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A 48-year-old Spring man was sentenced to 45 years in prison Thursday after being convicted of murder for shooting his neighbor in broad daylight as she stood with her dog in her front yard, Harris County District Attorney Kim Ogg announced.
“Hector Campos is a violent and vengeful man who killed his neighbor simply because they did not get along,” Ogg said. “Ana Weed, a loving wife, mother and grandmother, is dead and her family is devastated because an angry man with a gun could not control himself.”
Hector Arturo Campos was convicted earlier this week for gunning down his neighbor, 53-year-old Ana Weed, in her front yard on Jan. 24, 2017, in the 3400 block of Mourning Dove in Spring.
Weed’s family members testified they had a feud with Campos that began when Campos’ then-wife took the couple’s infant daughter on a trip to Mexico in June 2016. Campos had arranged the trip, then changed his mind and tried to cancel it. Because of that, Weed drove Campos’ then-wife and the baby to the airport, which apparently angered Campos, who eventually filed for divorce.
Months later, Campos was cleaning a truck in his driveway when he confronted Weed in her front yard about where his estranged ex-wife and daughter were. The two began arguing. Weed’s small dog got away and started barking at Campos, who tried to kick the dog. Weed, who had been wrapping a gift for her grandson and had a roll of clear packing tape in her hand, tried to retrieve the dog. At that point, Campos produced a handgun and shot her one time.
Campos later told police that Weed pushed him and then made a motion as though she was going to wrap a length of tape around his neck to choke him, so he shot her.
Jurors rejected Campos’ claim of self-defense, and sudden passion, convicting him of murder and sentencing him to 45 years in prison.
“You took away the life of an incredible and valuable person,” Weed’s sister, Carmen Guillen, said during her victim impact statement. “We will cherish her memory and she will never be forgotten. She lives on through her son and grandchildren.”
Assistant District Attorney Christopher Condon, who prosecuted the case with Ryan Trask, said the jury came back with the right verdict and a just sentence.
“He showed no mercy to Ana Weed,” Condon said. “For this family, every possible joyful occasion will be marred by sorrow, so we’re thankful for the jury’s hard work in bringing them justice.” 

No hay amenaza para los Estados Unidos o la Costa del Golfo de Texas. Se pronostica que Bonnie continuará hacia el oeste a través del sur del Mar Caribe y se trasladará a América Central este fin de semana.
La Oficina de Seguridad Nacional y Manejo de Emergencias del Condado Harris insta a todos los residentes a prepararse para la temporada de huracanes. ¡Solo unos simples pasos pueden hacer que usted y su familia estén más seguros! Para obtener más información sobre la preparación para desastres, haga clic aquí.
Los residentes pueden monitorear el clima local a través de las estaciones de radio y televisión locales, así como del Servicio Meteorológico Nacional. Para obtener más información sobre los huracanes, visite el sitio web del Centro Nacional de Huracanes.
¡Obtenga un kit, haga un plan y manténgase informado!


There is no threat to the United States or the Texas Gulf Coast. Bonnie is forecast to continue west across the southern Caribbean Sea and move into Central America this weekend.
The Harris County Office of Homeland Security & Emergency Managementurges all residents to prepare for hurricane season. Just a few simple steps can make you and your family safer! For more information on disaster preparedness, click here. Residents can monitor local weather through local television and radio stations as well as the National Weather Service. To learn more about hurricanes, visit the National Hurricane Centerwebsite.
Get a kit, make a plan, and stay informed!

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El Líder del Clima.
Mantente informado.
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A judge in Texas has blocked officials from enforcing a dormant 1925 abortion ban that the US state’s Republican attorney general said was back in effect after the United States Supreme Court overturned the constitutional right to the procedure nationwide.
Judge Christine Weems issued the temporary restraining order on Tuesday after a last-ditch effort by abortion providers to resume services after the Supreme Court overturned the landmark 1973 Roe v Wade ruling on Friday.
The order was confirmed by the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) and the Center for Reproductive Rights, which represented the abortion providers. Abortion performed at up to the sixth week of pregnancy can now resume in Texas at some clinics, the legal groups said.
“Every hour that abortion is accessible in Texas is a victory,” Marc Hearron, a lawyer at the Center for Reproductive Rights, said in a statement.
“Every day that clinics can remain open will save countless people from the life-altering risks and consequences of forced pregnancy,” the ACLU also said on Twitter.
Texas last year enacted one of the nation’s most restrictive abortion bans, barring people from undergoing the procedure after six weeks of pregnancy – a point at which many do not know they are pregnant. That law, which also allows people to sue anyone who facilitates an abortion, took effect in September.
Tuesday’s decision came amid a flurry of litigation by abortion rights groups seeking to slow or halt Republican-backed restrictions on the ability of women to terminate pregnancies – restrictions that are now taking effect or are poised to do so in 22 states.
On Monday, a judge in the US state of Louisiana temporarily blocked a so-called “trigger” abortion ban from coming into effect, after an abortion clinic sued to allege the restrictions violated due process and were too vague.
Texas is one of more than a dozen US states that had such “trigger” laws on the books, which were designed to take effect after Roe was overturned.
Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton issued an advisory note after the Supreme Court’s decision, saying the state’s 2021 trigger ban, which bars abortions almost entirely, would not take immediate effect. Providers say that could take two months or more.
But Paxton said that prosecutors could choose to immediately pursue criminal cases “based on violations of Texas abortion prohibitions predating Roe”.
“Although these statutes were unenforceable while Roe was on the books, they are still Texas law. Under these pre-Roe statutes, abortion providers could be criminally liable for providing abortions starting today,” his note read.
Meanwhile, abortion providers in Texas have said that if the laws are blocked, they will continue to provide services.
“We are already contacting patients on our waiting lists and working on resuming abortion services in all our 4 Texas clinics as quickly as possible,” Whole Woman’s Health, an independent abortion provider, said on Twitter on Tuesday afternoon.
“Keep in mind, Texas still enforces a two-visit requirement and a 24-hour waiting period, as well as the 6-week ban and other restrictions. Even with these obstacles, our clinic staff are ready and eager to welcome patients back,” the group said.
A further hearing is scheduled for July 12.
Paxton said on Tuesday afternoon that he planned to immediately appeal the judge’s “wrong” decision. “The judge’s decision is wrong. I’m immediately appealing. I’ll ensure we have all the legal tools to keep TX pro-life!” he tweeted.
Source: aljazeera
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A woman who claims former Houston Texans quarterback Deshaun Watson sexually assaulted her during a massage session sued the team Monday, claiming it enabled his habit of seeking out random therapists on social media.
Toi Garner, a flight attendant, and small business owner, says she had started taking classes with the goal of obtaining a massage therapy license when Watson, whom she had met through mutual friends, sent her a direct message on Instagram in November 2020 asking for a massage.
“Plaintiff found it somewhat peculiar that Watson would seek such services from her, because she was only a student at the time and did not have her license,” according to the lawsuit she filed against Houston NFL Holdings LP dba Houston Texans in Harris County District Court.
“Plaintiff was under the impression that a player like Watson had access to an entire team of professional trainers and massage therapists,” the complaint continues.
Garner says she declined Watson’s invitation to massage him at the Houstonian, an upscale Houston hotel, where Watson had a private suite that a Texans staffer had put in his name because Watson, now 26, did not meet the hotel’s age requirements.
She agreed to see Watson at her mother’s home in Manvel, a Houston suburb on Nov. 6, 2020.
Garner says Watson showed up with a non-disclosure agreement and she left the room so he could get undressed.
When she entered the room, she says, Watson was lying face-down on the massage table with only a small towel covering his butt.
Feeling nervous and unsure of herself, she recounts, she started sweating as Watson told her to “get up in there,” “don’t be scared,” and to “use your fingers.”
He flipped over and Garner says he directed her to massage his groin. She refused.
The session ended with Garner flustered and thinking she had not done a good job, according to the lawsuit, so she agreed to another appointment with Watson four days later, again at her mother’s house.
She claims Watson exposed himself and kept moving his penis towards her hands before ejaculating onto her arm.
“Watson got dressed and was grabbing his belongings when he asked about getting another massage that same day. Plaintiff told him she would let him know just to get him out of the house,” the complaint states. “After Watson left the house, he sent her a text saying ‘Maybe 4:30 pm? At Houstonian. I see you’re getting comfortable with certain techniques and areas.’”
Garner says Watson repeatedly called her over the following days, but she did not answer because she “felt violated, disgusted, used and betrayed,” and wanted nothing to do with him.
She sued the Texans for civil assault, intentional infliction of emotional distress and negligence and gross negligence “as principal of agent Deshaun Watson,” and negligence, gross negligence, and conspiracy via vicarious liability, by which employers can be held responsible for damages caused by their employees.
Garner is represented by Houston attorney Tony Buzbee. He also represents her and 23 other women in lawsuits filed against Watson, alleging sexual misconduct and abuse during massage sessions.
Last week, Watson settled 20 of those lawsuits.
Garner’s complaint against the Texans cites the deposition testimony—obtained by Buzbee for the civil cases against the quarterback—of Watson, Houston police who investigated allegations against him, and Roland Ramirez, the Texans’ director of player care and sports medicine.
Ramirez testified he found it strange when Watson asked him in August 2020 for a massage table, and told the quarterback, “We’re here for you, you know if there’s any work or whatever.”
According to the lawsuit, Jodi Honn, owner of Genuine Touch—a massage therapy firm under contract with the Texans—had complained to team officials as early as June 2020 that Watson was seeking out massage services from unqualified strangers on Instagram.
“It was her belief that Watson was potentially exposing himself to the Covid virus, or that he would eventually be sued if he continued to reach out to random strangers for private massages,” the filing states.
At least two Genuine Touch therapists also told Honn about Watson’s “towel trick” and “were well aware of his ‘sketchiness’ and attempts to push boundaries,” the suit states.
Though two Texas grand juries declined this year to criminally charge Watson, a Houston police sex crimes detective testified in a deposition cited in Garner’s lawsuit she believed Watson had committed crimes in sessions with some of his accusers.
She said her investigation revealed Watson had worked with 50 therapists from about September 2019 through January 2021.
Watson acknowledged in a deposition the Texan head of security, a former Secret Service agent, had given him a non-disclosure agreement after another therapist posted his phone number on Instagram and threatened to out him for alleged sexual abuse.
As further evidence of the Texan’s complicity, Garner says, the team security chief contacted Instagram and got it to take down the post because it contained Watson’s personal information.
As this drama played out behind the scenes, acrimony was also unfolding in the public eye.
Watson fell out with the Texans front office and demanded a trade in January 2021 after the team finished the 2020 season with a 4-12 record.
Still collecting his paychecks, he sat out the entire 2021 season.
The Texans traded him in March to the Cleveland Browns, who signed him to a five-year, $230 million contract, the largest fully guaranteed contract in NFL history.
The NFL is investigating Watson for possible personal conduct violations and considering suspending him for one season.
In a statement responding to Garner’s lawsuit, the Texans said they have fully complied with law enforcement and various investigations of Watson since March 2021, when the first of his accusers, Ashley Solis, sued him.
“We will continue to take the necessary steps to address the allegations against our organization,” the team said.
Buzbee indicated Monday this is probably not a one-and-done lawsuit against the Texans.
“Today we filed the first case of what will likely be many against the Houston Texans related to Deshaun Watson’s behavior,” he said in a statement. “Suffice it to say, the overwhelming evidence collected indicates that the Houston Texans enabled Watson’s behavior is incredibly damning. We believe the Texans knew or most certainly should have known of Watson’s conduct.”
Source: courthousenews