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29 people found in Houston home after man escapes alleged human smuggling operation

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More than two dozen people were found inside a southwest Houston home on Thursday night — held hostage in just their underwear, police said.

Among the victims was a girl who may be a minor.

Mauro Dominguez-Maldonado, a 36-year-old Honduran national who was illegally residing in Houston, has been charged with harboring 29 individuals. He is expected to make his first court appearance Monday.

The criminal complaint alleges the residence had boarded-up windows and deadbolt locks on the inside doors. If convicted, Dominguez-Maldonado faces up to 10 years in federal prison and a fine up to $250,000.

The horrific scene was discovered after one of the victims managed to escape, running down the street with barely any clothes and calling for help. Police responded, breaking open what appears to be an apparent human smuggling operation.

According to police, the discovery was made at a home in the 4800 block of Raven Ridge Drive around 9 p.m. Thursday. And what police found has left neighbors speechless.

“It was crazy. It was like, wow, I don’t have any words to say,” said neighbor Bruno Chavero.

Someone called 911 when they heard a man calling for help, and when police arrived, he led them back to the house he’d escaped.

Caught on a neighbor Bruno Chavero’s surveillance is the moment officers swarm in. Inside, they found more than two dozen people police say were being held against their will. Chavero watched it all unfold.

“Right when they started taking everyone out, that’s when they let us out, and I could see a few people walking out naked, basically,” Chavero said.

Police are now investigating this as an apparent human smuggling operation. They say the victims, all from different Latin American countries, including Honduras, El Salvador, Mexico, and Cuba had been picked up in Brownsville and held in the Houston home for days, some nearly a week.

“Like how can we not see that, or hear anything?” said neighbor, Stephanie Corona.

Police said one of the victims told them he’d been promised a job in Houston, but that all changed when they arrived.

“I just feel really bad for these people you know; I wish and pray for them to be okay now,” Chavero said.

Thursday night, one woman showed up to the scene, hoping her cousin who she’d lost contact with for two months, might be one of the victims.

“I hope that God has saved him. That’s why I came all the way over here,” said Andrea Baquedeno.

Baquedano rushed to the scene on Thursday night.

“I don’t know. I just had a feeling he was in that group,” Baquedano said.

She said her cousin was among them.

“He gave us a call and he said he was in there in the house and that the police got them,” she said.

Her cousin was trying to get to the U.S. from Honduras but she hadn’t heard from him in two months.

“I was worried because one of the men that they used to call us he said, ‘You know what. Your cousin is missing. He probably might be dead,'” Baquedano said.

She knew her cousin was in trouble.

“Every time they call us, they say, ‘OK, you want to know about him, give us $3,000,’” she said.

She is relieved all the victims are safe.

Mary Lewis lives directly behind the home.

“When he ran up to me he looked like he was all cut up,” Lewis said. “He had like cuts in his face. But he was in his red shorts, drawers. And he was barefoot.”

Lewis believes the man jump her gate to get away from the house.

She said she was in her front yard when the man ran up to her.

“Then I was backing up. I said, ‘What’s wrong, man? I can’t understand you. What are you talking about?’ And then he would look back that way,” Lewis said.

She said the man then ran to another home for help.

As for the victims, they were moved out of the cold and into a nearby school gym before immigration services picked them up. During that time, neighbors like Mayra Aleman stepped in to help, providing clothes and blankets to the victims.

“We know that they struggle on their way here, they’re just looking for a better future, they’re just victims in all of this,” said Mayra Aleman.

Neighbors said three people moved into the rental home several months ago, and that the men were friendly and unassuming.

James Harden misses Rockets’ first practice due to COVID-19 protocols

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The Houston Rockets began to practice for the 2020-21 season on Sunday, but they were without their best player. James Harden missed Houston’s practice due to COVID-19 protocols. The NBA required players participating in training camp to quarantine in the days leading up to camp, but Harden posted photos of himself attending the birthday party of rapper Lil’ Baby over the weekend. Harden, who reportedly asked Houston for a trade over the offseason, will have to post a negative test before he can join his teammates, which the Rockets are hoping happens soon.

“I’m not exactly sure what hoops he has to jump through in order to practice with the team,” Rockets coach Stephen Silas said of Harden on Sunday. “I would just say I want him here, and I want him to be a big part of what we’re doing. I’m excited to coach him and have him be a part of what we just had out there with good practice, with a bunch of guys who are working hard on both ends of the floor and had a good vibe about them.”

Despite swirling trade speculation, new Rockets guard John Wall “for sure” expects Harden to remain with the team this season. While speaking with media members Sunday, Wall said he and Harden had a “great talk” after Houston traded Russell Westbrook for Wall earlier in the week, according to Marc Stein of the New York Times. Despite the fact that Harden isn’t yet with the team, his newest teammate isn’t worried and said that the two are on the same page.

“We’re going to figure out what’s the best decision [regarding] when he wants to get here and be here,” Wall said of Harden. “We’ve been on the same page since I’ve been traded here.”

Even if Harden doesn’t want to be in Houston anymore, the decision is pretty much out of his hands at this point as he still has two years remaining on his current contract. At the very least, Harden is reportedly expected to begin the season as a member of the Rockets. Houston’s front office is clearly hopeful that the addition of Wall will be enough to entice Harden to want to remain with the Rockets, as Harden had a preference of playing with Wall over continuing to play with Westbrook.

With the 2020-21 season set to start in a few weeks, it certainly seems like Harden will indeed at least begin the season as a member of the Rockets. Given the years remaining on Harden’s current contract, there’s no reason for the Rockets to rush into a deal. In addition to trading for Wall, the Rockets also added a couple of talented big men in DeMarcus Cousins and Christian Wood over the offseason, and on paper, the project as a formidable squad.

If things click, Houston could still be a team capable of making noise in the highly competitive Western Conference, and Harden might change his stance about being traded. This is the best-case scenario for Houston, and it’s far from a guarantee. If things go south, though, the Rockets could still opt to trade Harden prior to the trade deadline, or even next offseason, and still, likely receive an attractive return package.

Biden picks health team

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Including Becerra for HHS secretary, Fauci as top coronavirus adviser.

President-elect Joe Biden announced Monday that he intends to nominate California Attorney General Xavier Becerra for secretary of Health and Human Services.

Becerra is cutting short his term as his state’s attorney general, which would have lasted until January 2023.

Republicans are already signaling their opposition to Becerra.

“Xavier Becerra spent his career attacking pro-life Americans and tried to force crisis pregnancy centers to advertise abortions,” Sen. Tom Cotton, R-Ark., wrote on Twitter. “He’s been a disaster in California and he is unqualified to lead HHS. I’ll be voting no, and Becerra should be rejected by the Senate.”

Additionally, Becerra’s being chosen to lead HHS essentially puts him out of the running for the Senate seat that will open up once Vice President-elect Kamala Harris is sworn in. California Gov. Gavin Newsom will appoint a senator to fill out the remainder of her term, and Becerra was rumored to be a leading contender.

Biden also named Dr. Anthony Fauci as his chief medical adviser on COVID-19. Fauci is currently director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, and Biden said Fauci would continue to hold that position as well.

Dr. Vivek Murthy has been picked to return to his post as surgeon general, which he held during the Obama administration. The Senate voted to confirm him 51 to 43 in 2014.

Other picks that Biden announced Monday are:

–Chief of Infectious Diseases at Massachusetts General Hospital Dr. Rochelle Walensky for director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

–Yale School of Medicine professor Dr. Marcella Nunez-Smith for COVID-19 Equity Task Force chair

–Former Obama administration official Jeff Zients for the coordinator of the COVID-19 Response and counselor to the president

–Biden’s deputy campaign manager Natalie Quillian for deputy coordinator of the COVID-19 Response

Proposed COVID-19 relief bill expected to get backing from Trump, McConnell

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A proposed COVID-19 relief bill is expected to get backing from President Donald Trump and Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell but it won’t include $1,200 in direct payments to most Americans, a Republican senator involved in the bipartisan talks says.

“President Trump has indicated that he would sign a $908 billion package — there’s only one $908 billion package out there and it’s ours,” Sen. Bill Cassidy, R-La., said Sunday. “The pain of the American people is driving this, and I’m optimistic that both those leaders will come on board.”

With time running out, lawmakers from both parties were closing in on the final language that would provide roughly $300 in extra federal weekly unemployment benefits, leaving the issue of cash payments for President-elect Joe Biden to wrestle over with a new Congress next year.

The package to be released Monday would be attached to a larger year-end spending bill needed to avert a government shutdown this coming weekend.

The direct payments were popular when they were first distributed after the pandemic hit, and Biden on Friday had expressed hope that a second wave might come after weekend negotiations.

But senators involved in the talks said the checks won’t be included as part of the compromise, even as Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., and others said that could cause them to oppose the measure.

Sen. Dick Durbin of Illinois, the second-ranking Democrat, indicated that excluding the checks while assuring small-business aid and renters’ assistance was the only way to reach agreement with Republicans who are putting firm limits on the bill’s final price tag.

“The $1,200 check, it cost we believe nationally $300 billion, to give you an idea,” he said. “The Democrats have always wanted a larger number, but we were told we couldn’t get anything through the Republicans, except this $900 billion level.”

The plan being worked on by a group of Republican and Democratic senators is less than half of the Democrats’ push of $2.2 trillion and nearly double the $500 billion “targeted” package proposed by McConnell, R-Ky.

Cassidy agreed that a new round of direct checks “may be a go” at some point. “This is not a stimulus bill, it’s a relief bill,” he said. “And it’s something for the next three to four months to help those in greatest need.”

The proposal is expected to include the $300 per week in bonus federal unemployment payments, providing relief just as emergency aid payments at regular benefit levels are set to expire at year’s end. It would extend a freeze on evictions for people who cannot pay their rent and reauthorize the Paycheck Protection Program to give a second round of subsidies to businesses struggling through the pandemic.

Still, potential sticking points remain.

Sanders and Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-N.Y., said last week they wouldn’t support the $908 billion proposal if it did not include checks for families, and were joined by Sen. Josh Hawley, R-Mo. Sanders and Ocasio-Cortez are also against shielding businesses from lawsuits claiming negligence for COVID-19 outbreaks, a provision pushed by Republicans.

While favoring the $1,200 checks, Biden said the emerging compromise was “immediately needed” and that additional assistance could follow later.

On Sunday, lawmakers involved in the negotiations said the direct payments would have to wait until after Biden is inaugurated on Jan. 20. At that time, Biden will face a new Congress as vaccines are being distributed, with a narrowed Democratic majority in the House and a closely divided Senate potentially split 50-50 if Democrats are able to prevail in two runoff elections in Georgia on Jan. 5.

Sen. Mark Warner, D-Va., said Sanders was not involved in the negotiations and “his characterization is just not accurate” about the potential liability protections for businesses. The direct payments, he said, will be a task for Biden.

Sen. Joe Manchin, D-W.Va., said the bipartisan group was focused on extending the most urgent aid for the next four months.

“Every indication says more money is needed; we see that,” he said. “This gets us through basically the lifelines that people need and the small businesses that can survive and not go under.”

Manchin said Biden’s team, when in power, “can put together a different proposal that takes us further down the road for more recovery.”

Durbin spoke on ABC’s “This Week,” Cassidy appeared on “Fox News Sunday,” Warner was on CNN’s “State of the Union” and Manchin was interviewed on NBC’s “Meet the Press.

Biden Transition Highlights: Biden Says He Will Ask Americans to Wear Masks During First 100 Days

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A deal still appears out of reach as Mitch McConnell and Nancy Pelosi discuss stimulus proposals. Vice President-elect Kamala Harris announced her top aides, including her chief of staff. The White House communications director for the Trump administration resigned.

President-elect Joseph R. Biden Jr. on Thursday pressed Congress and the nation to confront the worsening pandemic with urgency, as he also addressed fallout from President Trump’s final turbulent days in office.

Mr. Biden’s remarks came as part of a wide-ranging joint interview in which he and Vice President-elect Kamala Harris defended their cabinet appointments, alluded to covert Republican outreach to Mr. Biden and offered some of their most detailed remarks since winning the election about the next steps the country must take to battle the coronavirus crisis.

Mr. Biden said that on his first day as president, he would ask Americans to wear masks for 100 days. “Just 100 days to mask,” he said. “Not forever. 100 days. And I think we’ll see a significant reduction.”

He also expressed support for the bipartisan stimulus compromise under discussion in Congress. He said it was a “start,” even as he said that more relief would be needed as the nation reels from the pandemic’s economic fallout.

“I think it should be passed,” Mr. Biden said of the $908 billion proposal, though he added, “I’m going to have to ask for more help when we get there to get things done.”

The joint interview came as Mr. Trump continues to push false claims of election fraud and declines to concede.

Asked whether it would be important for Mr. Trump to attend the Democrat’s inauguration, Mr. Biden laughed, but conceded that such a move could help the country heal.

“Not in a personal sense,” he said. “Important in a sense that we are able to demonstrate at the end of this chaos that he’s created, that there is peaceful transfer of power with the competing parties standing there, shaking hands and moving on.”

Plenty of Republican lawmakers have not yet recognized Mr. Biden as president-elect, either, but Mr. Biden, a relative centrist and former senator himself who insists that bipartisan deal-making is still possible, said that he had received some quiet outreach.

“There have been more than several sitting Republican senators who have privately called me and congratulated me,” Mr. Biden said.

The president-elect also spent considerable time addressing his response to the pandemic, saying that he had asked Dr. Anthony S. Fauci, the nation’s top infectious disease expert, to play a central role in his administration.

“I asked him to stay on in the exact same role he’s had for the past several presidents, and I asked him to be a chief medical adviser for me as well, and be part of the Covid team,” Mr. Biden said in the interview, adding that he had spoken with Dr. Fauci earlier in the day.

Many experts say the United States is headed into an especially brutal stage of the coronavirus pandemic, even as hopeful signs for a vaccine emerge.

Mr. Trump has been overtly critical of Dr. Fauci and frequently ignored the advice of health experts throughout the pandemic, despite testing positive himself for the coronavirus weeks before Election Day.

Mr. Biden expressed concern on Thursday about the prospect of Mr. Trump weighing pre-emptive pardons, including of his own children.

“It concerns me in terms of what kind of precedent it sets, and how the rest of the world looks at us as a nation of laws and justice,” he said.

But Mr. Biden stressed, as he had in the past, that he will defer to his Justice Department for any possible response on the matter, emphasizing the importance of an independent department.

“I’m not going to be telling them what they have to do and don’t have to do,” he said. “I’m not going to be saying, ‘Go prosecute A, B or C,’ I’m not going to be telling them. That’s not the role. It’s not my Justice Department. It’s the people’s Justice Department.”

Mr. Biden has not yet named his choice to lead that department, and he did not directly answer a question about whether he favored appointing a Black attorney general.

Mr. Biden is facing a range of pressures over the composition of his cabinet. Some supporters worry that he has not yet delivered on his promise to assemble a diverse administration that reflects the country, and progressives in his party are pushing for more representation.

“I promise you, you’ll see the most diverse cabinet, representative of all folks, Asian-Americans, African-Americans, Latinos, L.G.B.T.Q., across the board,” he said.

More than a dozen people found in possible smuggling case in SW Houston, police says

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Houston police are investigating a possible human smuggling operation after more than a dozen people were found in a home in southwest Houston.

According to police, a woman and the rest of the men were found in the home near naked.

Initially, officers responded to a kidnapping call in the 4800 block of Ridgeton Street. Police said a man got away and was running down the street looking for help.

When police arrived at the scene, the man told them he escaped a home where he was being held against his will. That’s when officers went inside and found more than a dozen others. Police said the victims were not bound but had been locked inside the house. Inside, investigators said the windows were boarded up and the doors were locked. They also found food.

Most of them told police they were being held against their will. Some told police they had been there from a few days to a week. Investigators said the victims were picked up in Brownsville, Texas, and they came from countries such as Mexico, Honduras, El Salvador and Cuba.

All of the people who were found in the home have been taken to Ridgemont Elementary School for shelter. Neighbors in the area have reportedly stepped in to help by providing them clothes.

Houston police said they have possible suspects detained and are waiting on immigration officials to begin their investigation.

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The Houston Fire Department Urges Citizens to use Safety when using Heating Devices

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With the a freeze warning for Harris County from mid-night to 8 a.m. tomorrow morning, the Houston Fire Department urges citizens to be careful and follow some simple safety tips when using space heaters, fireplaces and other supplemental heating sources. Any shift away from the exclusive use of central heating presents an increased possibility for fire.

Citizens should always keep in mind that: Space Heaters Need Space. The Houston Fire Department recommends the following safety tips when using supplemental heating sources:

  • Make sure you have a working smoke alarm.
  • Never leave children unattended in a room with a space heater
  • Children knock over space heaters especially if they are placed on top of wobbly tables or stools and near where the children play. Children may also stick paper or toys in the grates of the space heaters especially gas space heaters.
  • Keep all combustible materials, including yourself at least 3 feet from the heater
  • Open face heaters should have a screen
  • Provide ventilation to prevent carbon monoxide poisoning

Vented Gas / Fired Heating Appliances Tips – Central heating units, floor furnaces, recessed wall heaters, and vented space heaters.

  • Inspect annually by a qualified service technician.
  • Do not use these type units without a proper vent pipe. Vent pipes must exhaust to the outside!
  • If your flame is not blue, it is not burning properly. It is producing Carbon Monoxide, which can’t be seen, smelled or tasted. Turn it off.
  • Use flexible metal tubing with threaded ends to connect the heater to the gas valve. There should be a cutoff valve for the heater at the wall. Never use a rubber hose to connect a space heater to the gas valve!
  • Use soapy water to check all connections and valves for leaks. NEVER use a match to test for a gas leak!
  • Look for the American Gas Association label and follow the manufacturer’s recommendations for proper usage.

Electric Heaters Tips

  • Never overload outlets or breakers
  • Don’t use extension cords for the heater. If the cord is hot to the touch, turn off the heater and unplug it!
  • Electric heaters permanently installed in the wall or ceiling should have lint and dust removed regularly. Lint and dust will burn!
  • Fireplace safety from the National Fire Prevention Association (NFPA)

According to the NFPA While fireplaces often conjure up images of warmth and comfort, they also represent a source of home heating fires. Creosote – a sticky, oily, combustible substance created when wood does not burn completely – rises into the chimney as a liquid and deposits on the chimney walls, and plays a role in nearly one-fourth (23%) of all home heating fires each year.

Just like a space heater, keep anything that can burn at least three feet away from a fireplace, and create a three-foot “kid-free zone” around open fires.

  • Make sure the fireplace has a sturdy screen to stop sparks from flying into the room
  • Never leave a fireplace fire unattended, particularly when children are present.
  • Ashes should be cool before putting them in a metal container, and kept at a safe distance from your home.
  • Make sure you open your fireplace flue, if applicable. There have been several fires this month because citizens left the flue closed.