendliest. Green and Lehrmann are working to combat that dynamic in an unlikely place: Lubbock.
“I Won’t Stop Dispensing Justice”
Dallas County District Attorney Craig Watkins wonโt go so far as to compare his support to the near-divine fervor of President Obamaโs. But Watkins, who gained national prominence for using DNA evidence to exonerate nearly two dozen wrongfully convicted people in one of Texasโ notoriously tough-on-crime jurisdictions, will come close. โItโs a religious experience to vote for Craig Watkins,โ Texasโ first African-American D.A. says without irony. Like Obama, he says, other Democratic candidates are โhanging their hatsโ on his re-election โ and on the minority voters he draws to the polls. Like Obama, heโs got โa big targetโ on his back. โIโve got to fight the political attacks coming at me from all directions,” he insists. โIโll say it publicly: If you throw punches at us, weโll drop a bomb on you.โ
Sun on the Horizon
A small but growing number of state officials are warming to the idea of greater transparency and open access to raw government data, following a budding trend across the country. In the latest example, state Sen. Kirk Watson, D-Austin, wrote to numerous Texas agencies, urging them to post “high-value” databases online in open-standard formats.
TribBlog: Census Director “Concerned” About Texas
Texans’ lagging response to the U.S. census questionnaire is getting the attention of the higher-ups at the bureau.

