82.9 F
Houston
Tuesday, May 12, 2026

Home Blog Page 632

Roberto Carlos – Ese Tipo Soy Yo

0
El tipo que piensa en ti a toda hora
Que cuenta segundos si tú te demoras
Y que todo el tiempo él te quiere ver
Porque ya no sabe sin ti lo que hacer
Y en el medio de la noche te llama
Para decir que te ama
Ese tipo soy yo
El tipo que firme te lleva del brazo
Y no deja que nadie interrumpa tus pasos
Pase lo que pase te va a proteger
El héroe esperado por toda mujer
Y por ti él encara el peligro
Tu mejor amigo
Ese tipo soy yo
El tipo que te ama así como eres
Que después del amor en su pecho te duermes
Que acaricia tu pelo, te habla de amor
Te dice otras cosas que te dan calor
De mañana despiertas sonriendo
Tu mirada diciendo
Ese tipo soy yo
Ese tipo soy yo
Yo soy el tipo exacto para ti
Que te hace feliz y que te adora
Que seca tu llanto siempre que tú lloras
Ese tipo soy yo
Ese tipo soy yo
El tipo que siempre te espera sonriendo
Que te abre la puerta del carro diciendo
Que está apasionado, que es loco por ti
Te besa en la boca y vuelve a decir
Que ha sentido tu falta y reclama
Porque te ama
Ese tipo soy yo
Ese tipo soy yo
Ese tipo soy yo
Ese tipo soy yo
Ese tipo soy yo

FBI Releases 2021 Statistics on Law Enforcement Officers Killed in the Line of Duty

0

According to statistics reported to the FBI, 129 law enforcement officers were killed in line-of-duty incidents in 2021. Of these, 73 officers died as a result of felonious acts, and 56 officers died in accidents. Comprehensive data tables about these incidents and brief narratives describing the fatal attacks were released today in the Law Enforcement Officers Killed and Assaulted (LEOKA) portion on the FBI’s Law Enforcement Data Explorer (a subset of the Crime Data Explorer).

Felonious Deaths

Seventy-three officers were feloniously killed in 2021, an increase of 27 when compared to the 46 officers who were killed as a result of criminal acts in 2020. The 73 felonious deaths occurred in 28 states, the District of Columbia, and Puerto Rico.

The 5- and 10-year comparisons show an increase of 27 felonious deaths when compared with the 2017 figure (46 officers) and an increase of 24 deaths when compared with 2012 data (49 officers).

Officer Profiles. The average age of the officers who were feloniously killed was 39 years old. The victim officers had served in law enforcement for an average of 12 years at the times of the fatal incidents. Of the 73 officers:

  • 68 were male.
  • 5 were female.
  • 60 were White.
  • 9 were Black/African American.
  • The race of 4 officers who died was not reported.

Circumstances Encountered by Victim Officer Upon Arrival at Scene of Incident. Of the 73 officers feloniously killed:

  • 24 officers were killed in unprovoked attacks.
  • 9 officers died as a result of investigative/enforcement activities.

o    4 were involved in surveillance activities.

o    2 were conducting traffic violation stops.

o    1 was responding to an active shooter.

o    1 was involved in an undercover situation.

  • 1 was investigating a wanted person.
  • 8 officers were ambushed (entrapment/premeditation).
  • 8 officers were involved in pursuits.

o    7 were vehicular (anything other than on foot).

o    1 was on foot.

  • 7 officers responded to disorders/disturbances.

o    3 were responding to a disturbance (disorderly subject, fight, etc.).

o    2 were responding to domestic disturbances (family quarrel, no assault).

o    2 were responding to domestic violence situations.

  • 6 officers were involved in tactical situations.

o    4 were involved in barricaded/hostage situations.

o    2 were serving/attempting to serve arrest warrants.

  • 4 officers were involved in arrest situations.

o    2 were involved with verbal advisements only.

o    1 was maintaining custody of a prisoner (in vehicle, precinct, etc.).

o    1 arrest situation type was not reported.

  • 2 officers responded to crimes in progress.

o    1 was an active shooter.

o    1 was an assault.

  • 1 officer was assisting other law enforcement officers.
  • 1 was serving/attempting to serve a court order (eviction notice, subpoena, etc.).
  • 1 officer was out of service (court, dining, etc.).
  • 1 officer was responding to a report of crime.
  • 1 officer was providing/deploying equipment (flares, traffic cones, etc.).

Weapons. Offenders used firearms to kill 61 of the 73 victim officers. Six officers were killed with vehicles used as weapons. Four officers were killed by the offender’s use of personal weapons (hand, fists, feet, etc.). Of the 61 officers killed by firearms:

  • 15 were slain with handguns.
  • 11 with rifles.
  • 2 with shotguns.
  • 33 with firearms in which the types of firearms were unknown or not reported.

Regions. Felonious deaths were reported in three of the four U.S. regions.

  • 44 officers were feloniously killed in the South.
  • 13 in the West.
  • 12 in the Midwest.
  • None were feloniously killed in the Northeast.
  • 4 officers were also killed in Puerto Rico.

Suspects. Law enforcement agencies identified 66 alleged assailants in connection with the felonious line-of-duty deaths.

  • 20 of the assailants had prior criminal arrests.
  • 9 of the offenders were under judicial supervision at the times of the felonious incidents.

Accidental Deaths

Fifty-six law enforcement officers were killed accidentally while performing their duties in 2021, an increase of 10 when compared with the 46 officers accidentally killed in 2020. The majority (32 officers) were killed in motor vehicle crashes.

Officer Profile. The average age of officers who were accidentally killed was 40 years old; the average number of years the victim officers had served in law enforcement was 10. Of the 56 officers accidentally killed:

  • 52 were male.
  • 4 were female.
  • 46 were White.
  • 7 were Black/African American.
  • 1 was Asian.
  • The race for 2 victim officers was not reported.

Circumstances. The 56 officers accidentally killed died in a variety of scenarios:

  • 32 died as a result of motor vehicle crashes.

o    30 while operating motor vehicles.

o    2 while operating an ATV or a motorcycle.

  • 20 were pedestrian officers struck by vehicles.
  • 4 officers drowned.

Use of seatbelts. Of the 30 officers killed in motor vehicle crashes (not including ATVs and motorcycles), 7 were wearing seatbelts, and 5 were not. Data about seatbelt usage was not reported for 18 of the officers.

Regions. Accidental deaths were reported in all four U.S. regions and in Puerto Rico.

  • 26 of the accidental deaths occurred in the South.
  • 13 in the West.
  • 9 in the Midwest.
  • 7 in the Northeast.
  • 1 in Puerto Rico.

Law Enforcement Officers Killed and Assaulted, 2021 Release Schedule

To provide a more timely release of data to the public, today’s release provides three categories of data. These categories include data and statistics concerning officers feloniously and accidentally killed and statistics about federal officers killed and/or assaulted. The remaining portions of the information, which present data reported to the FBI concerning law enforcement officers assaulted in the line of duty in 2021, will be released in the fall.

 

 

Harris County Attorney Christian D. Menefee Urges EPA Action on Ozone Measures

0

 

HCA_Logo_Color-01.png
Harris County Attorney Christian D. Menefee advocated for residents and voiced concerns about Texas’s noncompliance with ozone standards at a virtual public hearing with the Environmental Protection Agency regarding Ozone National Ambient Air Quality Standards (NAAQS).

The Houston area has failed to attain each of the four ozone NAAQS at the time of initial designation.

“Texas’s nonattainment status is even more important given how climate change is impacting our environment. Harris County is among the areas most vulnerable to climate change in the nation,” said Harris County Attorney Christian D. Menefee. “Harris County has a vested interest in strengthening Texas’s compliance with the Ozone NAAQS. We support the EPA’s denial of TCEQ’s one-year extension request.  History has shown that if Texas is granted an extension, it is unlikely that the issues will be corrected.”

Additionally, County Attorney Menefee asked that the EPA expediate the timeline for Texas’s State Implementation Plan and disapprove the state’s Reasonably Available Control Technology and Reasonably Available Control Measures State Implementation Plan revision for the 2008 ozone NAAQS serious reclassification.

About the Harris County Attorney’s Office
Christian D. Menefee serves as the elected, top civil lawyer for Texas’ largest county. The Harris County Attorney’s Office represents the county in all civil matters including lawsuits. Menefee leads an office of 250 attorneys and staff members. He entered office at 32 years old, making him the youngest person and first African American elected as the Harris County Attorney.
Office of the Harris County Attorney Christian D Menefee

Southwest Freeway SB connector ramp to I-610 West Loop SB to be closed for 2 years in Galleria area

0
Houston drivers are going to need to get ready for another major closure at the I-69 Southwest/I-610 West Loop Interchange Reconstruction Project continues.

Starting on April 29 at 9 p.m., the Texas Department of Transportation will be closing the I-69 Southwest Freeway southbound connector ramp to I-610 West Loop southbound. TxDOT said the $259 million projects is going to take approximately two years to complete.

“We’re four years into the project with two years left,” said Danny Perez with TxDOT. “We’re getting close, but everything we’re doing now is – there’s going to be some impacts.”

“We’re making room not only for the new ramp we’re going to build but we’re also making room for the 610 main lane bridge that we’re building over 69,” he continued.

Perez said the closure is unavoidable as TxDOT plans to build a new ramp close to the footprint of the existing one. While the closure may be an inconvenience, it’s all in an effort to improve traffic moving from one freeway to another.

“When you’re on the main lanes and you have that one person in the left lane and they need to get over to the right lane weaving over at the last minute we’re putting those connectors back – we’re putting those entrances back further – so they can make their decision further back,” Perez said.

On top of this, the Chimney Rock exit on the south side of Highway 59/I-69 Southwest Freeway will be closed for about two months.

TxDOT recommends drivers take the Fountain View exit ramp from the Highway 59/69 southbound main lanes, make a U-turn at Fountain View, get back on the first entrance to Highway 59/69 Southwest Freeway northbound main lanes and take the connector ramp to I-610 West Loop southbound to avoid this closure.

“This interchange project gets us to a good place to keep traffic flowing through that area,” Perez said. “There’s a lot of movement. There are 300,000 cars on either freeway.”

“We’re getting close to moving to project forward to the finish line,” he said. “Once it’s opened up it’s going to be great for folks traveling through that interchange.”

Source: khou

May 05 – May 11, 2022 | Weather

0

¡Que Onda Magazine!

El Líder del Clima.

Mantente informado.

Click on the map to view details or click here: QOHW0505

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

¡México presente! Eiza González impacta con elegante vestido en la Met Gala 2022

0

Dicen que la elegancia se hereda y parece ser cierto en Eiza González, quien no ha dejado de sorprendernos con los looks que nos ha regala en cada pasarela. La mexicana ha sabido posicionarse en el mundo del entretenimiento así como en la moda, ¡y vaya que es parte de ella!, pues engalana a todos con su porte. Ahora tocó mostrarlo con un magnífico vestido durante la alfombra de la Met Gala 2022.

Como toda una miembro de la realeza, la actriz hizo su aparición con un look de inspiración clásica, muy acorde a la temática de este año, el gilded glamour. El vestido adornado con lentejuelas, plumas y un increíble collar de diamantes enaltecen la belleza de la mexicana, quien muestra un atuendo sobrio pero ideal para la gala.

The Houston Fire Department Debuts New State-Of-The-Art Supervisor Vehicles

0

Today, the Houston Fire Department (HFD) placed in service two state-of-the-art Supervisor Emergency Response Vehicles. The units are assigned to EMS Supervisors at station 30 and 82.

They are equipped with a fridge-freezer combination to ensure optimal temperature regulations for emergency cardiac medications. To assist with easy access of emergency equipment, they feature rear locking dual storage compartments and a three-tier storage system located directly behind the front passenger seat.

HFD Supervisors provide leadership to the more than 100 basic and advanced life support units, often assisting with interventions during transport. Supervisors and their team respond to emergency calls, conduct clinical assessments, and implement interventions as needed. Supervisor’s roles are so dynamic, introducing these new features will expectantly aid in delivering the highest degree of customer service.

These two units will not only provide exceptional service to the community, but will also be continuously evaluated by EMS professionals. The evaluations will be used for future enhancements to next year’s wholesale replacement of the remaining supervisor vehicles.

A special thanks to the Honorable Mayor Sylvester Turner for his continued support of the HFD fleet replacement program.

Website
Twitter
Facebook
Instagram

Texas Activists Say They Have Enough Signatures To Put Marijuana Decriminalization On Another Local Ballot

0

Activists in Denton, Texas say they’re confident that they’ve collected enough signatures to place a marijuana decriminalization initiative on the local ballot.

The group Decriminalize Denton said that it will continue collecting additional petitions until May 3 while it also works to verify the more than 2,500 signatures that have already been gathered. But as of last week, organizers said that it appears that they’ve already netted enough to put the measure before voters in November.

The campaign plans to submit the signatures to the city in the first week of May. They need 1,745 valid signatures from registered voters for ballot placement.

Meanwhile, as Denton activists pursue the midterm election in November, the campaign Ground Game Texas successfully put cannabis decriminalization on the Austin ballot for next month. Early voting for that local measure started on Monday.

The Denton petition says that police “shall not issue citations or make arrests for Class A or Class B misdemeanor possession of marijuana offenses, except in the limited circumstances.” Those limited circumstances include investigations into violent felony cases.

Police also couldn’t issue citations or make arrests for class C misdemeanor offenses for drug residue or drug paraphernalia in lieu of a marijuana possession arrest.

The proposal would also make it so city funds could not be expended to test for THC concentration in cannabis products to determine whether it meets the state’s legal definition of legal hemp or illegal marijuana. Law enforcement in Texas has been especially thrown following hemp legalization.

Additionally, the initiative would prohibit police from using the odor of cannabis alone as  “probable cause for any search or seizure,” with limited exceptions.

The city would be required to work with the local police department, as well as “other relevant stakeholders,”  to educate them about the policy change and inform updated training protocols.

For what it’s worth, Gov. Greg Abbott (R) said in January that he doesn’t believe people should be incarcerated over low-level marijuana possession. However, he also incorrectly suggested that lawmakers have already adopted the policy statewide.

While Austin and other major Texas cities like Dallas have already independently enacted law enforcement policy changes aimed at reducing arrests for cannabis-related offenses by issuing citations and summons, these ballot initiatives would take the reform further.

Ground Game Texas is also actively working to put marijuana decriminalization on local ballots in Killeen and Harker Heights, and activists in San Marcos began a similar campaign in September.

There is no statewide, citizen-led initiative process that would enable advocates to put an issue like decriminalization or legalization on the Texas ballot. But at the local level, there are limited cases where activists can leverage home rule laws that allow for policy changes.

A recent poll found that a strong majority of Texans—including most Republicans—support even broader reform to legalize marijuana for adult use.

The survey from the University of Houston and Texas Southern University found that 67 percent of Texas residents back the broad reform. Fifty-one percent of participants who identified as Republican said they back legalization.

In Texas, drug policy reform did advance in the legislature during last year’s session, but not necessarily at the pace that advocates had hoped to see.

A bill to expand the state’s medical cannabis program and another to require a study into the therapeutic potential of certain psychedelics for military veterans were enacted.

Advocates remain disappointed, however, that lawmakers were unable to pass more expansive cannabis bills—including a decriminalization proposal that cleared the House but saw no action in the Senate.

The House approved a cannabis decriminalization bill in 2019, but it did not advance in the Senate that session.

The Texas Republican Party adopted a platform plank endorsing decriminalization of marijuana possession in 2018.

A Texas poll that was released over the summer found that 60 percent of voters in the state support making cannabis legal “for any use.”

Separately, the state Supreme Court last month heard testimony in a case concerning the state’s ban on manufacturing smokable hemp products—the latest development in a drawn-out legal battle on the policy first proposed and challenged in 2020.

FBI Warns of Increase in Sextortion Schemes Targeting Young Boys

0

The FBI is warning parents and caregivers about an increase in incidents involving sextortion of young children. The FBI is receiving an increasing number of reports of adults posing as young girls coercing young boys through social media to produce sexual images and videos and then extorting money from them.

Sextortion begins when an adult contacts a minor over any online platform used to meet and communicate, such as a game, app, or social media account. In a scheme that has recently become more prevalent, the predator (posing as a young girl) uses deception and manipulation to convince a young male, usually 14 to 17 years old, to engage in explicit activity over video, which is then secretly recorded by the predator. The predator then reveals that they have made the recordings and attempts to extort the victim for money to prevent them from being posted online.

Sextortion is a crime. The coercion of a child by an adult to produce what is considered Child Sexual Abuse Material (CSAM) carries heavy penalties, which can include up to life sentences for the offender. To make the victimization stop, children typically must come forward to someone—normally a parent, teacher, caregiver, or law enforcement. The embarrassment children feel from the activity they were forced to engage in is what typically prevents them from coming forward. Sextortion offenders may have hundreds of victims around the world, so coming forward to help law enforcement identify the offender may prevent countless other incidents of sexual exploitation to that victim and others.

The most effective way to disrupt these criminals is through awareness, education, and having serious discussions with your children about their online safety. We recognize victims may feel embarrassed and thus hesitant to come forward and report these incidents, but the FBI strongly encourages victims to notify law enforcement so that these individuals are held accountable and are prevented from harming other children. “While we understand victims may feel embarrassed, it is important for them to not just tell someone but to talk to, and cooperate with, investigators. We’ve noticed that some children who have reported being victims of sextortion are apprehensive to work with us or are unresponsive when we reach out,” says Supervisory Special Agent Jeanette Milazzo who heads the FBI Houston’s Crimes Against Children Task Force. They of course want to put this behind them, but because these individuals are likely victimizing other kids, their cooperation is key.

The FBI provides the following tips to protect you and your children online:

  • Be selective about what you share online, especially your personal information and passwords. If your social media accounts are open to everyone, a predator may be able to figure out a lot of information about you or your children.
  • Be wary of anyone you encounter for the first time online. Block or ignore messages from strangers.
  • Be aware that people can pretend to be anything or anyone online. Videos and photos are not proof that a person is who they claim to be.
  • Be suspicious if you meet someone on a game or app and they ask you to start talking to them on a different platform.
  • Encourage your children to report suspicious behavior to a trusted adult.

If you believe you or someone you know is the victim of sextortion:

  1. Contact your local FBI field office (contact information can be found at www.fbi.gov), the FBI’s Internet Crime Complaint Center (IC3) at www.ic3.gov, or the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children (1-800-the-lost or Cybertipline.org).
  2. Do not delete anything before law enforcement is able to review it.
  3. Tell law enforcement everything about the encounters you had online; it may be embarrassing, but it is necessary to find the offender.

In 2021, the IC3 received over 18,000 sextortion-related complaints, with losses over $13.6 million. This number reflects all types of sextortion reported, not just this scheme.

More information about sextortion, including graphics and a video PSA, can be found at https://www.fbi.gov/news/stories/stop-sextortion-youth-face-risk-online-090319.