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CRIME STOPPERS OF HOUSTON  FUGITIVE FRIDAY

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In an effort to keep our neighborhoods safe, Crime Stoppers of Houston and the Harris County Sheriff’s Office are seeking the public’s help locating the following individuals that have active Felony and/or Misdemeanor Warrants.

Crime Stoppers may pay up to $5,000 for information leading to the location and arrest of the suspects featured. Information may be reported by calling 713-222-TIPS (8477), submitted online at www.crime-stoppers.org or through the Crime Stoppers mobile app. All tipsters remain anonymous. Only tips and calls DIRECTLY TO Crime Stoppers are anonymous and eligible for a cash reward.

The following individuals all have active warrants as of March 17, 2023 at 4:00 pm.

Christin Danielle Brinkley

W/F      09-05-97      5’07”/110 Lbs.      Bln/Blu
Warrant #: 1780739, 1796609
FRAUD/USE/POSS ID INFO -10-49
BURGLARY OF HABITATION
Last known location: Houston Texas

Jerry Jerome Cooper

B/M      11-28-77      5’08”/200 Lbs.      Blk/Blk
Warrant #: 1806405
FELON POSS WPN
Last known location: Houston Texas

Gloria Dominique Garza

W/F      07-14-80      5’05”/180 Lbs.      Bro/Haz
Warrant #: 1805475, 1669358
UNAUTH ABSENCE COMM CORR FAC
ROBBERY-BODILY INJURY
Last known location: Houston Texas

Keishia Lashay Green

B/F      01-04-04      5’03”/150 Lbs.      Blk/Bro
Warrant #: 1806561
CREDIT/DEBIT CARD ABUSE
Last known location: Houston Texas

Ryon Avery Holmes

B/M      11-14-97      6’03”/195 Lbs.      Bro/Bro
Warrant #: 1806439
EVADING ARREST/DETENTION W/VEH
Last known location: Katy Texas

Iyianna Latesha Maxey

B/F      07-26-05      5’01”/112 Lbs.      Bro/Bro
Warrant #: 1806430
THEFT AGGREGATE =>$2,500<$30K
Last known location: Houston Texas

Robert Vincent Morin

W/M      06-19-83      6’02”/225 Lbs.      Bro/Bro
Warrant #: 1807012
BURG W-INTENT-COMMIT OTHER FEL
Last known location: Alvin Texas

Adrian Robert Perez

W/M      12-16-01      5’08”/140 Lbs.      Blk/Bro
Warrant #: 1806559
ASLT FAM/HOUSE MEM IMPED BRTH/
Last known location: Houston Texas

Tara Kristin Reed

W/F      05-20-86      5’03”/120 Lbs.      Bro/Bro
Warrant #: 1807527, 1796384
THEFT <$2,500 2/MORE PREV CONV x2
Last known location: Houston Texas

Glenn Edward White

W/M      11-23-82      5’06”/130 Lbs.      Blk/Bro
Warrant #: 1806569
CRIMINAL MISCHIEF >=$2,500<30K
Last known location: Houston Texas

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Upcoming March Events

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Homenaje A La Mujer:

A Tribute to Alice Valdez

Friday, March 24th | 7:30 PM

Join us for Homenaje a la Mujer: A Tribute to Alice Valdez on Friday, March 24th at MECA East End!

Known as a visionary and community leader, MECA’s Founder, Alice Valdez has worked for over four decades to help disadvantaged youth and families create a brighter future for themselves and the community.

Determination, commitment, and a refusal to yield to the impossible are her trademarks, and her work has had a tremendous impact on hundreds of Houstonians.

HOMENAJE A LA MUJER: A Tribute to Alice Valdez is a performance featuring a female-led cast of Mariachi MECA Alumni and MECA Ballet Folklorico dancers as we celebrate her contribution to the arts in Houston.

Homenaje A La Mujer: A Tribute to Alice Valdez is funded in part by

the City of Houston through Houston Arts Alliance.

Reserve Your Tickets
Sunburst Summer

Arts Camp

Camp dates:

June 5th – July 28th

Registration fees vary:

$30.00 Nonrefundable Registration Fee (before April 14, 2023)

$45.00 Nonrefundable Registration Fee (April 17, 2023- May 12, 2023)

$60.00 Nonrefundable Registration Fee (after May 15, 2023)

Registration will begin on Monday, March 20th by appointment ONLY.

You can schedule your appointment with our receptionist by calling 713-802-9370starting Friday, March 17th between 1 pm – 6 pm.

Heights Kids’

Day of Music

Saturday, March 25th

The Heights Kids’ Day of Music is a music festival all about inspiring kids to have a lifelong love of and engagement with music and the arts. 100% Local. 100% Fun.

Stop by MECA’s table and visit Ms. Salinas to learn about Academic & Family Support Services and Michael Martin for a special art project!

Hermann Park Conservancy Kite Festival

Sunday, March 26th

Don’t forget we’re at Hermann Park Conservancy’s Kite Festival, 10:00 am – 3:00 pm this Sunday, March 26.

Visit MECA’s table and meet Michael Martin teaching Kendama (Japanese skill toy) and Julio Luna for kite making workshop! MECA’s Ballet Folklorico under the direction of Julio Lopez will be performing at 12:15 PM at the festival!

#HermannParkKiteFestival

MECA’s work to provide year-round, high quality arts education, social services and vigorous academic support is made possible by generous contributions from the following donors:

Billionaire Ackman ‘Extremely Concerned’ $30 Billion Bank Rescue Plan Risks Financial Contagion Spiraling Out Of Control

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Billionaire Bill Ackman railed against the federal government-backed infusion of $30 billion into the regional bank First Republic in a scathing tweet on Thursday, calling it an insufficient plan that lulls the market into a “false sense of confidence” and risks the spread of “financial contagion”—all while shares of the ailing bank tanked yet again despite the new support from big banks.

KEY FACTS

The rescue plan rolled out Thursday afternoon designed to instill market confidence in First Republic including $5 billion uninsured deposits apiece from the nation’s four largest banks causes First Republic’s “default risk” to be “spread to our largest banks,” according to Ackman, the head of the hedge fund Pershing Square who has been outspoken about the need for government intervention in the sector.

The market seemingly agreed with Ackman’s assessment that the scheme did little to solve First Republic and the banking industry’s issues, with shares of First Republic crashing 21% in premarket trading Friday and shares of the five largest U.S. banks each falling 2%.

Ackman said he’s “extremely concerned about financial contagion risk spiraling out of control and causing severe economic damage,” adding he has no investments in the banking industry.

The 11 large banks depositing $1 billion or more into First Republic were “pressured” by the federal government to comply and assured the deposits “would be backstopped if it failed,” Ackman claimed.

The banking system needs a “temporary systemwide deposit guarantee immediately,” Ackman suggested.

CRUCIAL QUOTEElon Musk, the eccentric billionaire CEO of Tesla, Twitter and SpaceX, chimed in on Ackman’s assessment of the First Republic situation, writing“The inefficiency of the set of heterogeneous resource allocation databases we call money is astounding.”

CHIEF CRITIC

Fellow hedge fund billionaire Ken Griffin has taken a diametrically opposite stance than Ackman on the need for government intervention in banks, telling the Financial Times on Monday: “The U.S. is supposed to be a capitalist economy, and that’s breaking down before our eyes.” The federal government stepping in to protect previously uninsured depositors at Silicon Valley Bank represented a “loss of financial discipline,” he added. Griffin said a hands-off response from the government “would have been a great lesson in moral hazard” to emphasize the importance of risk management.

FORBES VALUATIONS

This group of billionaires questioning the federal government’s response to the banking crisis are some of the wealthiest people in the nation, and the world: Musk’s $187 billion fortune is the largest in the U.S. and second-biggest on the planet, Griffin’s $32.6 billion wealth pile makes him the 37th-richest person in the world, and Ackman is the 819th-wealthiest person on earth with a $3.4 billion net worth.

KEY BACKGROUND

Regulators shuttered Silicon Valley Bank on Friday as the bank was unable to meet consumer withdrawal requests during a massive run. Ackman called for government intervention days before the bank’s failure and subsequent quasi-bailout, suggesting inaction could cause “dominoes [to] continue to fall” in the banking sector. New York-based and digital-first Signature Bank failed two days after Silicon Valley Bank. Those failures, combined with Silvergate Capital’s closure last week, caused a host of regional bank stocks including First Republic to crash as investors panicked about spillover effects.

SURPRISING FACT

Several executives and board members at First Republic sold $12 million in their company’s stock in the two months preceding the bank’s crisis and stock crash, according to regulatory filings.

TikTok invierte $1500 millones en Texas para intentar eludir la prohibición de los republicanos

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La aplicación TikTok sigue siendo objeto de controversia en Estados Unidos. El lunes pasado, la Casa Blanca dio un plazo de 30 días a todas las agencias federales de Estados Unidos para eliminar la aplicación TikTok de todos los dispositivos propiedad de agencias gubernamentales. Esta prohibición federal se suma a las ya existentes regulaciones en 32 de los estados americanos.

Desde su creación en China, en 2016, la aplicación TikTok ha logrado un éxito sin precedentes y ha alcanzado más de mil millones de usuarios en una fracción del tiempo que a otras aplicaciones les llevó alcanzar ese número. Actualmente, opera en más de 150 países, y sólo en Estados Unidos ha sido descargada en dispositivos móviles más de 210 millones de veces. Sin embargo, ya desde el gobierno de Donald Trump se ha cuestionado la protección de la privacidad de los usuarios de Tiktok, así como el vínculo que tiene esta empresa con el gobierno chino.

Entre los argumentos a favor de prohibir TikTok en Estados Unidos se encuentra el temor de que Bytedance, la empresa matriz de la aplicación, facilite información sobre los usuarios al gobierno chino, entre ellas sus principales búsquedas o su ubicación geográfica. También se teme que se utilice para la difusión de noticias falsas y propaganda para influir en las elecciones y otros eventos de la vida política norteamericana. Por otro lado, se está observando un aumento en el número de personas que se oponen a la prohibición de TikTok en los Estados Unidos. Estas personas argumentan que la medida representa una violación a las libertades civiles y los derechos digitales de los ciudadanos estadounidenses.

¿Por qué el auge de TikTok es uno de los principales riesgos políticos para el 2023?

¿Cuál será la forma de implementar la prohibición de TikTok en dispositivos gubernamentales? Según Chris Bronk, experto en cyber-geopolítica y profesor de la Universidad de Houston, esto podría llevarse a cabo fácilmente, tal como ya se ha hecho con otras actividades prohibidas. “No se necesita desarrollar nada nuevo o innovador aquí. Al igual que otras formas de actividad en línea que no están permitidas, TikTok podría ser fácilmente prohibido en dispositivos o redes propiedad del gobierno”, aseguró a La Política Online.

La prohibición de TikTok en agencias gubernamentales también se extiende al uso de sus redes de WiFi, incluyendo las de las universidades. Esto plantea una cuestión importante sobre la libertad de los estudiantes para utilizar las aplicaciones que deseen, ya que esta medida puede limitar el acceso de los estudiantes a una de las aplicaciones más populares en la actualidad, lo que podría afectar su capacidad para comunicarse con amigos y familiares, así como para acceder a contenido y oportunidades relevantes en la aplicación.

En cualquier caso, la prohibición de TikTok en dispositivos gubernamentales es un tema de interés y preocupación para muchas personas, especialmente aquellas que se encuentran en posiciones de poder o responsabilidad dentro del ámbito gubernamental. Y en este sentido, TikTok se convirtió en un ítem más en el esquema de polarización partidaria de los Estados Unidos.

La prohibición de TikTok en dispositivos gubernamentales es tema de preocupación para muchas personas que se encuentran en posiciones de poder o responsabilidad dentro del ámbito gubernamental. Hoy TikTok es un ítem más en la batalla de polarización de los Estados Unidos.

De los 32 estados que han prohibido el uso de TikTok en dispositivos estatales, 24 de ellos han sido por iniciativas lideradas por gobernadores republicanos. En Washington, ocurre algo similar, ya que los legisladores republicanos son los principales impulsores de la prohibición. Estos líderes políticos acusan repetidamente a la aplicación de ser una herramienta de espionaje del Partido Comunista Chino. Tanto es así que Michael McCaul, congresista republicano de Texas, llegó a llamar a la aplicación “un globo espía en tu teléfono móvil”.

Por su parte, los demócratas tienen una posición más cautelosa en relación con esta temática. Gregory Meeks, representante demócrata por Nueva York, manifestó su opinión al respecto: “No podemos actuar precipitadamente sin tener en cuenta el poder blando muy real, la libertad de expresión y las consecuencias económicas de una prohibición”.

¿Qué opinan las empresas competidoras de TikTok como Meta (Facebook), Snapchat o Twitter sobre esta prohibición? Según Bronk, estas empresas estadounidenses han vivido una historia similar al intentar ingresar al mercado chino: “China ha estado prohibiendo las plataformas de redes sociales estadounidenses en su porción de Internet global durante años. Empresas como Meta, Twitter o Snapchat están excluidas del mercado chino. Lo que propone el gobierno estadounidense es una forma similar de prohibición, pero en una plataforma china”.

Además, Bronk señaló que estas prácticas no son inusuales en suelo estadounidense: “Estados Unidos ha prohibido y sancionado a empresas chinas en el pasado, generalmente debido a problemas de seguridad técnica, como Huawei o ZTE. TikTok es un caso similar, con la diferencia de que se trata de una empresa que opera en redes sociales. No creo que las empresas estadounidenses estén preocupadas por la prohibición, ya que solo estamos hablando de una prohibición en las computadoras y dispositivos móviles del trabajo de las personas. Estados Unidos no está bloqueando TikTok a nivel nacional”.

Se espera que durante este mes, el CEO de TikTok, Shou Zi Chew, declare en representación de la empresa ante el Congreso. Chew ya ha adelantado que TikTok está dispuesto a cooperar con las agencias gubernamentales de Estados Unidos y a trabajar para proteger la privacidad de los usuarios.

Dentro del esquema de cooperación propuesto por TikTok, la iniciativa más ambiciosa es Project Texas. De acuerdo con los ejecutivos de TikTok, Project Texas es una plataforma de seguridad digital destinada a proteger la información de los usuarios y los intereses de seguridad nacional de los Estados Unidos. Consiste en crear una nueva entidad para TikTok en los Estados Unidos, separada legalmente de su empresa matriz en China, Bytedance. En caso de prosperar, esta nueva empresa se ajustaría al cien por cien a la legislación estadounidense y permitiría que sus algoritmos fueran auditados para verificar que no exista almacenamiento de datos de los usuarios con fines de desinformación y espionaje.

Según los ejecutivos de TikTok, Project Texas es una plataforma destinada a proteger la información de los usuarios y los intereses de seguridad nacional de EEUU. Consiste en crear una nueva entidad para TikTok en los Estados Unidos, separada legalmente de su empresa matriz en China, Bytedance.

Los directivos de TikTok están decididos a levantar las prohibiciones. La empresa ha invertido hasta ahora alrededor de mil quinientos millones de dólares en Project Texas, y sus directivos creen que operar esta nueva entidad costaría unos $700 millones anuales. Sin embargo, la posibilidad de que esta empresa prospere parece ser incierta y difícil de creer para muchos. “Project Texas no es algo totalmente ridículo, pero es difícil de tomar en serio. ¿Qué impide que TikTok envíe datos recopilados en EE. UU. a China por medios no oficiales?” dijo Bronk a La Política Online.

En conclusión, la prohibición de TikTok en los dispositivos y redes gubernamentales de Estados Unidos ha generado controversia y opiniones encontradas. Mientras que algunos líderes republicanos han impulsado la prohibición acusando a la aplicación de ser un arma de espionaje del Partido Comunista Chino, otros han expresado su preocupación por las libertades civiles y digitales de los ciudadanos. Por su parte, TikTok puso en marcha un ambicioso plan para mantener su presencia en el mercado americano. El futuro de TikTok en los Estados Unidos aún es incierto, pero lo que es seguro es que la privacidad, la seguridad digital, y las libertades individuales son temas cada vez más importantes en la sociedad actual.

A spat between the US and Russia over a downed drone is escalating. Here’s what you need to know

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The US has released footage of the moment a Russian plane dumped fuel on a US drone over the Black Sea on Tuesday – a confrontation that has sparked a diplomatic spat and led to a race to recover some highly classified technology.

The White House slammed Moscow’s actions as “unsafe, unprofessional and reckless” while Russia’s defense ministry denied its aircraft came into contact with the drone.

But dramatic footage that was declassified on Thursday seemingly shows the Russian jet emitting a plume of fuel over the drone, causing its camera systems to cut off.

Russian and US aircraft have operated over the Black Sea during Moscow’s war in Ukraine, but this is the first incident of its kind since the conflict began – and it threatens to heighten tensions between the two countries further.

Here’s what you need to know.

What happened to the US drone?

The drone – a US-made MQ-9 Reaper – and two Russian Su-27 aircraft were flying over international waters over the Black Sea on Tuesday when one of the Russian jets intentionally flew in front of and dumped fuel on the unmanned aerial vehicle several times, a statement from US European Command said.

The aircraft then hit the propeller of the drone, prompting the drone’s remote operators to bring the MQ-9 drone down in international waters. Pentagon spokesman Brig. Gen. Patrick Ryder added Tuesday that the Russian aircraft flew “in the vicinity” of the drone for 30 to 40 minutes before colliding just after 7 a.m. Central European Time.

The Russians had given a different version of events. A Russian fighter aircraft “did not use airborne weapons or come into contact” with a US Air Force MQ-9 Reaper drone over the Black Sea, the Russian defense ministry said in a statement Tuesday.

Thursday’s video provides a view from the drone’s cameras of the interaction, showing the Russian jet veering closely over the unmanned aerial vehicles (UAV).

“It clearly demonstrated our narrative of what happened and I think if any of you have seen that video you can see clearly that it does,” said John Kirby, the strategic communications coordinator at the National Security Council.

He said the decision to release the footage was in part to “lay bare and to make clear to the rest of the world the manner in which the Russians have been just flat out lying, flat out lied, about their account” of the episode.

Who will recover the downed drone?

The incident marks the first known time Russian and US military aircraft have come into direct physical contact since Russia launched its invasion of Ukraine just over a year ago and is likely to increase tensions between the two nations.

More pressingly, a race is underway to avoid the drone falling into the wrong hands.

The Russian Security Council Secretary said Wednesday that Russia may try to get the wreckage of the drone to study it.

“I don’t know if we will be able to get it or not, but we need to do it… And we will definitely look into it,” said Nikolai Patrushev on on Russian state TV Rossiya 1.

The Kremlin has said a decision on whether to retrieve the drone from the Black Sea will come from Russia’s Ministry of Defense. “This is the prerogative of the military. If they believe that it is necessary for our interests and our security in the Black Sea, they will do it,” Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov told reporters on a conference call. Peskov said he did not know what the ministry has decided.

On Thursday, Ukraine’s Operational Command said Russia is increasing its presence in the Black Sea with a “rather atypical number of ships,” in a post on its official Facebook page.

“The rather atypical number of ships in the amount of 21 units may also be related to a demonstration of dominance at sea,” following Tuesday’s drone incident, Operational Command “South” said.

“It is also possible that the Russians themselves will conduct a search operation,” it said.

What is the MQ-9 Reaper drone?

The US Air Force primarily uses the Reaper for collecting intel, according to the service’s website, which touts the “intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance” abilities of the drone.

But when armed, the drone can also be used against “high-value, fleeting, and time-sensitive” executive targets, given its weapons systems and its ability to surveil an area for a long period of time.

In other words, the Reaper is both capable of surveilling and striking an enemy. These dual uses have earned the Reaper a nickname in military circles: the “hunter-killer.”

The US Air Force has relied heavily on drones for a number of missions; it had logged more than 2 million cumulative flight hours by 2019, according to the Department of Defense’s most recent unclassified Selected Acquisition Report (SAR), and was flown for around 330,000 hours each year.

They are expensive; a unit of four aircraft costs $56.5 million, according to the Air Force.

The surveillance and strike platforms saw heavy service in the US-led wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. But the Air Force has been looking to wind down the production and use of the drones in recent years. Annual funding for the program has declined since it reached more than $800 million annually on two occasions during the Obama administration, SARs show.

Following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine last year, Politico reported that the Air Force was looking to send some of its older drones to Kyiv, and was seeking to persuade the Pentagon to approve the move.

Why was the US flying a drone in this region?

American reconnaissance missions have been a regular occurrence in international airspace over the Black Sea for several years, and the area has been heavily militarized since Russia annexed Crimea in 2014, so it is not uncommon for a US drone to be spotted over these waters.

Russia appeared to claim on Tuesday that the area falls under the remit of its invasion of Ukraine, which it euphemistically calls a special military operation; Russian Ambassador to the US Anatoly Antonov said in response to a question from CNN that Russia “had informed about this space that was identified as a zone for special military operation.”

Several European countries also use the drone.

“We have warned not to enter, not to penetrate,” he said, asking how the US would react if a Russian drone came close to New York or San Francisco – a continuation of Russia’s claim that it is entitled to Ukrainian land.

But that argument carries little weight outside of Moscow, given Russia’s annexation of Ukrainian territory in Crimea in 2014 and then its unprovoked full-scale invasion of the entire country last year.

The US has said that the drone was in fact flying over international waters when it was downed; interactions between Russian and US operations in that region happen frequently, and it’s unclear whether Moscow intended to down the drone or whether it was simply trying to “buzz” the aircraft – a close fly-by that is done to encourage the drone or plane to move on.

Has this happened before?

The US has repeatedly reprimanded Russia for buzzing its aircraft in the Black Sea in recent years.

Around 90% of US reconnaissance flights over the Black Sea, often flown out of nearby naval stations in Europe, are intercepted by Russian jets, according to the US military in 2020.

“The greatest risk is miscalculation. The Russians do intercept these aircraft frequently,” Capt. Tim Thompson, commodore of the US Navy’s Task Force 67, told CNN that year. “They tend to be very professional and safe, but, on occasion, they can be unprofessional.”

And this is not the first Reaper to be downed while on a mission. In 2019 the US blamed Iran for the shooting down of a MQ-9 Reaper over Yemen by a surface-to-air missile.

Dara Massicot, a senior policy researcher at the RAND Corporation who specializes on defense issues relating to Russia, wrote on Twitter that Tuesday’s incident “fits with a larger pattern” by Russia of “escalating signals before coming too close to a platform,” though she noted that dumping fuel on the drone appeared to be a new tactic.

Massicot described the incident as “a close pass that went bad,” and suggested that it followed a Russian approach of “(escalating) behavior to compel their target to change course.”

What happens next?

Despite the history of encounters in the Black Sea, Russia’s ongoing invasion of Ukraine heightens has heightened tensions in the region. The US European Command said in its press release on Tuesday that the incident “could lead to miscalculation and unintended escalation.”

US National Security Council communications coordinator John Kirby called the incident unique in how “unsafe, unprofessional and reckless” the Russian actions were; Antonov said that Russia did not want “confrontation” with the US.

After Tuesday’s harsh language and the summoning of the Russian ambassador in DC, the US took the rare step of hastily declassifying and releasing footage from the drone – directly calling out Russia’s version of events.

That step could escalate the war of words over the incident.

But there is a pressing question that remains unanswered: what will become of the downed Reaper and its highly classified payload? According to the NSC’s Kirby, the US is not confident it will be able to successfully find wreckage in the Black Sea.

“I’m not sure we are going to be able to recover it,” he told CNN This Morning.

Russia has signaled its intention to find the wreckage first. And Moscow’s Navy has several ships in the Black Sea, including ships based in Crimean ports, which would have placed them in an advantageous position to attempt to recover the US MQ-9 Reaper drone after its encounter with Russian fighter jets on Tuesday.

The drone came down in international waters in the Black Sea approximately 70 miles southwest of Crimea, one of the officials said. It is unclear if Russia was able to recover any of the wreckage from the drone when they arrived at the crash site.

Army investigating death of another Ft. Hood soldier who complained of sexual harassment

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Fort Hood officials are investigating the death of Private Second Class Ana Basalduaruiz, whose family said she complained to them about sexual harassment by one of her fellow soldiers.

The 21-year-old served for 15 months as a combat engineer at Fort Hood, the same Texas base where Army Specialist Vanessa Guillen was killed in 2020. Guillen’s death launched a sweeping probe into sexual misconduct at Fort Hood.

“The army criminal investigation division and the chain of command are actively investigating the facts and circumstances surrounding [Basalduaruiz’s] death,” the base told ABC News in a statement.

Just like Basalduaruiz, Guillen too complained of sexual harassment by another soldier. Guillen was later murdered by another soldier who killed himself when being pursued by police.

Guillen’s mother, Gloria, described these complaints in a 2021 interview with ABC News.

“[She said,] ‘I’m being sexually harassed by a sergeant.’ I said, ‘Honey, that can’t be, honey. To that extent?’ She said, ‘Yes mami,’ and tears ran down like this,” she told ABC News in Spanish.

A scathing report released more than a year after her death confirmed that Guillen had been sexually harassed by a superior. The nearly 300-page document reported that leaders in her unit did not take appropriate action after she reported the sexual harassment to her supervisor on two separate occasions.

Guillen’s sister, Mayra, spoke to ABC News’ Stephanie Ramos after the report’s release.

“It’s sad how after over a year, they finally accepted that we were saying the truth and nothing but the truth from the very beginning,” Mayra said.

Mayra also reacted to Basalduaruiz’s death on Twitter Wednesday night, saying in part, “This is also very triggering for me … I will be speaking to the family soon.”

Source: abc13

Mar 16 – Mar 22, 2023 | Weather

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¡Que Onda Magazine!

El Líder del Clima.

Mantente informado.

Click on the map to view details or click here: QOHW0316 (1)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

¡Que Onda! Magazine Houston – edición 1259

Gracias por SEGUIRNOS, este artículo contiene la edición 1259 de la revista digital de HOUSTON de ¡Que Onda! Magazine.

Del 16 de marzo al 22 de marzo del 2023

 

Trade Delegation of agricultural and cattle exporters from Costa Rica attend the Houston Rodeo

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 Costa Rica is a true gem among tourist destinations, offering a unique blend of natural beauty, cultural richness, and sustainable tourism practices. This small Central American country boasts an incredible array of ecosystems, from lush rainforests to pristine beaches, and stunning volcanoes to expansive grasslands. The country’s commitment to conservation and eco-tourism has resulted in a truly unforgettable travel experience that is both educational and awe-inspiring.

Visitors to Costa Rica can experience some of the most diverse and

abundant wildlife on the planet, including jaguars, sloths, and howler monkeys. Adventurers can enjoy activities like hiking, zip-lining, surfing, and birdwatching, while history and culture enthusiasts can explore the country’s rich traditions and landmarks. From the iconic Arenal Volcano to the Monteverde Cloud Forest Reserve, there is truly something for everyone.

Beyond its natural beauty and cultural significance, Costa Rica is also known for its exceptional hospitality and service. The tourism industry is a vital part of the country’s economy, and visitors can expect a warm and welcoming attitude from locals. Sustainable tourism practices are also a priority in Costa Rica, with eco-lodges, resorts, and boutique hotels offering eco-friendly accommodations and tours.

It may come as a surprise to some, but Costa Rica is a notable exporter of beef to the United States. Currently, a delegation of agricultural and cattle exporters led by Costa Rican Congressman Daniel Gerardo Vargas Quiroz is effectively representing Costa Rica at the 2023 Houston Livestock and Rodeo.

Overall, Costa Rica is a great tourist destination for those seeking a truly unique and unforgettable experience that combines natural beauty, cultural richness, and sustainability.