âStick with me kidâ đŞđź0209
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âStick with me kidâ đŞđź0209
The end of the City Hall corruption case
A developerâs probation and a standing ovation punctuate the longtime tale
And this is how The City Hall Corruption Story ends.
Not with a clang.
But with probation and applause.
Sherman Roberts, the low-income housing developer who in 2024 pleaded guilty to bribing former Dallas City Council members Dwaine Caraway and the late Carolyn Davis, will not spend a second in prison.
Instead, on Wednesday morning, in a downtown courtroom lined with jampacked pews, U.S. District Judge Ed Kinkeade sentenced the 72-year-old Roberts to four years of probation and a $10,000 fine to be paid over the next year.
Federal prosecutors were asking for five years in prison for the man who, despite his 2020 indictment and 2024 guilty plea â to the charge of Conspiracy to Commit Bribery Concerning Programs Receiving Federal Funds â remains the president and CEO of low-income housing development company City Wide Community Development Corp.
As prosecutor Chad Meacham told the judge, developer Devin Hall got a year in prison â and he pleaded guilty to bribing only Davis, the former chair of the councilâs Housing Committee.
Davis was killed in a horrific 2019 car crash that also claimed her daughter Melissa.
âMr. Roberts has to get more than that,â Meacham said.
But Kinkeade seemed reluctant to dole out even that generous of a sentence to Roberts, who, during his brief remarks to the judge, said he was sorry to be in this situation and that âyou grow up trying to do the right thing and donât know whatâs going to cross your path.â
But he never apologized, as Caraway did during his 2019 sentencing that resulted in a lengthy stay in a few federal prisons.
Thatâs because Roberts now maintains his innocence, insisting in court documents filed last year that he pleaded guilty only because he was ill, scared and acting upon the advice of very bad counsel.
Kinkeade said he had no choice but to punish Roberts, who had pleaded guilty to offering Davis and Caraway cash in exchange for supporting three City Wide projects.
Meacham told the judge there was a recurring theme in the investigation into Carolyn Davis, who died before her sentencing: âIf you run the money through a 501(c)(3), they canât touch you.â
One project involving the nonprofit City Wide CDC was Serenity Place Apartments at E. Kiest Boulevard and S. Lancaster Road, on six acres of land once owned by the city.
In 2015 the City Council voted to kick in around $1.9 million toward the low-income housing tax credit project â at the insistence of Davis, prosecutors have long alleged.
Another was in the nearby Runyon Springs subdivision, where the city awarded City Wide CDC $1.5 million to build single-family homes on foreclosed lots.
The third involved the infamous Patriotâs Crossing project, a three-time loser that returned to council in recent weeks under a new moniker, Veterans Community Project Village.
During Wednesdayâs hearing, Robertsâ Fort Worth attorneys, Michael Heiskell and Nate Washington, walked Kinkeade through the funding of Serenity Place, specifically, and maintained that it was ânot profitable.â
They said Roberts never made a cent on the project outside of his annual City Wide salary of $150,000.
The gallery included Robertsâ family, including his wife and two sons; Concord Church Senior Pastor Bryan Carter and members of his flock; political and civic leaders; and other low-income housing developers.
They erupted with cheers and applause upon the judgeâs ruling.
Probation, then the ovation.
Robertsâ indictment and guilty plea were headlines in every media outlet in this town way back when, more seemingly sordid dispatches from the bottomless corruption case that threatened to swallow City Hall.
But aside from Elite News publisher and editor Darryl Blair, a friend of Robertsâ and a true believer in his innocence, I saw no other media present.
Roberts, the last man standing in the sinkhole, has fallen from the front page to the footnotes to the forgotten.
Which is what happens in this town, where the arms are long and the memories are short.
âYouâll be fine,â Kinkeade told him.
âDo something good so I can read about it in the paper.â Before
Roberts was free to go, the judge told him, âNo reason to send you to jail at this point.â
Maybe because it was one year ago this month that developer Ruel Hamilton was found not guilty of paying Caraway and Davis for their support.
Hamilton walked out the Earle Cabell Federal Building on June 12, 2025, an innocent man â four years after he was initially convicted, and three years after the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals said, look, sometimes, what looks like a bribe is really just a âgratuity.â
Hamiltonâs name was only mentioned once Wednesday, by the prosecution.
But Kinkeade is the son of a pastor and a jurist in these parts for nearly 50 years.
He knows this town.
He knows its history.
Why Kinkeade gave Roberts probation instead of prison time, I do not know beyond what he said in court.
I do know this: Putting a Black man behind bars a year after the white developer walked in the same case would have sent a terrible message.
Kinkeade also knows that Roberts has spent almost a year trying to take back his guilty plea in the hopes he could stand trial after all.
In August, two months after Hamilton was acquitted, Heiskell and Washington filed a motion to withdraw Robertsâ guilty plea before sentencing.
The attorney said Roberts pleaded guilty because he was severely ill with numerous maladies, including a bum gall bladder and irritable bowels.
And because it was all so stressful on him and his wife.
And because he initially had lousy attorneys who gave him bad advice, like cooperating with the feds in their case against Hamilton in return for probation.
Roberts said in a declaration filed with his motion to withdraw that he only pleaded guilty because he was âtired, stressed and anxiousâ about a case that had lingered for years.
âAs the pressure built on a potential trial date I took into account my health, and the health of my wife,â he wrote, âand decided to plead guilty since I felt probation was assured.â
Which it was not.
In December, Kinkeade denied the motion to withdraw, which Robertsâ attorneys say they may still appeal.
But when I saw Heiskell before sentencing, he said he would be asking for probation, âhopeful that the court would look at his age, health and clean, pristine history.â
Meacham declined comment after the hearing. So did Roberts.
âYou donât write right,â he told me between hugs and handshakes.
âThis is what we asked for,â Heiskell said. âThis is what we hoped for. And this is what we prayed for.â
my â95 morning-atx-guest â jewel
iâll distract you with something youtube just showed me.
in austin, after college, i worked at the nbc affiliate.
đŹ 0  đ 0  â¤ď¸ 0 ¡ ACE OF BASS and Yours Truly ... shamelessly flossing my so-on-trend Daniel Johnston âJeremiah the Innocentâ t-shirt. THE KI
(everyone in media with the bigger gigs ⌠theyâre all entitled jerks, who never appreciate they have an advantage. they're also terrified and more insecure than a premenstrual teen. plus, just make sure no one ever gets ahead, the jerks deliberately treat everyone else like their work aint-never good enuf. stupid. thatâs whatâs going on at 60 minutes right now.)
anyway... this pretty gal from los angeles was a new publicist for atlantic records.
she liked my work. she was also that singerâs publicist who died in the fire.
anyway, jewel was starting out. the publicist-gal knew that every morning, i was working like a slave for peanuts at the tv station. at the time jewel was NOTHING.
but atlanticâs PR were getting ready to make jewel HUGE. so the publicist from los angeles says, Hey, think maybe some of my bands stopping in atx might appear on your morning show? so⌠i said, Iâll give the producer your info.
the producer wasnât much older than me. he sucked. heâs half the reason why the news was so bad on the branch davidian coverage because austin was closest to waco than the other bigger-markets.
anyway, jewel was the first act my atlantic-publicist-friend booked on our show. other bands came later. jewel comes to austin. nails her live-tv performance. and later on, sheâd hit â HUGE. in austin, jewel sang at a remote-live location while i was in the studio doing graphics. that morning, she wrote me â like â a "note" that jewel had delivered to the station.
later that night, jewel and i met backstage and shook hands. (she was opening for peter murphy)
eventually, i interviewed jewel. next thing i knew, she was on the cover of time magazine
but just before jewel was on our austin tv-show, conan oâbrien (also nbc) had her on. jewelâs network debut. instead of just thanking or acknowledging me â ever â for the hookup, the premenstrual producer pulls me into a video-bay at three in the morning before our live-shot.
jewelâs a VERY good guitarist. youâd never guess. but her fingers can do some intricate work. not easy.
so that morning, the austin producer shows me the conan clip and the part he shows me is when ... during one tiny moment, the cameraâs behind her⌠you can⌠i guess see jewelâs buttâŚ
thatâs... it...
not even a great butt shot. (especially for a song with a lyric about a butt)
jewelâs wearing jeans. not, like, cutoff shorts.
what a deliberate snub to both me â for making his job easier that day â and to his "guest" singing live on a thursday-morning local-show he produced.
havenât seen this conan clip in forever. but the butt-shot is at 2:15
and now that i look at the butt shot. even conanâs staff are choreographing the camera work to the song. the butt-cutâs exactly after the chorus and before the next verse starts. an empty, non-singing shot.
and in the frame, conanâs co-host andy richter watches jewel â paying attention to The Show-Guestâs performance.
i swear
it was like the producer was showing me the video. and he was trump, and i was billy bush having to endure him say âgrab her by the pussyâ
oh, wow. i really havenât listened to jewel since that first album. anyway, the real reason why i interviewed jewel later was she was in this weird but expensive staged-version of the wizard of oz. the ENTIRE musical â with even more songs than the movie.
jewel, of course, played dorothy and sang her butt off. i never âsawâ it. but i was given the recording. and even jewelâs version of somewhere over the rainbow is⌠excellent.
anyway. for my wizard-of-oz interview, there was surprisingly a lot of contact with jewelâs manager â nedra. who i liked. nedra and i talked more than a few times before the interview.
only did i realize during our interview that nedra ⌠was jewelâs mom. i would have NEVER guessed. cut to seeing this just now
i donât LOVE jewel. but from the beginning i knew she could play (i was given a tiny PR scoop when i interviewed jewel, because the publicist told me sean penn was in austin with her â they were dating because pennâs bumpy relationship with robin wright was kaput ... until penn got back together with wright)
Social reaction, video as Texas Longhorns celebrate beating Red River Rival Oklahoma 23-6 in Cotton Bowl.
INDIAN SUMMER
Chords: F#, E, B, C#m. Chords for Dream Academy - "Indian Summer". Chordify gives you the chords for any song
It was the time of year / Just after the summer's gone
When August and September / Just become memories of songs To be put away with the summer clothes And packed up in the attic for another year
â˘â˘â˘
We had decided to stay on / For a few weeks more Although the season was over now / The days were still warm
And seemed reluctant to give up and hand over to winter for another year
Indian... Indian summer
His parents had rented a house on the shore
âThough I stared at him all summer / We never really talked
In the end... At the summer's end I wish we could turn it around and start it again â˘â˘â˘ He shared a house with his sister and mother It belonged to a painter, who rented out for the summer His father had already gone home The days were quiet and we were both alone Intensified by the lack of competition We walked along the ocean / And put off decisions To keep us from saying goodbye
Indian... Indian summer
In the distance the city lights / Flickered in the bay But any previous existence seemed a world away In the end At the summer's end I wish we could turn around and start it again
Indian... Indian summer
Away from the magic / Could it ever be the same I think I knew those days would never / Come again
contour gauge
https://www.lowes.com/pd/Marshalltown-4-in-Black-Plastic-Contour-Gauge/1000204027
HPD officer fired for racist comments is seeking reinstatement
A former Houston police officer who filmed herself using racist slurs will go before an independent examiner to ask for her job back, according to her attorney.
Scott Siscoe, a former Houston officer and attorney who handles many cases of police discipline, confirmed that heâd filed a notice of appeal on behalf of Ashley Gonzalez and that he expected the hearing to be scheduled in October.
Police Chief Noe Diaz fired Gonzalez in April amid a chorus of people calling for her ouster after she posted the video on social media.
In firing her, Diaz called the behavior âabhorrent, disgusting and entirely unacceptable.â
Mayor John Whitmire applauded the decision, saying Diaz acted as quickly as allowed under Texas civil service rules.
In the video, posted on Instagram, Gonzalez appeared to be sitting in the passenger seat of a vehicle.
She made racist comments about Black people, used the N-word and talked about slavery.
She also said she used a slur while arresting someone.
Gonzalez had been with the department since 2023, according to a copy of her personnel file acquired through an open records request.
In her time with the department, she received one group commendation for tracking down a suspect in a burglary at a Family Dollar.
She had no listed discipline before Diaz terminated her employment, records show.
Texas elections chief to step down after primaries
POLITICS
AUSTIN â Secretary of State Jane Nelson will resign July 17 after overseeing the stateâs primary and runoff season.
Nelson, 74, did not provide a reason Tuesday for leaving.
A former Republican state senator from North Texas, she served as the stateâs top elections official for over three years.
âIt has been my goal to ensure that voting in Texas is secure, accessible and fair,â she said in a news release.
âWe have worked extensively to ensure accurate voter rolls and to educate voters about what they need to know to vote with confidence.â
Gov. Greg Abbott, who appointed Nelson, saluted her âlong and loyal service.â
âShe has represented our state with grace and honor across the globe, and Texas is better because of it,â the governor said.
Abbott will now appoint a successor who will oversee the November midterm elections.
The secretary of state administers elections, manages business filings.
Nelson also acted as the stateâs âchief international protocol officer.â Nelson drew criticism from Democrats in January after providing the federal government with Texasâ voter registration rolls for a review of potentially ineligible voters, a move opponents said invited federal overreach.
During her tenure, the agency renovated its headquarters, revamped its website and digitized millions of records.
COURTS No Black jurors in Metcalf murder case
Jury seated in Frisco track meet stabbing trial despite defense objections
McKINNEY â Collin County prosecutors and defense attorneys spent hours Wednesday whittling down a pool of about 250 prospective jurors, selecting the people tasked with deciding the fate of a teenager accused of murder.
The Karmelo Anthony case has shaken Frisco, drawn national headlines and stoked racial animus on social media.
The teenager he is accused of fatally stabbing, Austin Metcalf, was white. Anthony is Black.
Defense attorneys late in the day accused prosecutors of striking three Black jurors â the only Black candidates left in the jury pool â without proper cause.
Prosecutors are required to provide a ârace neutralâ reason for striking the jurors, and they said it was because all three were educators.
District Judge John Roach Jr. sided with prosecutors.
The 12 jurors and six alternates will be asked to decide the case only on what they see and hear in court over the next two weeks.
The trial centers on a confrontation under a tent during a rainy high school track meet in Frisco last year.
Anthony is charged with murdering Metcalf.
Both were 17 at the time.
The questions from both sides sketched the outlines of the case jurors are expected to hear.
Prosecutors appeared focused on whether jurors could hold a young defendant responsible for murder if the evidence supported it.
Defense attorneys signaled they may center their case on Anthonyâs self-defense claim, highlighting Texas law on carrying knives and asking whether jurors would hold it against someone who chose to defend themselves rather than retreat from a threat.
Jurors
About 600 Collin County residents were summoned for jury duty in the case, with prosecutors and defense attorneys beginning Wednesday morning with the pool of roughly 250.
Sandra Guerra Thompson, a University of Houston Law Center professor who has studied jury selection, said larger jury pools like the one in Collin County are generally used in cases that have drawn significant public attention or pretrial publicity.
Calling a large pool of potential jurors could reflect prosecutors and the defense âerring on the side of caution,â because many people summoned for the case could be dismissed for a variety of reasons, Thompson said.
Generally, prosecutors or defense attorneys can ask to remove potential jurors for cause, but the judge decides whether there is a legal reason to excuse them, such as if they cannot be fair or follow the law.
Each side also has a limited number of peremptory strikes, which allow lawyers to remove potential jurors without having to prove they are unfit to serve.
Strikes based on things like profession are allowed, but under the U.S. Supreme Courtâs 1986 decision in Batson v. Kentucky , lawyers cannot use those strikes to remove prospective jurors because of race.
Thompson said successful Batson challenges are rare, in part because the evidence needed to prove the strike was made on racial grounds and because lawyers accused can offer other rationales.
âItâs very hard to come by,â she said.
Defense
Mike Howard, Anthonyâs lead defense attorney then asked whether they would hold it against someone who chose to âstand their groundâ and defend themselves rather than walk away from a threat.
Howard hinted that the knife found at the scene after Anthonyâs arrest was small enough to legally carry in public.
Howard also asked prospective jurors to rate their view on the current state of immigration enforcement in the county on a scale of 1 to 10 â with 1 meaning they strongly supported it and 10 meaning they were strongly opposed.
The most common answer was 5, though a handful of prospective jurors placed themselves at either end of the scale.
Others declined to answer.
Lisa Blue, a Dallas jury consultant, lawyer and psychologist who is not involved in the Anthony case, said the question was likely aimed at gauging the political leanings of those in the jury pool.
The case has drawn outsized attention from right-wing influencers, and the discourse has often focused on race.
Outside the courthouse Wednesday, the gatherings were smaller than they had been at the start of the trial, when dozens of demonstrators supporting both Anthony and Metcalf stood on opposite sides of the street.
The attention around the case has extended beyond the courthouse as well.
On Tuesday, Frisco police arrested Jake Lang, a far-right influencer and Jan. 6 defendant pardoned by President Donald Trump, on a criminal trespass warrant tied to an incident at Kuykendall Stadium in Frisco, where the stabbing happened last year.
Frisco ISD previously confirmed trespassing charges had been filed after Lang posted a video online showing he had entered the stadium after Metcalfâs death.
After the jury panel was seated, Roach, the judge, sent them home.
âIâm going to say it again,â he said, âdonât discuss the case with anyone.â
FRISCO
Pardoned Jan. 6 rioter, influencer arrested
Pardoned Jan. 6 Capitol rioter Jake Lang was arrested Tuesday in Frisco, one year after he published a video of himself breaking into David Kuykendall Stadium.
Lang, a far-right provocateur and influencer, was booked into the Collin County jail on criminal trespass charges, jail records show.
Video is circulating on social media of his arrest outside Frisco City Hall, where a âRally Against Rednecksâ rally drew a few dozen counter protesters, some with guns and white supremacist messaging.
Earlier in the day, Lang posted a video of himself outside the Collin County Courthouse holding a sign that read âWhite Lives Matterâ and demanding justice for Austin Metcalf.
Metcalf, 17, was fatally stabbed last year at a Frisco track meet at the districtâs Kuykendall Stadium.
The trial for 19-year-old Karmelo Anthony, who said he was defending himself, is underway at the Collin County courthouse in nearby McKinney.
The case has sparked a deluge of misinformation and racist and divisive rhetoric on social media.
Metcalf was white.
Anthony is Black.
Last April, Lang hosted a sparsely attended Protect White Americans rally outside the stadium where Metcalf was stabbed.
He later posted a video on X saying he broke into the stadium.
âI gotta get out of here before the police come,â Lang said in the video.
âI just hopped the fence to get in here.â
He pointed to a dark streak on the ground near the bleachers and alleged it was the blood of Austin Metcalf.
School district officials said at the time the video was filmed on the opposite side of the stadium from where Metcalf was stabbed.
The district said it was pursuing charges in the case.
An arrest warrant obtained Wednesday by The Dallas Morning News confirmed Lang was arrested in connection with the break-in.
The document noted the stadium is surrounded by a six foot chain-linked fence topped with barbed wire, and has several signs noting itâs for âFISD use only.â
âBased upon Langâs statements, he clearly understands he is prohibited from being inside the gated area of the stadium,â an officer wrote in the warrant.
Lang could not be reached for comment Wednesday, and it was not clear if he had hired an attorney.
He recently told The News that he wanted to stand up for Metcalf.
Lang was in jail awaiting trial on several charges related to the U.S. Capitol attack, including assaulting a law enforcement officer, when he and nearly 1,600 others received pardons last year from President Donald Trump.
Lang, who posted photos and videos of himself at the Capitol, could be seen in other posts swinging a baseball bat at officers, according to court documents.
The Florida activist returned to a Frisco City Council meeting last month to fight plans for a new mosque, Hindu temple and Jain temple. Wearing an army green vest and Confederate flag patch, he told city council members that Muslims and Hindus were teaming up to take over Texas.
âGood evening Frisco-istan, what are you guys doing inviting the enemy?â he said.
âThese people donât want to assimilate ⌠if Jainism, if Hinduism is so great, why are their countries sâholes?â
âIf I lived in Texas, I would burn down one of these ⌠mosques,â Lang shouted.
Police escorted him out after his allotted public speaking time lapsed.
TRACK MEET MURDER CASE
Self-defense claim takes center stage at trial
Attorneys counter prosecution argument that Anthony provoked confrontation
McKINNEY â From the start of Karmelo Anthonyâs murder trial, there was no dispute over who plunged a knife into Austin Metcalfâs chest.
The question jurors must answer is why.
The dueling accounts laid out by Collin County prosecutors and Anthonyâs defense attorneys Thursday in the trialâs first hours offered sharply different perspectives jurors will be asked to weigh as the testimony unfolds.
The case, which has drawn national attention, racially charged demonstrations and online animus, centers on a dispute last year that began when Metcalf and his twin brother told Anthony to leave their teamâs tent during a rainy high school track meet in Frisco.
Anthony, now 19, was charged with murder and faces up to life in prison.
Both were 17 at the time.
Prosecutors argued Anthony provoked the confrontation, seizing on brief physical contact as an excuse to commit murder.
Anthonyâs defense attorneys argued he made a split-second decision in the face of a threat from teenagers larger than him â an act they say amounted to self-defense.
Because the defense has already conceded that Anthony killed Metcalf, legal experts said, the trialâs outcome will depend on how jurors interpret the moments under the tent before the stabbing.
Surveillance video that captured the altercation from a distance was a key piece of evidence showing Anthony was guilty of murder, prosecutors said.
Assistant District Attorney Bill Wirskye, the lead prosecutor, told jurors the case was not about race or self-defense, pointing to surveillance video he said made clear Anthonyâs actions were criminal.
âThe video will tell the story,â Wirskye said.
âThe facts of this case are as simple as this act was senseless.â
Toby Shook, one of Anthonyâs defense attorneys, said the video shows Metcalf pushing Anthony, painting it as evidence the teenager was defending himself.
Self-defense claims
As in all criminal trials, prosecutors carry the burden of proving the charge beyond a reasonable doubt.
Once self-defense is raised, they also must persuade jurors beyond a reasonable doubt that the use of force was not justified.
In opening statements, prosecutors focused in part on what they described as Anthonyâs taunt before the stabbing.
After a brief exchange under the tent, they said, Anthony challenged Metcalf to touch him and âsee what happens.â
John Helms, a Dallas criminal defense attorney and former federal prosecutor, said that focus was likely aimed at persuading jurors that self-defense laws donât apply in the case.
Texas self-defense laws donât protect someone who provokes a person before the deadly encounter.
âIf the juror thinks that the defendant went way beyond what was necessary, either because they were angry, they felt slighted, they were trying to get revenge, for whatever reason, thatâs not self-defense,â Helms said.
âSelf-defense is protecting yourself to the extent necessary based on the threat.â
Defense
Anthonyâs lead defense attorney, Mike Howard, told jurors Anthony stepped under Metcalfâs team tent to get out of the rain and talk with a friend, and was later approached by Metcalf, his twin brother, Hunter, and several others who told him to leave.
The Metcalf brothers were several inches taller and at least 70 pounds heavier than Anthony, Howard said, and Austin Metcalf made the first physical contact.
âThe thing about self-defense is you canât use it too early,â Howard said.
âSelf-defense is useless if you wait too late.â
Sam Bassett, an Austin defense attorney who has tried self-defense cases, said Howardâs emphasis on the Metcalf brothersâ size and the group approaching Anthony was likely aimed at convincing jurors that Anthony perceived a threat.
One of the defenseâs toughest challenges will be convincing jurors that Anthonyâs use of deadly force was proportional to the threat he perceived, Bassett said, particularly because Metcalf was unarmed.
âThatâs a real uphill battle,â Bassett said.
Other testimony heard by jurors Thursday included Mark Porter, a Tarrant County District Attorneyâs Office video analyst who told the jury how he used digital tools to enhance what can be seen on video clips captured by surveillance cameras at the stadium.
Jurors also heard from three high school track coaches, including Robert Starr of Frisco Memorial High School, where the Metcalfs attended. Starr fought back tears during his testimony.
Starr said he had just returned to the stadium after retrieving a Crock-Pot for the concession stand when he saw a commotion near his teamâs tent.
He dropped the slow cooker, jumped a fence and rushed over.
âI saw Austin on the ground and his face was purple,â Starr said on the witness stand.
âAnd thereâs a big hole in his chest.â
COURTS
Pardoned Jan. 6 U.S. Capitol rioter blocked from attending trial Jake Lang, who has repeatedly tried to stoke racial strife in North Texas and nationwide, is blocked from attending the murder trial of Karmelo Anthony.
Lang, who received a pardon for his involvement in the Jan. 6 Capitol attack, was released Wednesday afternoon on a $7,500 bond from the Collin County jail on criminal trespass charges.
As a condition of his release, Lang is prohibited from going within 200 feet of the Collin County courthouse for the next 30 days, court documents show.
Arrived at rally
Anthonyâs trial was underway Thursday at the courthouse in McKinney.
Shortly before 12:50 p.m., Lang arrived at the Austin Metcalf rally outside the courthouse.
Lang did not respond to a message Thursday from The Dallas Morning News , but he called his arrest a âblatant use of lawfareâ on X.
Lang was arrested Tuesday outside Frisco City Hall, one year after he posted a video of himself breaking into David Kuykendall Stadium.
Video circulated on social media of his arrest, where a âRally Against Rednecksâ event drew a few dozen protesters, some with guns and white supremacist messaging.
Earlier that day, Lang posted a video of himself outside the Collin County Courthouse holding a sign that read âWhite Lives Matterâ and demanding justice for Austin Metcalf.
Metcalf, 17, was fatally stabbed last year at a Frisco track meet at the districtâs Kuykendall Stadium.
Anthony, now 19, said he was defending himself.
The trial has generated national attention and a flood of misinformation and racist rhetoric online.
Metcalf was white. Anthony is Black.
Last April, Lang hosted a sparsely attended Protect White Americans rally outside the stadium where Metcalf was stabbed.
He later posted a video on X saying he broke into the stadium.
âI gotta get out of here before the police come,â the Florida activist said in the video.
âI just hopped the fence to get in here.â
In a video, Lang pointed to a dark streak on the ground near the bleachers and alleged it was the blood of Austin Metcalf.
School district officials said at the time the video was filmed on the opposite side of the stadium from where Metcalf was stabbed.
The district said it was pursuing charges in the case.
Pardoned by Trump
Lang was in jail awaiting trial on several charges related to the U.S. Capitol attack, including assaulting a law enforcement officer, when he and nearly 1,600 others received pardons last year from President Donald Trump.
Lang, who posted photos and videos of himself at the Capitol, could be seen in other posts swinging a baseball bat at officers, according to court documents.
He returned to a Frisco City Council meeting last month to fight plans for a new mosque, Hindu temple and Jain temple.
Wearing an army green vest and Confederate flag patch, he told city council members that Muslims and Hindus were teaming up to take over Texas.
Police escorted Lang out as he suggested burning down mosques.
sara hickman
Like Pee Wee Hermanâs sister Silly charmer Sara Hickman returns to Big Dâs gayborhood SPONTANEOUS AND ETHERIAL: Folk-pop songstress Sara Hi
San Antonio-born '60 Minutes' Scott Pelley
Why CBS fired San Antonio-born '60 Minutes' correspondent Scott Pelley
'The waste is heartbreaking,' Pelley wrote in a statement following his Tuesday termination.
This undated file photo released by CBS shows "CBS Evening News" anchor Scott Pelley.
According to audio transcripts obtained by Status, Pelley's dismissal followed a tense introduction with Bilton during a Monday staff meeting.
During that introduction, he once again called editor-in-chief Bari Weiss' leadership into question
San Antonio-born veteran â60 Minutesâ reporter Scott Pelley was fired Tuesday by CBS News, just one day after a heated clash with the programâs new executive producer, former technology journalist and filmmaker Nick Bilton.
Hereâs what to know about the months-long chain of events leading up to Pelleyâs ousting.
Pelley and Biltonâs Tense Introduction
According to audio transcripts obtained by Status, Pelleyâs dismissal followed a tense introduction with Bilton during a Monday staff meeting.
During that introduction, he once again called editor-in-chief Bari Weiss' leadership into question by raising concerns over Biltonâs hiring.
Bilton is replacing 27-year veteran Tanya Simon, daughter of former correspondent Bob Simon, after a spate of firings ushered in by Weiss last week.
Pelley reportedly said Bilton has âslender qualifications for this jobâ and accused Weiss of attempting to sabotage the program.
When Bilton said, âBari loves this institution⌠She loves '60 Minutes,'â during the meeting, Pelley reportedly fired back: âSheâs murdering '60 Minutes,'â Pelley said.
âShe does not love this place. She was brought in to kill it â and sheâs doing exactly that.â
Pelley also called attention to Simonâs firing during the heated exchange, along with that of former correspondents Cecilia Vega and Sharyn Alfonsi, demanding to know why they were ousted.
âWhy should we expect any of this is going to be any better?â he asked of Bilton.
According to Variety, Bilton tried to deflect Pelleyâs questions and ended the meeting early.
Biltonâs Letter to Pelley
Pelleyâs termination notice was issued later Tuesday evening.
In a letter to Pelley shared by CBS, Bilton wrote that Pelley âhijackedâ his first staff meeting âto disparage me, my qualifications, and my intentions with remarkable incivility and contempt.â
He stated that Pelleyâs âantipathy to the future of the show has come through loud and clear. And I have heard you⌠your employment with CBS is terminated for cause effective immediately.â
Pelleyâs Statement
Scott Pelley, renowned â60 Minutesâ reporter with CBS, charged "the new owner of our network" with casting aside the â60 Minutesâ legacy "to curry a moment of favor with the Trump administration."
However, in a statement from Pelley, the veteran news correspondent shared a different perspective, charging âthe new owner of our networkâ with casting aside the â60 Minutesâ legacy âto curry a moment of favor with the Trump administration.â
He also accused new management of pressuring him to âto inject falsehoods and bias into a politically sensitive storyâ and of telling him to insert âassertions that are unverifiedâ into his stories.
More 'Censorship' Issues
Additional criticisms over perceived censorship have been shared by Pelleyâs former â60 Minutesâ colleague, Cecelia Vega.
In a May 29 report from the Los Angeles Times, Vega said she and her colleagues faced pressure âto insert political bias into our storiesâ at the program, noting that reporting teams held back certain pitches due to the âfear of the internal repercussions.â
âLetâs call this what it is: censorship, both imposed and self-driven,â Vega said.
âIt is dangerous for the show and dangerous for democracy.â
Former â60 Minutesâ correspondent Sharyn Alfonsi, who was also ousted amid Weiss' staffing overhaul, also chided new management for what she viewed as politically motivated editorial interference.
In December 2025, Weiss pulled the programâs segment investigating El Salvadorâs CECOT maximum-security prison, described as a âblack hole for human rights,â hours before it was scheduled to air in December 2025.
While Weiss said the story was pulled because the piece didnât have an on-camera response from the White House, ex-correspondent Alfonsi said she believed the decision to pull the segment was ânot an editorial decision, it is a political one.â
If âthe administrationâs refusal to participate becomes a valid reason to spike a story,â Alfonsi added, âwe have effectively handed them a 'kill switch' for any reporting they find inconvenient.â
In his statement following his Tuesday termination, Pelley said he and his â60 Minutesâ colleagues âfought harder than anyone knows to save the program that became an American icon.â
However, he said the program âlost its DNAâ when senior leadership, along with Vega and Alfonsi, were fired amid last weekâs staffing overhaul.
âGood people were silenced because they stood up for our audience,â he wrote.
âThey stood for fairness against the forces of political bias; they stood for professionalism against chaos⌠The waste is heartbreaking.â
According to multiple reports, Bilton and Weiss aim to lead the program in a new direction.
For Bilton, â60 Minutesâ â a show known for its in-depth investigative journalism â isnât producing enough quick-hit content:
âThe show is on the air one day, one night, one hour a week,â he told Variety.
âTo me there is an incredible opportunity to take the show and do a lot of things with it,â he added.
He noted that he aims to shift the program toward a mobile audience and âreach a different generation of consumers that donât tune in to the broadcast channel but still want to experience â60 Minutesâ in all its forms.â
Representatives for CBS News' parent company, Paramount, did not immediately respond to Express-News' request for comment.
Scott Pelley accuses CBS News boss of âmurderingâ â60 Minutesâ The CBS television network logo is seen outside their offices on 6th Avenue in New York, in May 2016.
CBS News faced a fresh wave of turmoil today after Scott Pelley, the â60 Minutesâ correspondent, laced into the showâs newly hired executive producer during a staff meeting and accused Bari Weiss, the networkâs editor-in-chief, of âmurderingâ the long-standing Sunday news program.
In an extraordinary exchange, Pelley, his newscasterâs baritone sometimes shaking in anger, told Nick Bilton, the new executive producer, that he had âslenderâ qualifications for his new job and questioned the networkâs commitment to the future of the program, according to a recording of the meeting obtained by The New York Times.
The 10 a.m. gathering, held at the programâs midtown Manhattan headquarters in New York City, was intended as a formal introduction to Bilton, a tech journalist and filmmaker who was appointed last week as part of a major shake-up at â60 Minutes.â
CBS fired Tanya Simon, the previous executive producer, and her deputy, along with Sharyn Alfonsi and Cecilia Vega, two of the showâs correspondents â an event that Pelley referred to as âBlack Thursday.â
The meeting quickly turned tense â not a surprise after months of strain between veteran journalists at â60 Minutesâ and Weiss, an opinion journalist who was a longtime critic of legacy media institutions before she became the head of one last year.
She was appointed by David Ellison, a tech scion who took control of CBSâ parent company Paramount in a multibillion-dollar merger.
Bilton, who has never worked in traditional broadcast news, opened todayâs meeting by trying to assuage the anxieties of staff members who believed he might fundamentally change the decades-old DNA of the countryâs top-rated news program.
âFor me, the journalism is the journalism,â Bilton said, according to the recording.
âThat is why I am here. That is why we are all here.â
He added: âThe rumors people are spreading, that Iâm going to turn the show into 60 one-minute episodes, that itâs going to be like TikTok, that is not changing. The show is going to stay exactly like it is for now.â
He also warned that the broadcast television industry that incubated â60 Minutesâ would soon be obsolete.
âBroadcast is an ice cube that is melting, OK?â Bilton said, saying the show had to adapt.
âBari loves this institution,â he added.
âShe loves â60 Minutes.ââ
At that, Pelley interrupted.
âShe is murdering â60 Minutes,ââ the correspondent said.
âShe does not love this place. She was brought in to kill it, and sheâs been doing exactly that.â
Pelley added:
âShe has no qualifications for her job; you have slender qualifications for this job. The changes that sheâs made at the âEvening Newsâ have been catastrophic, so why should we expect that any of this is going to be any better?â
Bilton responded: âWell, I will show you. Thatâs what I have to say. That is my plan over the next two weeks. Iâll be meeting with everyone. Iâm very excited to meet with everyone, yourself included.â
A representative for CBS News did not immediately respond to a request for comment today.
Weiss did not attend the gathering.
A CBS executive at the meeting said that Weiss had been âprepared to come, and we asked her not to,â citing the staffâs ill feelings surrounding the firings.
Pelley pressed Bilton repeatedly on why CBS had fired Alfonsi and Vega.
Bilton said those decisions predated his hiring.
Pelley asked Bilton why he had accepted a position at a program âknowing that you will never be welcome here.â
âI have no problem taking a job in a place that I am not welcome in,â Bilton said.
âI donât think that will be the case.â
He added: âYou are not going to intimidate me in front of this group of people. I want that to be clear.â
Bilton said that he wanted to help â60 Minutesâ avoid the fate of old-media stalwarts that had failed to adapt, citing Time magazine.
âI care so deeply about this institution,â Bilton said, to which Pelley interrupted: âOh, please.â
At one point, Charles Forelle, a top deputy to Weiss, urged Pelley not to act ârudeâ toward Bilton.
âIâm not being rude,â Pelley responded.
âYou know what was rude? Black Thursday was rude.â
Weissâ handling of â60 Minutesâ has generated internal turmoil for months.
In December, she pulled a segment reported by Alfonsi, about the brutal treatment of migrants in a Salvadoran prison, saying that it needed more reporting.
The segment was critical of the Trump administration, and Alfonsi said the decision was âpolitical.â
The piece ultimately aired with some additional comments from the Trump administration.
Bilton today moved to conclude the meeting after roughly 15 minutes.
He encouraged the assembled staff members to partake in the food that had been laid out.
âI just want to thank everyone for graciously being so welcoming,â Bilton said.
âI look forward to talking to you in a one-on-one setting as these meetings are scheduled. And enjoy the bagels.â
The â60 Minutesâ staff applauded Pelley after Bilton departed.
In his termination letter to longtime â60 Minutesâ correspondent Scott Pelley on Tuesday, the showâs brand-new executive producer, Nick Bilton, complained that Pelley had decided to âambushâ him with âa performative display of hostilityâ during a Monday meeting with the showâs staff.
There was certainly an element of the theatrical in Pelleyâs confrontation with his new boss, with Pelley delivering the kinds of withering lines that aggrieved employees can only dream of.
Pelley clearly wanted a fight.
The question then became how Bilton and the person who hired him, Bari Weiss, would respond to this massive display of disrespect. They chose not only to fire Pelley, but to blame the entire dispute on him. Weiss doubled down the next morning, telling staff on a conference call, âI know I speak for myself, and I hope I speak for everyone here when I say that Iâm only interested in working in a newsroom that is built on trust and mutual respect. We cannot do our work without it. That foundation was broken on Monday, and despite our attempts to engage with Scott Pelley and to find a way back, unfortunately we werenât able to do so, and so we had to part ways.â She added, âThatâs the path he chose.â
Could Weiss have handled it all differently? âI think thereâs managerial incompetence. Even if you have disagreements with talent, you have to find a way for there to be a graceful transition,â said one CBS staffer. âIt sounds like Pelley didnât make that easy, but you still have to find a way to do it.â
STOP THE PRESSES
Bari Weiss Chooses War
By Charlotte Klein, a features writer and media columnist at New York Magazine
In his termination letter to longtime 60 Minutes correspondent Scott Pelley on Tuesday, the showâs brand-new executive producer, Nick Bilton, complained that Pelley had decided to âambushâ him with âa performative display of hostilityâ during a Monday meeting with the showâs staff.Â
There was certainly an element of the theatrical, possibly even the premeditated, in Pelleyâs confrontation with his new boss, with Pelley delivering the kinds of withering lines (âYou have slender qualifications for this jobâ) that aggrieved employees can only dream of â all of which were instantly leaked to sympathetic reporters and spread far and wide.Â
Pelley clearly wanted a fight.
The question then became how Bilton and the person who hired him, Bari Weiss, would respond to this massive display of disrespect.Â
They chose not only to fire Pelley, but to blame the entire dispute on him.Â
Biltonâs letter accused Pelley, a 30-year veteran at CBS, of having âno interest in contributing to the future success of the show.âÂ
Pelley fired back that Weiss and her team, among other offenses, âinstructed me to inject falsehoods and bias into a politically sensitive story.â
Weiss doubled down the next morning, telling staff on a conference call, âI know I speak for myself, and I hope I speak for everyone here, when I say that Iâm only interested in working in a newsroom that is built on trust and mutual respect. We cannot do our work without it. That foundation was broken on Monday, and despite our attempts to engage with Scott Pelley and to find a way back, unfortunately we werenât able to do so, and so we had to part ways.â
MEDIA
â60 Minutesâ faces turmoil
NEW YORK â âThis is â60 Minutes,ââ Harry Reasoner announced on Sept. 24, 1968, introducing his new CBS News show alongside fellow correspondent Mike Wallace.
âItâs kind of a magazine for television.â
He added: âWe do think this is sort of a new approach.â
More than a half-century and 58 seasons later, that same term â ânew approachâ â is being deployed by CBS News leader Bari Weiss to explain her sweeping changes at the most renowned news program in TV history: firing the top producer and two correspondents, among others, and installing a new chief with no TV broadcast experience.
Now, one of the showâs most famous faces, Scott Pelley, is gone too â fired after a tense confrontation with bosses.
âWe realize, of course, that new approaches are not always instantly accepted,â Reasoner said on that night in 1968.
And Weissâ ânew approachâ has been greeted with biting criticism from some corners.
Moreover, the turmoil has become a top news story in itself, with competing narratives flying â none of them flattering to CBS News.
The essential question percolating on Wednesday: Where does 60 Minutes go from here?
To one prominent analyst of TV news, it seemed Wednesday that something had already evaporated â if only, perhaps, a long-held perception that 60 Minutes , which manages to be both old-school and pugnacious, was something essentially untouchable.
âMy first response is, it started in 1968 â not a bad run,â said Robert Thompson, director of Syracuse Universityâs Bleier Center for Television and Popular Culture.
âBecause it really does look like this is systematically deconstructing what (the show) was.â
He felt, though, that there were concerning signs.
The show is suddenly down four correspondents.
Three have been dismissed, including Pelley, and Anderson Cooper is leaving of his own accord.
There have also been unsettling accusations launched by Pelley.
âNew management has instructed me to inject falsehoods and bias into a politically sensitive story,â the correspondent and former evening news anchor contended in a statement Tuesday.
âIâve been told to include assertions that are unverified.â
CBS News denied the charge.
âThere is no political interference at CBS News, not from ownership, not from Bari Weiss,â said a statement from a spokesperson Wednesday night.
âThe only âinterferenceâ is the normal back and forth between editor and correspondent that happens in every newsroom.â
Turmoil had been evident at 60 Minutes for more than a year, after President Donald Trump sued the show over its editing of a 2024 interview with then-Democratic presidential candidate Kamala Harris.
It became part of a broader upheaval at CBS News after Weiss was named to the new role of editor-in-chief by parent company Paramount late last year following David Ellisonâs arrival as the networkâs corporate leader.
Could Joe Rogan replace Anderson Cooper on â60 Minutesâ? Here's what we know
CBS News is reportedly searching for a replacement for â60 Minutesâ correspondent Anderson Cooper, and network executives may have their sights set on Austin-based podcaster Joe Rogan.
RadarOnline, a celebrity and entertainment news site, reported that CBS considering Rogan, who boasts 20.9 million subscribers on his YouTube channel, âPowerfulJRE,â and millions of viewers of his podcast, âThe Joe Rogan Experience,â would be âstrategy,â not âstunt casting.â
Rogan would bring âa core connection to over 50 percent of the country,â an unnamed media executive told RadarOnline, saying the 58-year-old media mogul speaks to âviewers who feel ignored or mocked by legacy media,â a viewership that, if reengaged, would solve the networkâs ratings and credibility problems.
The American-Statesman reached out to Roganâs team for comment. CBS and â60 Minutesâ have not confirmed the reports.
Cooper announced in February that he was stepping away from â60 minutesâ after more than two decades, saying in a statement that he wanted to spend âas much timeâ as possible with his kids. His last broadcast was May 17.
Whatâs on âThe Joe Rogan Experienceâ
Roganâs podcasts feature a variety of guests discussing a range of topics, most notably politics and culture.
The podcaster was credited with helping President Donald Trump appeal to young male voters after Trumpâs appearance on the show during the 2024 presidential campaign.
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The girl you took to the prom Pop queen Deborah Gibson is still the perfect date for a gay boy to bring home to mom LITTLE DEBBIE, ALL GROWN
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Douglas Collins passed away on May 30, 2026 in Lebanon, Indiana. Funeral Home Services for Douglas are being provided by Strawmyer & Drury M
A Catholic priest, I am not celibate
What politics gets wrong about sex
The natural, beautiful and mysterious doesnât fit well into economic models
A Catholic priest, I am not celibate.
Rather, Iâm a married father of five.
Many readers know this, but since itâs rare and relevant to the topic of this column, I mention it again.
When my wife and I converted to Catholicism, we were pregnant with our first child.
Our daughter is in high school now.
Our youngest starts pre-kindergarten this year.
Our home is noisy and messy.
Ever since becoming Catholic, we have indeed been fruitful, multiplied.
We know the rules.
For a married priest like me, a convert, some restrictions apply.
It was John Paul II back in the 1980s, as an act of unity, that made it possible for someone like me to pursue the priesthood, yet he did set parameters.
For instance, I can never get remarried.
If my wife passes to glory before me or tires of me, suddenly Iâll be celibate.
I try not to think about that.
Also, only the pope himself can dispense a priest from celibacy.
Yet I am nonetheless quite thankful.
If youâll forgive the joke, Iâm grateful to be one of the few people in the world to have written papal permission to have sex.
Now I say all this by way of preface, because I want to talk about sex and reproduction and civilization.
And before you shut me down simply for being a priest, if thatâs your prejudice, I think itâs important you know that Iâm a strange priest â a priest for whom the subjects of sex and children are not merely academic.
Reproduction is something a lot of people are talking about these days.
The headlines, the podcasts, studies half-read and quoted, Robert F. Kennedy Jr., Dr. Oz, Elon Musk: All of it has coalesced into a nervous vibe and a warning.
It seems that not enough people are having babies.
It seems weâve dropped below the â2.1 children per womanâ replacement rate.
âUnder-babiedâ is how Dr. Oz put it. Secretary Kennedy recently called it an âexistential crisis.â
Plentiful, of course, are theories about what exactly may be behind this drop in fertility.
Economists and politicos point to things like inequality and affordability.
Some blame feminism.
Others have pointed to the deskilling effects of technology: how by moving so much of our social life to apps on constantly surveilled screens â everything from dating to sexual gratification â we have slowly forgotten the most basic mores of human love.
Whatever there is to any of these theories, Iâm certainly not qualified to answer.
Iâm merely grateful weâre now having the discussion, that weâre beginning to crowdsource the problem.
Thatâs good.
And itâs why, inexpert though experienced as I am, I feel able to join this important conversation, not to criticize policy proposals or demographersâ theories, but to suggest that what might be underneath our present antinatalist anxieties is something more than fear related to the economy or to political or cultural instability.
Iâd like to suggest that what is depriving us of the joys of sex and the good of children is that we have abandoned our sense of the nature of sex â the naturalness of it, our nature too.
I invoke here the idea of nature in the full sense of the word, in the ancient sense.
The word I suppose weâd use today is holistic.
To invoke nature in this sense, what I suggest is that human biology necessarily implies an ethic, even a political philosophy.
That is, biology is not merely the collection of carbon-based mechanisms that can be easily replaced by technology but rather the first incarnation of human flourishing.
This is why Aristotleâs Politics has much to say about children and the inevitability of affection and the homes that make both good citizens and a good city.
Fertility is not first a problem of economics or technology but of meaning.
Humans find themselves in the mood to have sex and bear children less when they are thinking about economics and politics and more when theyâve simply fallen in love â when they are in harmony with nature, with the meaning of nature in its fullest sense.
Now believe it or not â and stay with me here â this is one of the reasons I find Catholicism compelling.
Because I think Catholicism is the last great champion of this more natural understanding of sex and children.
You see, the whole point of Catholic sexual ethics is that sex is good because creation is good and because human beings are good; and that itâs natural to fall in love, to find oneself aroused by oneâs spouse, to give oneself completely to oneâs spouse as both give themselves to the risk-filled mystery of life and death.
Which, of course, sometimes results in children.
Catholicism simply teaches that this adventure is best embraced naturally rather than under the duress of management or control.
It teaches that sex is an organic thing, something best enjoyed without artificial constraints or interventions, uncoerced by material ambitions or political or cultural pressures or by the whims of personal will.
And as a corollary, Catholicism teaches that to be just one should work to create a society wherein such natural love is cherished and supported.
But then Catholicism teaches something funny.
For in the same breath, it teaches that none of this really matters all that much, that although sex is naturally significant, what ultimately matters is supernatural.
Here we bump up against the apparent strangeness of Catholicism praising natural sex and procreation while at the same time saying that virginity is even better, for virginity and celibacy point to a more eternal creation not dependent on us.
Which, aside from whatever Catholicismâs cultural despisers, pundits and psychoanalysts may say, at least frees us from the burden of having to save civilization.
The point of human life is not to have sex and produce children for the sake of the nation or the economy or the species or even the church.
Rather, the point is to love and be loved and to worry about little else; itâs simply to be loved by oneâs spouse and oneâs neighbor and oneâs God such that one feels free enough to love in return, carefree because God takes care of the rest.
Which is why Catholic sex is the most liberating sex possible and why it may just be the key to the Westâs fertility crisis.
It kicks worrying about macroeconomics and saving civilization out of the bedroom, preferring instead the whispers of more careless and eternal love, the only love thatâs truly creative.
Joshua J. Whitfield is pastor at St. Rita Catholic Community in Dallas and a contributing columnist for The Dallas Morning News.