Corrections and Clarifications

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Our reporting on all platforms will be truthful, transparent and respectful; our facts will be accurate, complete and fairly presented. When we make a mistake โ€” and from time to time, we will โ€” we will work quickly to fully address the error, correcting it within the story, detailing the error on the story page and adding it to this running list of Tribune corrections. If you find an error, email corrections@texastribune.org.

Posted in Criminal Justice

Thanks, But No Thanks

Depending on whom you ask, Dallas District Attorney Craig Watkinsโ€™ repeated refusal to allow Texas Attorney General Greg Abbott into a local corruption investigation is either bold or stupid. Either way, itโ€™s unusual. Abbott has offered prosecution assistance to local district attorneys 226 times since 2007, when lawmakers first gave him permission to do it. In all but 16 cases, heโ€™s been invited in. And Watkins didn’t decline politely.

Posted in Criminal Justice

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.

Posted in Demographics

Counting the Counties

Only three states โ€” Louisiana, New Mexico and Alaska โ€” are returning the census form at lower rates than Texas. But two dozen Texas counties are outperforming the national average, according to our interactive map.

Posted in Health care

Admission Impossible

The wait to get into one of Texas’ 10 state mental hospitals โ€” already long โ€” may be about to get longer. Last month, as part of its attempt to comply with Gov. Rick Perryโ€™s request that each state agency reduce its budget by 5 percent, the Department of State Health Services proposed eliminating 50 beds from four of the state’s 10 mental hospitals: San Antonio, Rusk, Terrell and North Texas Wichita. The state’s mental hospitals are already almost at full capacity, with nearly 2,500 self-admitted patients and allegedly criminal patients awaiting treatment so they can stand trial.

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