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BISD TRUSTEES PULL A FAST ONE; AND PUBLIC CAN'T OBJECT

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By Juan Montoya

In the Brownsville Independent school District's unique version of the Mexican tradition of "El Año del Hidalgo," an outgoing trustee and two others facing possible losses in their election Tuesday have called a special meeting noon Monday to get theirs before the getting stops.

That phrase does not refer to the hero of Mexican independence, but rather to the corrupt Mexican government tradition of an outgoing administration or public official emptying the coffers before their successor takes over. In other words, it's a last chance to deplete the public treasury before their terms end.

And since this is a special meeting, there is no public comment period for the people to voice their displeasure at this obvious display of arrogance and corruption at its worse.

Insiders say that BISD board president – Cesar Lopez, who is not running for reelection – has told everyone far and wide that he has the votes to award the $85,000-plus salary position of Administrator for Marketing to City of Brownsville commissioner schoolteacher and part-time disc jockey Ricardo Longoria Jr.

Those votes will probably be those of Lopez, Carols Elizondo, Joe Rodriguez, and one other, although we seriously doubt that Laura Perez-Reyes will go along with this obvious disdain of propriety in public service.

Why propriety?

Longoria is a sitting city commissioner, an entity which is providing evidence in the Cameron County District Attorney's Office prosecution of Elizondo who is under indictment and facing one count of theft by a public servant and one count of misapplication of fiduciary property based off a complaint filed against Elizondo by the Brownsville Fire Fighters Association.

He has also been charged with 11 felony counts of computer security breach for entering the city's Emergency Reporting System for the Brownsville Fire Department looking up cases after he had been suspended.

Will Longoria side with Elizondo and against the city's allegations if push comes to shove in court?

There is also another problem with this particular hire. Superintendent Esperanza Zendejas was authorized to draw up a job description for the position and to bring it back before the board for final approval. Now we learn that she drew up the description but never brought it back for board approval before she posted it for applicants.

If the board did not approve it and the funding has not been allocated in the compensation plan, the position doesn't exist. So how can anyone – not just Longoria – be hired without funding allocated to the position?

With the BISD – and trustee Joe Rodriguez – under the gun to produce customers to pay for the $1.4 million scoreboard at Sams Stadium within four years, he has obviously hit upon Rick's showmanship talents to hustle local businesses and professionals to cough up the dough.

After all, Longoria has shown he can milk the municipality to hire him for DJ gigs and has made the sale of Charro Days outfits a side business and works at it when he attends the Mr. Amigo presentations in Mexico City on city's dime.

We guess that kind of qualifies him for the BISD plum despite not having a marketing degree from a college or university. If he can sell charro outfits to Mexicans (like refrigerators to Eskimos), by golly he can probably sell the district to the local yokels.

The board will also consider the approval to compensate three other employees (G.L.A., C.D.E., M.H.) for years of back pay the administration says they earned but were not paid.

The board will vote to employee identified as G.L.A. for eight years experience for the years 2015- 2016, 2016-2017 and 2017-2018.

They will also consider paying employee C.D.E. stipends for the fiscal school years: 2014-2015, 2015-2016, 2016-2017 and 2017-2018.

Employee M.H. is also in line to get paid for a stipend earned but not paid in the following fiscal school years: 2014-2015, 2015-2016, 2016-2017 and 2017-2018.

Employee E.D. will be consider for compensation for job related experience earned but not paid in the following fiscal school years: 2014-2015, 2015-2016, 2016-2017 and 2017-2018.

Now, granted, perhaps some of these folks might have gotten short shrift all those years and deserve their honest wage. But to do it in a specially-called meeting a day before the election and just a week before their successors are sworn into office?

It smells to high heaven. Why not wait to let the new board decide? What's the hurry?

Could it be that Lopez couldn't care less because he won't be in office anyway, and Rodriguez and  Elizondo think that there is a very real possibility that they will lose their elections and won't have another chance to hand out the goodies to their pals?

If we were one of the 10 other candidates who are challenging the incumbents, we would make our displeasure known by showing up at the board at Monday's meeting. Some, like most of the public, probably cannot make it to the board room at noon Monday since they are probably working. But that might be the logic of calling the meeting at that inconvenient time.

There is another rather unsavory political tie between outgoing BISD president Lopez and Longoria. Both have ties to former Cameron County Commissioner Lucino Rosenbaum Jr. Rosenbaum encouraged Longoria to run for the city commission back in 2003 when he was just 29. He even brought him into the Southmost Lions Club and introduced him to his political supporters.

Since then he has been reelected to office and his term is set to expire on May 2019.

And how did Longoria repay his benefactor? He turned right around and supported Cameron County Commissioner Sofie Benavides (the successor of her late husband Pedro Benavides) when Rosenbaum ran for county commissioner again.

Lopez, meanwhile, is married to a woman whose sister is married to the wife of Lucino Rosenbaum III, the former commissioners' son. On different occasions when Rosenbaum Jr. has needed to do business with the district, he has not received the support he thought he would from Lopez, his pariente.

It's a small town with a lot of people in it, isn't it?

VETS GATHER UNDER OLD GLORY DOWNTOWN SATURDAY

IGNORANT WAS THE RACIST...OF HIS RACISM

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Ignorant was the racist. 

The ex Marine,
The combat veteran of the Pacific 

And now a coach,
A history teacher 
In a middle school in Delphos, Ohio. 

Ignorant he was...
When the only migrant student in his class 
Raised his hand to answer a question...

And he pointed to him and said: 
"Ok. You, Jap..." 

Ignorant was the racist
Of his racism

DIRTY DEEDS VICTIM: ARRESTED, HUMILIATED, NEVER CHARGED

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Image result for tony yzaguirre

(Ed.'s Note: The dismissal and the acquittal of Cameron County Tax Assessor-Collector Tony Yzaguirre and five other tax office staffers on a combined 40 criminal counts of bribery, abuse of official capacity, official oppression, engaging in organized criminal activity, tampering with government records, and breach of computer security, has triggered a complaint against two Texas Department of Public Safety investigators. The cases were prosecuted under the direction of Cameron County District Attorney Luis V. Saenz. We will publish each of the victims' stories that form the basis of the complaint with the DPS Inspector General. This is by Marisol Sifuentes, a tax office vehicle-title clerk.) 

By Marisol Sifuentes
 Complaint

My name is Marizol Sifuentes, I am over the age of eighteen (18) years; I am of sound mind and capable of making this affidavit; I am fully competent to testify to the matters stated herein; and I have personal knowledge of each of the matters stated herein.

This written affidavit is made pursuant §614.021 of the Texas Government Code, complaining of the wrongful and unlawful conduct engaged by Rene Aaron Olivarez, a Texas Peace Officer employed as Special Agent by the Texas Department of Public Safety (DPS) ID No. 1 1884.

I further request that Agent Olivarez be criminally investigated for, including but not limited to, violations of the Texas Penal Code, specifically Abuse of Official Capacity and Official Oppression.

I am 39 years old and have been an employee of the Cameron County Tax Assessors Office for 18 years.

On April 13, 2016, Agent Olivarez walked into my office where he proceeded to handcuff me and then parade me through my office for all to see. Prior to encountering Agent Olivarez, I had never been arrested for anything in my entire life. He falsely arrested me in order to coerce and intimidate me. This kind of behavior is wrong and should not be tolerated.

Agent Olivarez prepared offense reports charging me with the felony crime of Breach of Computer Security. His actions led to the news media putting my photograph in the newspapers and on TV for all my family, friends and neighbors to see.

This was extremely humiliating and degrading. Agent Olivarez knew I had not done anything wrong but arrested me in retaliation for detecting one of his sting titles. As his arrest was bogus, no charges were officially filed. Nonetheless, the harm he caused was tremendous.

On June 23, 2015, Agent Olivarez sent in his informant Melquiades Sosa, with a title application that Agent Olivarez was trying to sneak through our office. Based on my training and experience, the paperwork was suspicious.


My supervisor Lt. Joe Mireles is the one who verifies data through the National Insurance Crime Bureau Data Base (NICB); however, that day he was out of town at a law enforcement training seminar.

As I did not want to take any chances of our office processing a fraudulent application and in order to be thorough, I called supervisor Mireles to advise him of the situation. At that time, he provided me with a temporary password and he instructed me to access the NICB Data Base.

My suspicion turned out be correct as the title turned out to be a junk title. It is my job to look out for fraudulent or false applications such as the one presented by Olivarez's informant and that is exactly what I did. Agent Olivarez's informant was provided with a rejection letter advising him of the reason our office was rejecting his paperwork.

This obviously upset Agent Olivarez as this action went against the theory of his case. In other words, Olivarez was hoping that our office would look the other way and process the application. My rejection letter threw a wrench into his plans.

Not only did I have consent to access the NICB system, but I was provided with a temporary password and instructed to do so by my supervisor, Lt. Joe Mireles. At the time he arrested me, Agent Olivarez knew full well that I was provided authority to access the database. If he now contends that he didn't know, then he is taking the position that he arrested me without first bothering to find out.

(Trial Transcript Olivarez P. 15, L. 10-14.)
Q. So when you-guys found out that this title that was supposed to go through didn't go through, you-guys couldn't determine how the tax office could have figured this out, correct?
A. That's correct, sir. 


(Trial Transcript Olivarez P. 152, L. 5-8.)

Q. Okay. But when she actually did the check and balance, sir, that caught your transaction, you had her – you had her arrested after this: isn't that true? A. Yes, sir.

Prior to arresting me, Agent Olivarez knew that I had authority to access the database. This is important as the Breach of Computer Security allegation that he arrested me for requires lack of consent: 

(Trial Transcript Olivarez P. 25, L. 16-18.)

Q. And she told you that she was given a temporary code, correct?
A. She said she was given temporary access
.

(Trial Olivarez P. 26, L. 6-16

Q. And that you said she's looking at sentences higher than three times than getting arrested for a WI. Three times? A. Correct, sir. 
Q. Okay. And engaging in organized crime?
A. That is correct, sir.
Q. Now, you've told her that she is looking at serious felonies, correct?
A. That's correct, sir.
(Trial Transcript Olivarez P. 27, L. 9-14.)

Q. Okay. Do you still believe that this young lady, basically, because she was suspicious of a fraudulent title and got a temporary code to access the system so she could do her job, do you still think today that what she did was very wrong?
A. She accessed a secure database, sir, and, yes, that is wrong...

(Trial Transcript Olivarez P. 27, L. 9 P. 30, L. 14.

Q. Never been arrested, correct? 
A. That is correct, sir.
Q. Never been in any kind of trouble in her entire life.
A. That's correct.
Q. Basically spent pretty much her adult life checking titles at this man's office?
A. I don't know what all her duties were, sir, but when she was – when she was being interviewed, she was checking the titles.
Q. So, yesterday, you testified that you were concerned about the informant's civil rights, correct? 
A. Yes, sir.
Q. You care about civil rights?
A. Yes, sir...

Q, Okay, She then came back, and you told her to put her hands behind her back, correct?
A. Probably so, sir.
Q. And you put handcuffs on her, correct?
A. That's correct, sir.
Q. And then you paraded her down the hallway through the tax office crying. A. I don't know if she was crying, sir, but we took her out of the tax office. Q. Walked her out with handcuffs in front of everybody.
A. She was walked out of the office, yes, sir.
Q. There's people there, sir, right? Correct? 
A. Yes, sir, it was during business hours.
Q. Okay. It was done in front of all the tax employees.
A. I don't know who all saw it, sir.
Q. And she was taken to jail, correct? 
A. That is correct, sir.
Q. She had to make arrangements for bond, correct? 
A. I guess so, sir. I wasn't present for that.
Q. She had to spend money on lawyers, correct? 
A. I don't know, sir. I've never met her lawyer.
Q. You know that let me show you this picture. 
Do you recognize the young lady there?
A. It's the same lady that was up on the screen, sir, Marizol Sifuentes.
Q. She was placed on the news, correct?
A. Yes, sir.
Q. With her mugshot. 
A. Okay, sir.

Conclusion
As a result of his illegal conduct and flagrant abuse of power, I was humiliated in front of my friends, co-workers and most importantly my family. I had to borrow thousands of dollars in order to bond out of jail and hire a lawyer. 

The felony arrest remains on my record as I have not been able to raise sufficient funds to hire an attorney to have my record expunged. A simple Google search will pull up my mugshot. 

MIDTERM VOTING SURGE UNLIKE ANYTHING WE'VE KNOWN

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By Juan Montoya
If normal statistical rules apply, except perhaps in the Texas U.S. Senate race which is neck to neck, most of the races in local government and the Brownsville Independent School District have already been decided by the early Blue Wave Vote.

Historically, the early vote has hovered above 50 percent, but closer to 60 or more.

The BISD race, which is nonpartisan, has nonetheless been affected by the surge in local voting. That election has drawn 19,650 early votes. The reason there goes beyond the Betomania surge, but can also be ascribed to the large number of candidates (12) vying for three seats.

In 2016, a presidential year, 35,693 voters cast ballots in the BISD race. This mid-term year could approach 30,000. In the Position 1 race, with five candidates vying for a majority vote, a candidate that draws a little over 6,000 could well take it.

Compared to the 2014 midterm elections, this year has more than doubled the early vote. In 2014, there were 40,439 votes cast in Cameron County, and 20,733 were cast early.

At the end of the 11-day voting period ending Friday, the number of early votes was 50,916, 10,477 than the 40,439 total vote (early and election day) cast in 2014. If we add in another 25,000, on election day on Tuesday, it will approach 76,000 total votes this year.

Now, that doesn't approach the November 2016 presidential-year total of  93,716 votes cast in this county then. That year, 61,481 votes were cast early, about 57.6 percent.

Nonetheless, every candidate in these races knows that every vote – specially in the BISD race – is crucial. They've put out their name to serve, and now it's up to us to determine who will. Don't take that right in vain.

WILL BISD BOARD HIRE LONGORIA DAY BEFORE ELECTION?

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(At noon today, a day before the election tomorrow Tuesday, three of the four trustees on the current majority on the board of the Brownsville Independent School District will vote to approve the hiring of City of Brownsville Commissioner Rick Longoria. He is being recommended by the administration to be the first Director of Marketing for the district. 

Think abut it. Carlos Elizondo will get an ally in his fight to remain free on numerous felony charges, Cesar Lopez will need his votes in any future political aspirations he may have, and Joe Rodriguez will have a salesman to make good on his promise to pay for the $1.4 million for his scoreboard through advertising sales. 

Lopez isn't running for reelection. But Elizondo and Rodriguez are. What if they lose? Why burden the next board with their pick? And what does the public get in return?

They'll get a part-time DJ who makes a few pesos on the side selling Charro Day outfits and pay him upwards of $85,000 of taxpayers' hard-earned money for his troubles. Will any other trustee go along with these three and approve this 11th-hour sleight of hand?) 

By Juan Montoya

In the Brownsville Independent school District's unique version of the Mexican tradition of "El Año del Hidalgo," an outgoing trustee and two others facing possible losses in their election Tuesday have called a special meeting noon Monday to get theirs before the getting stops.

That phrase does not refer to the hero of Mexican independence, but rather to the corrupt Mexican government tradition of an outgoing administration or public official emptying the coffers before their successor takes over. In other words, it's a last chance to deplete the public treasury before their terms end.

And since this is a special meeting, there is no public comment period for the people to voice their displeasure at this obvious display of arrogance and corruption at its worse.

Insiders say that BISD board president – Cesar Lopez, who is not running for reelection – has told everyone far and wide that he has the votes to award the $85,000-plus salary position of Administrator for Marketing to City of Brownsville commissioner schoolteacher and part-time disc jockey Ricardo Longoria Jr.

Those votes will probably be those of Lopez, Carols Elizondo, Joe Rodriguez, and one other, although we seriously doubt that Laura Perez-Reyes will go along with this obvious disdain of propriety in public service.

Why propriety?

Longoria is a sitting city commissioner, an entity which is providing evidence in the Cameron County District Attorney's Office prosecution of Elizondo who is under indictment and facing one count of theft by a public servant and one count of misapplication of fiduciary property based off a complaint filed against Elizondo by the Brownsville Fire Fighters Association.

He has also been charged with 11 felony counts of computer security breach for entering the city's Emergency Reporting System for the Brownsville Fire Department looking up cases after he had been suspended.

Will Longoria side with Elizondo and against the city's allegations if push comes to shove in court?

There is also another problem with this particular hire. Superintendent Esperanza Zendejas was authorized to draw up a job description for the position and to bring it back before the board for final approval. Now we learn that she drew up the description but never brought it back for board approval before she posted it for applicants.

If the board did not approve it and the funding has not been allocated in the compensation plan, the position doesn't exist. So how can anyone – not just Longoria – be hired without funding allocated to the position?

With the BISD – and trustee Joe Rodriguez – under the gun to produce customers to pay for the $1.4 million scoreboard at Sams Stadium within four years, he has obviously hit upon Rick's showmanship talents to hustle local businesses and professionals to cough up the dough.

After all, Longoria has shown he can milk the municipality to hire him for DJ gigs and has made the sale of Charro Days outfits a side business and works at it when he attends the Mr. Amigo presentations in Mexico City on city's dime.

We guess that kind of qualifies him for the BISD plum despite not having a marketing degree from a college or university. If he can sell charro outfits to Mexicans (like refrigerators to Eskimos), by golly he can probably sell the district to the local yokels.

The board will also consider the approval to compensate three other employees (G.L.A., C.D.E., M.H.) for years of back pay the administration says they earned but were not paid.

The board will vote to employee identified as G.L.A. for eight years experience for the years 2015- 2016, 2016-2017 and 2017-2018.

They will also consider paying employee C.D.E. stipends for the fiscal school years: 2014-2015, 2015-2016, 2016-2017 and 2017-2018.

Employee M.H. is also in line to get paid for a stipend earned but not paid in the following fiscal school years: 2014-2015, 2015-2016, 2016-2017 and 2017-2018.

Employee E.D. will be consider for compensation for job related experience earned but not paid in the following fiscal school years: 2014-2015, 2015-2016, 2016-2017 and 2017-2018.

Now, granted, perhaps some of these folks might have gotten short shrift all those years and deserve their honest wage. But to do it in a specially-called meeting a day before the election and just a week before their successors are sworn into office?

It smells to high heaven. Why not wait to let the new board decide? What's the hurry?

Could it be that Lopez couldn't care less because he won't be in office anyway, and Rodriguez and  Elizondo think that there is a very real possibility that they will lose their elections and won't have another chance to hand out the goodies to their pals?

If we were one of the 10 other candidates who are challenging the incumbents, we would make our displeasure known by showing up at the board at Monday's meeting. Some, like most of the public, probably cannot make it to the board room at noon Monday since they are probably working. But that might be the logic of calling the meeting at that inconvenient time.

There is another rather unsavory political tie between outgoing BISD president Lopez and Longoria. Both have ties to former Cameron County Commissioner Lucino Rosenbaum Jr. Rosenbaum encouraged Longoria to run for the city commission back in 2003 when he was just 29. He even brought him into the Southmost Lions Club and introduced him to his political supporters.

Since then he has been reelected to office and his term is set to expire on May 2019.

And how did Longoria repay his benefactor? He turned right around and supported Cameron County Commissioner Sofie Benavides (the successor of her late husband Pedro Benavides) when Rosenbaum ran for county commissioner again.

Lopez, meanwhile, is married to a woman whose sister is married to the wife of Lucino Rosenbaum III, the former commissioners' son. On different occasions when Rosenbaum Jr. has needed to do business with the district, he has not received the support he thought he would from Lopez, his pariente.

It's a small town with a lot of people in it, isn't it?

CAN CASCOS COUNT ON CROSSOVER VOTES TO COUNTER WAVE

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By Juan Montoya
If normal statistical rules apply, except perhaps in the Texas U.S. Senate race which is neck to neck, most of the races in local government and the Brownsville Independent School District have already been decided by the early Blue Wave Vote.

That raises the question of whether the race for Cameron County Judge between incumbent Eddie Treviño and Republican Carlos Cascos will be determined by the surge of Betomania Democratic votes exciting the Democratic base. O'Rourke was in Brownsville Thursday to a standing-room only crowd at the Ringgold Park Pavilion. (That's Cascos in the graphic with former county commissioner Dan Sanchez, a Democrat of sizable political proportions).

Will his customary 20 percent Democratic crossover vote be able to overcome the additional estimated 30,000 votes expected this year. After all, there were 10,000 more votes cast in early voting this year than four years ago during midterms. And that's not counting election day, yet. For Cascos, that's the $64,000 question.   

Historically, the early vote has hovered above 50 percent, but closer to 60 or more.

The BISD race, which is nonpartisan, has nonetheless been affected by the surge in local voting. That election has drawn 19,650 early votes. The reason there goes beyond the Betomania surge, but can also be ascribed to the large number of candidates (12) vying for three seats.

In 2016, a presidential year, 35,693 voters cast ballots in the BISD race. This mid-term year could approach 30,000. In the Position 1 race, with five candidates vying for a majority vote, a candidate that draws a little over 6,000 could well take it.

Compared to the 2014 midterm elections, this year has more than doubled the early vote. In 2014, there were 40,439 votes cast in Cameron County, and 20,733 were cast early.

At the end of the 11-day voting period ending Friday, the number of early votes was 50,916, 10,477 than the 40,439 total vote (early and election day) cast in 2014. If we add in another 25,000, on election day on Tuesday, it will approach 76,000 total votes this year.

Now, that doesn't approach the November 2016 presidential-year total of  93,716 votes cast in this county then. That year, 61,481 votes were cast early, about 57.6 percent.

Nonetheless, every candidate in these races knows that every vote – specially in the BISD race – is crucial. They've put out their name to serve, and now it's up to us to determine who will. Don't take that right in vain.

BISD BOARD GROWS SOME, TABLES RICK LONGORIA'S GIG

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Special to El Rrun-Rrun

On a motion by Dr. Sylvia Atkinson and a second by Laura Perez-Reyes, a majority on the board of the Brownsville Independent School District tabled two items that would have added two more administrative positions in midyear, including one which would have given City of Brownsville commissioner – and school teacher – a cushy $85,000 gig as BISD Marketing Director.
Image result for RICK LONGORIA AND CARLOS ELIZONDO

Those voting against were Atkinson, Reyes, Minerva Peña and Phil Cowen. Those voting for the creation of the marketing director position and awarding it to Longoria were Cesar Lopez, Carlos Elizondo and Joe Rodriguez.

The inclusion of the Longoria job by the administration raised questions on the timing, since the board elections are scheduled for Tuesday and Lopez is not running for reelection, and depending on the mod of the BISD electorate, Elizondo and Rodriguez may not emerge among the winners.

Depending on the outcome of the election tomorrow, the item may not be brought back soon.

This issue was raised by Atkinson, who questioned why those two new administrative positions were included in the agenda.

"We are prepared to provide the personnel necessary for the campuses now," she said. "Adding two administrative positions can wait until later at budget time."

The motion to table and the second drew the ire of Rodriguez who said that by tabling the agenda item the board was going against the administration instead of supporting their recommendations.

Surprisingly, trustee Minerva Peña schooled Rodriguez on the function of the board when she told him that the voters didn't elect board to be the superintendent's rubber stamp but to vote based on their "conscience."

After the item was tabled, another had to deal with compensating BISD employees with stipend that had not been paid in the past four years. One of those items read:

8. Recommend approval to compensate professional employee (C.D.E.) for a stipend earned but not paid in the following fiscal school years: 2014-2015, 2015-2016, 2016-2017 and 2017-2018

Image result for RICK LONGORIA AND CARLOS ELIZONDOWhen Atkinson questioned whether Elizondo could vote for the item since it dealt with his wife (Cindy Elizondo), Atkinson called or legal counsel for his guidance.

"I can vote or abstain for whoever I want," Elizondo said.

But board counsel Baltazar Salazar told him he would have to abstain from voting since it involved a relative and he would be conflicted out of voting and forced to abstain, and Elizondo grudgingly accepted his ruling.

After four years on the board, it is strange to see that Elizondo does not understand a basic premise of public service: that as an elected official entrusted with the public's dime, you are not allowed to vote on a benefit to a relative, in this case, his wife.

WHAT SOME PRINCIPALS WILL DO TO SUPPORT THEIR BAND

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Special to El Rrun-Rrun

Earlier today, Hanna Early College High School principal Blanca Lambarri’s hopes to see her band perform at the U.I.L State Marching Band Contest fell flat. In fact, they blew up under her.

Before reaching the U.S. Border Patrol checkpoint at Sarita, the principal’s back tire went flat. Replacing the tire, the spare tire also blew to pieces, anchoring the principal to the side of the highway with her family.

Per our sources, no progress has occurred as of yet, leaving Lambarri and her family cheering for the Hanna Golden Eagle Marching Band 155 miles away. Where's Triple A when you need them?

CATY ASKS YOU TO "CONNECT THE DOTS OF DESPERATION"

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By Caty Presas-Garcia

This Sunday I was attacked in a newspaper ad by someone named "Leo Hernandez" whose charges are suspiciously similar to allegations made against me by the bogus Brownsville Taxpayers Political Action Committee which the Texas Ethics Commission found that it deliberately violated the Texas Election Code in at least two instances and fined its treasurer $1,500.

Image result for caty presas garcia, brownsvilleThe final resolution on TEC SC-3170479 was issued to PAC treasurer Juan Flores Fermin June 29, 2018. Flores first listed his address in a vacant lot on Iowa being sold by Judy Vera, a Realtor and the sister of BISD attorney Baltazar Salazar.

When he was found out, he changed his address to a Houston residence owned by...Salazar.
In the end, he said he lived in Ft. Worth.  I don't know this new Mr. Hernandez who paid for the ad – if he exists – and he has never had the courtesy to address these concerns directly to me. He, however, gave the newspaper $1,260 for the half-page ad.

But what is curiouser and curiouser is that the allegations made in his Sunday ad are exactly the same made by the PAC, even down to the graphics used. (The logo at left in the newspaper ad is the same I used in my 2016 BISD campaign election cards above.).
                                                         
                                                          CONNECT THE DOTS
But think about this and connect the dots: When I was on the board, trustee Luci Longoria and I were the only ones who voted against hiring Baltazar Salazar as board attorney. In our opinion, his firm lacked sorely in expertise on education issues compared to the other 17 applicants. We voted "NO."
He retaliated by making false allegations during an open board meeting that I made sexual advances on him in the BISD main office parking lot. He later retracted them.
                                                       
THE "$2 MILLION" LAWSUIT
Ms. Longoria and I had to sue the district and the board members who tried to "censure" us and to silence the voice of the thousands of voters like you who we represented. Among those concerns were the awarding of BISD insurance to vendors linked to some board members.

Salazar even tried to place an agenda item before the board to remove me from my elected position. The lawsuit caught their attention and they got the message. And no, we did not get one red cent from the BISD and we non-sued in the end. Was it worth it? Your voices were not silenced. Yes, it was.
                                                     
                                                           THE FAKE PAC                                                                                
 The TEC investigation found that now-board general counsel Salazar was listed on the PAC's reports as the only donor to the PAC making in-kind contributions totaling $13,200 in the form of payments to Brownsville advertising and marketing firm Breeden/McCumber. The TEC also noted that all the invoices were billed directly to Salazar.

Salazar and his associates were caught red handed manipulating public opinion behind a fake PAC. Now, with this newspaper ad, they're trying to do it again. Could it be that Salazar, who is getting paid $280,000 of your heard-earned dollars to attend 12 meetings a year, and his vendor buddies are  afraid I will kick them off the gravy train? They might be right. Someone should.

Notice that the ad says nothing about our children's education, the needs of our district, or relief for our taxpayers. It's all about character destruction and personal attacks. If you have had enough of this, vote this Tuesday so we can stop this nonsense and get back to the business of educating our future leaders. 

VOTING PLACES FOR ELECTION DAY: GENERAL, BISD RACES

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(Ed's Note: Unlike early voting, today is election day and voters must cast their ballots in their voting precinct. Below are listed both the general election voting precincts across the county and the Brownsville Independent School District voting precinct sites. For example, both county and BISD precincts 38 and 97 vote at Sharp Elementary on 1439 Palm Blvd., above.

Below voters lining up this morning at La Feria City Hall in the western part of the county where registered voters in precincts 26, 55, and 58 can cast their ballots.)

GENERAL CAMERON COUNTY
BISD


EARLY VOTE ELECTION RESULTS; O'ROURKE, TREVINO, VELA, UP, SBOE CORTEZ, BISD BROWN, PRISCI, ERASMO MAYBE

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US SENATE RACE (Cameron County)
                                Early Vote (Includes mail-in)        Election  Day       Total
Ted Cruz (R)              18,911

Beto O'Rourke (D)     30,800


U.S. HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES

Filemon Vela (D)       31,731

Rey Gonzalez (R)      17,716


CAMERON COUNTY JUDGE

Eddie Treviño (D)     29,754

Carlos Cascos (R)      21,129

SBOE

Ruben Cortez {D)       31,123

Tad Hasse (R)            18,042

                                                     


SOUTH TEXAS ISD

Bobby Lerma (D)         4,956

Eliceo Muñoz (R)          2,601

(Non-Partisan Races)
BISD

Place 1

Caty Presas-Garcia         4,356         

Jose Valdez                     2,745

Drue Brown                    6,047

Mark A. Cortez               3,604

Tim Ramirez                     2,278             


Place 2

Carlos Elizondo                5,776

Erasmo Castro                   6,775

Herman Otis Powers          6,400


Place 4

Coach Joe Rodriguez          2,700

Randy Gonzales                  5,837

Dr. Prisci Roca Tipton         7,178

Jorge Valdez                         3,046

County Results : click here.
Statewide: click here.

DPS, CAMERON COUNTY D.A.'S DIRTY DEEDS HURT INNOCENTS

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Image result for omar sanchez, brownsville
By Omar Sanchez
Special to El Rrun-Rrun

My name is Omar Sanchez Paz I am over the age of eighteen (18) years; I am of sound mind and capable of making this affidavit; I am fully competent to testify to the matters stated herein; and I have personal knowledge of each of the matters stated herein.

This written affidavit is made pursuant §614.021 of the Texas Government Code, complaining of the wrongful and unlawful conduct engaged by Rene Aaron Olivarez, a Texas Peace Officer employed as Special Agent by the Texas Department of Public Safety (DPS) ID No. 11884. 

I further request that Agent Olivarez be criminally investigated for violations to the Texas Penal Code, specifically §39.02 Abuse of Official Capacity and §39.03 Official Oppression.

1 am 26 years old and prior to agent Olivarez getting involved in my life, I had never been arrested. I am a single father and have 7 year old daughter. I have dedicated 6 years of my life working for Cameron County. 

On January 6, 2016, I was arrested at my place of employment and indicted for numerous felony counts of Abuse of Official Capacity and Engaging in Organized Criminal Activity.

On August 23, 2016, after being forced to concede that the charges filed against me by agent Olivarez had absolutely no merit whatsoever, the Cameron County District Attorney Luis V. Saenz reluctantly had no choice but to dismiss all charges against me. 

By this time I had already been publicly humiliated in the news media, my family's home and personal belongings were ransacked and searched and I was forced to spend thousands of dollars in bonds and attorney's fees. All in an attempt by agent Olivarez to try to threaten, coerce and intimidate me and my family

...Olivarez's unlawful conduct and lack of training on motor vehicle registration guidelines and procedures ultimately led to my false arrest on January 6, 2016 and subsequent indictment on January 27, 2016.

As part of his secret sting operation, Olivarez sent his "cooperating individual", Melquiades Sosa, to make contact with my superior, Mr. Tony Yzaguirre, Jr., so as to have Mr. Yzaguirre facilitate the registration of the vehicles. (That's him at left being booked on nine charges of Tampering With Government Documents.)

The plan was to see if our office would check for IDs when processing his informant's applications. 

If we didn't check, it would support his theory that we were not checking IDs in exchange for bribes.

Olivarez Omitted Exculpatory Evidence

"...Olivarez purposefully omitted the exonerating fact that he previously attempted to register the same vehicles and that our office rejected his fake titles.

On December 10th, Olivarez sent in his informant Sosa as part of his sting. I carefully revised the documentation provided by Sosa and determined that the documents initially submitted were missing the address of the purchaser on the assignment of title as well as the signature of buyer was missing on the assignment of title.

Once I noticed these deficiencies in said documents, I had the auto-tax staff prepare two rejection letters stating the reasons why the title registration for these two vehicles could not be processed.

Olivarez was thus fully aware that due to the incomplete documentation provided by his informant, I previously rejected and prevented the transfer of these two vehicles. 

Olivarez Tampered With Records

On December 15, 2015, Olivarez again attempted to register these vehicles. In an attempt to again pass his fake titles through our office, Olivarez, now tampered with the documentation I had previously objected to in the rejection letters.

This time around he falsified and manufactured the missing information, and forged the missing signatures of individuals without their permission. (That's agent Olivarezat right testifying during Mr. Yzaguirre's trial.)

Olivarez Ignorant of Underlying Law

...At the time of my arrest, Olivarez was ignorant of the law holding that neither the Tax Assessor-Collector (TAC) nor his staff are required to verify the title applicant's identification for Motor Vehicle Dealer Transactions (for car dealers like Sosa).

Thus, as matter of law, and contrary to Olivarez's assertions, I was never required to verify neither the identification nor the insurance of the title applicant on either of these Dealer transactions.

As result of Olivarez's poor knowledge of the laws pertaining to Texas Motor Vehicle Registration, I was arrested and indicted by a Cameron County Grand Jury.

Olivarez Falsified Affidavit

Though IDs were not required on the Dealer titles Olivarez was trying to pass through our office, I confirmed that one of the transactions where he accused me of not checking for IDs did nonetheless contain the copy of the photo ID of the registered owner as well as the vehicle insurance card.

Arrested Me For Transactions He Knew Were Not Mine

Significantly, both the exhibits attached to his investigative reports as well as independent Title History Reports issued by the Custodian of Records of the Texas Department of Motor Vehicles, confirm that the registration for both of these vehicles were processed by employee number CAMC131 (another employee of the Cameron County Tax Office) and not me (CAMCI 12). He knew before he arrested me that I was not even the person who processed these titles.

Conclusion

Therefore, because of agent Olivarez's ignorance of the pertinent laws, I was unlawfully arrested and indicted. (His) abhorrent investigative practices lead to not only my wrongful arrest but also to that of my co-workers. This is a textbook example of what a police officer should not stand for. I am sure that this kind of poor investigative performance and unlawful conduct is not condoned by the Texas Department of Public Safety and appropriate action should be taken and I do hereby respectfully request that adequate disciplinary action is taken.

DPS, DA'S DIRTY DEEDS STAIN 30-YEAR OFFICER'S REPUTATION

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Image result for tony yzaguirre
By Jose Mireles
Special to El Rrun-Rrun

This written affidavit is made pursuant §614.021 of the Texas Government Code, complaining of the wrongful and unlawful conduct engaged in by Rene Aaron Olivarez, a Texas peace officer employed as Special Agent by the Texas Department of Public Safety (DPS) ID No. 11884. 

I further request that Agent Olivarez be criminally investigated for violations of the Texas Penal Code, specifically §39.02 Abuse of Official Capacity and §39.03 Official Oppression. Agent Olivarez was the lead investigator for DPS in the State of Texas criminal case against me and other members of Cameron County Tax Assessor-Collector's Office for alleged criminal activity within that office labeled "Dirty Deeds."

I am a licensed master peace officer of this State and have been in law enforcement for over 30 years. I have been employed with the Cameron County Tax Assessor Collector's Office since 2001. 

Prior to my arrest, I served as the Lieutenant for the Auto-theft Task Force within that office, my duties were to supervise the vehicle registration department of the tax office, detect and prevent automobile crimes in Cameron County. Prior to agent Olivarez getting involved in my life, I had never been arrested.

I am a dedicated father of two children and have been married for over 20 years.
Because of Olivarez's wrongful actions and questionable investigative techniques, on January 6,
2016, I was arrested at my place of employment and indicted for numerous felony counts of
Bribery, Official Oppression, and Engaging in Organized Criminal Activity.

On August 19, 2016, after realizing that Olivarez's investigation was without merit, the Cameron County District Attorney's Office under Luis V. Saenz had no alternative but to dismiss all charges against me. 

By this time, I had been publicly humiliated in the news media, my family and I endured many months of emotional distress, I lost my job, I lost my only source of income to support my family and I was forced to spend thousands of dollars in bonds and attorney's fees. 

Agent Olivarez also had my Texas Peace Officer's license revoked. Agent Olivarez's actions led to considerable amount of economic and personal hardship.

On January 5, 2016, officer Olivarez submitted various general complaints and warrant affidavits to Judge Elia Cornejo Lopez of the 404 th Judicial District Court of Cameron County, Texas. 

In said complaints Olivarez under oath, accused me of engaging in organized criminal activity, official oppression and participating in an alleged bribery scheme within the Cameron County Tax Office. Olivarez claimed that I contributed and participated
in the profits of the alleged bribery scheme of Tony Yzaguirre, Jr., the Cameron County Tax
Assessor-Collector. 

 Olivarez Falsely Swore I Took Bribes, As Did DA Luis Saenz, Without Evidence
Olivarez (at right)  affirmed that his informant Mr. Melquiades Sosa (at left) paid a cash bribe to Yzaguirre as consideration for processing faulty motor vehicle title transfers and that I shared in said bribe.

(Sosa had copped a plea with the DA's Office to dismiss nine counts of Tampering With a Government Document in return for his false testimony. All nine counts were dismissed by Saenz.)

If one were to ask Olivarez, what evidence he had that I received a bribe, his response would surely be "none."  His allegations against me were nothing more than conjecture
and speculation. No witness ever told him that I accepted a bribe. No video ever showed I accepted a bribe. No audio showed I accepted a bribe. His investigation yielded no evidence whatsoever that I
ever accepted a bribe.

He basically pulled this allegation out of thin air so that he could arrest me and then coerce me. The same applies to his engaging in organized criminal activity and official oppression allegations.

Olivarez...eventually testified under oath that he was unaware of the law and rules pertaining to title transfers. Because he did not know the law, he based his entire investigation around an incorrect premise. I was allegedly splitting a $100 bribe with at least 2 other people so that the tax office would waive proof of ID and insurance requirements.

...Aside from not knowing the law at the heart of his case, his allegation absurdly assumes that I would jeopardize my career for a grand total of $33.33. His actions reflect badly on the Texas Department of Public Safety which continues to employ him.

As law enforcement officers we must guard against abusing the great power bestowed upon us. Not all officers, however, are able to adequately live up to this responsibility. Agent Olivarez's actions demonstrate that he is such an officer.

The flagrant disregard of exculpatory evidence by an officer is dangerous to the citizenry which he is sworn to protect and to the enforcement of the laws he is sworn to uphold. Agent Olivarez should not be allowed to continue as a peace officer. He lacks the judgment and character necessary for this position.

PUTEGNAT DOMINATED BISD SOFT-SHOE UNDER DEL CASTILLO

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Special to El Rrun-Rrun

Manfred del Castillo never dreamt he would become a decorated coach.

His career in education with the Brownsville Independent School District began at Canales Elementary in 1953. By 1957, he had a list of titles – Assistant Principal/Physical Education teacher and coach at A. S. Putegnat Elementary school.

In 1956, head Brownsville High School coach, Bob Martin, (who once coached Tom Landry at Mission High School) was convinced that in order to win championships – he would have to form sport programs at the elementary and junior high levels.

It was then, that the Brownsville Soft-shoe League was born – all elementary schools participated in football, basketball, softball and track. 

“Sports gave the kids something to do after school – which led to successful experiences,” said coach del Castillo.

This was the era when television was taking its first steps into the American living room, allowing for the first time, for youngsters to witness live images of sporting events. With this, the crave to participate in sports grew.

It was the able coaching of A.X. Benavides that set the foundation and tradition of winners –  which Manfred del Castillo took over in 1957.                                                                                                            Manfred said, “I was very fortunate to work with outstanding athletes who on a daily basis demonstrated a consistent passion for the game.”

As the football season started, the boys from Putegnat were making history – every time they stepped on the field, the odds were that they would win.

The kids proved to be too much for the opposition –  taking the championship flag in grand style, but not without the uproar of foul play that came from the other side of the tracks.

“The kids were obedient and well disciplined, something that they carried on to the field – which helped them to become winners,” explained del Castillo.

“We were undefeated, and nobody scored on us” declared running back Jose A. “Cricket” Gutierrez.

In 1924, Norte Dame, had the Four Horsemen – the Hispanic-barefooted boys from Washington Park had one more horse than the Irish, they were: “Cricket” Gutierrez, Johnny Garcia, Carlos Cisneros, Lorenzo Torres and Joseph Valero.

All participated in every team sport, which in 1957-58, helped Putegnat take the crowns in football, basketball, softball and track. An accomplishment that no other Brownsville school matched.

The following is a snapshot of the many outstanding athletes from that era that walked the halls of A.S Putegnat: Tommy Lozano, Marcos Serrano, Efrain Hernandez, David Solis, Armando Gonzales, Ismael Juarez, Joe Diaz, Celso Sanchez, Tomas Canul and Richard Moreno.

The Softshoe program was discontinued after 1960, but not before Putegnat had taken 12 out of 16 championships. Was it the threat of dominance and/or the discomfort of the losers the reason Bob Martin stopped the program? Some said that it was. 

Manfred will tell you that he did not do it alone, “help was always around the corner.”

While that might be true –  it was his hard work and dedication – which produced
winners on and off the field. Manfred del Castillo retired in 1989 – after a 36-year career as a teacher and principal with the Brownsville Independent School District.

TERCERO AWARDED $12.3 MILLION IN DAMAGES, 600K BACK-PAY IN TSC SUIT

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BULLETIN:

A federal jury has ruled in favor of former Texas Southmost College president Lily Tercero, awarding her $600,000 in back-pay and  $12.3 million in punitive damages.

Tercero's case was buttressed by former trustees Ed Rivera and Reynaldo Garcia when they testified that they believed  the college’s former president was set up to be fired. It took the jury less than a day to reach a verdict.

TSC is expected to appeal the verdict.

As reported before in the Brownsville Herald, trustees fired Tercero in September 2016 for deliberately and recklessly failing to obtain windstorm insurance with board approval in compliance with state law; for allowing TSC checks to be stamped with signatures of people who were no longer trustees; for failing to timely search and fill the position of vice president for finance and administration; for failing to inform the board of the ailing nursing program and its pending suspension; for refusing a board member’s request that he personally sign and review checks in the amount of $10,000 or more and for not complying with a request for information sought by another member.

Tercero’s termination followed the renewal of her contract in May 2016 that was approved by the college’s board of trustees, prior to an election that changed the makeup and majority of the board, for an annual salary of $228,228 that would have expired on May 1, 2019.

Tercero's attorney called both Rivera and Garcia to the stand on behalf of Tercero and both men expressed that they believed Board Chair Adela Garza was out to get Tercero and that the outcome of the public hearing where Tercero was fired was decided before hand.

“I don’t see how anyone could not deduce that it was their intention to fire her,” Rivera, who did not sit on the board at the time of her termination, testified. Trustees stated their actions were made on the advice of legal counsel.

Garcia, who voted against firing Tercero, echoed those sentiments.

“It was already decided what was going to happen,” Garcia testified.

However, under cross examination by TSC’s attorney, Eduardo G. Garza, Garcia testified that no votes were taken during the 41-minute executive session deliberation prior to Tercero’s termination, and also said that he had made up his mind prior to the hearing that he would vote against firing Tercero.

Both men testified that it was Tercero’s obligation to inform the board of trustees and seek its approval for windstorm insurance renewal and Rivera testified that he never provided his consent for his stamped signature to be used after he left the board of trustees.

TSC, BISD: RESULT OF LOSING BOARDS EXTENDING CONTRACTS

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By Juan Montoya

The federal jury verdict awarding former Texas Southmost College president Lily Tercero $12.5 million in damages and $675,000 is casting a harsh glare on a practice that is a blueprint for disaster: allowing lame duck boards to extend administrators' contract and unloading the burden on incoming board members.

This same recipe for disaster is brewing in the Brownsville Independent School District as we speak.

This past Tuesday, voters swept out two incumbent and since another didn't run for reelection, the BISD board will now have a majority who might not want Superintendent Esperanza Zendejas at the district's helm. The incoming candidates did not run on a stated fire-Zendejas platform, but their calls for "transparency,""change" and "reform" indicates that they think her administrative style and  policies are part of the problem.

But what stands in the way of the new board members implementing their campaign platform and changing administrators?

Before they left the board – and prior to the elections where two of them turned out to be losing candidates – the three outgoing BISD trustees formed the majority to extend Zendejas' contract for an additional three years.

Foremost among Zendejas' boosters was Joe Rodriguez, who at the  October 2 meeting, less than a month before the November 6 election where he was ousted, convinced his two other allies and  third trustee (Carlos Elizondo, Cesar Lopez and Laura Perez-Reyes) to extend her contract.  By a 4-3 vote, they extended her contract through June 30, 2021 at $305,000 a year.

Dr. Sylvia Atkinson, Phil Cowen and Minerva Peña voted against.

Just two days later after that meeting, Zendejas told the Brownsville Herald that "board attorney Baltazar Salazar approached her in June saying some board members wanted her out and if she didn’t leave they would fire her."

And now that she doesn't have Rodriguez to run interference for her, how long do you think it will be before this new majority goes through the predictable process of ditching Esperanza? And when the axe falls, how long will it be before she takes the BISD to federal court and demands her $305,000 yearly salary times 3 ($915,000) plus millions in damages?

Now Rodriguez and Elizondo – rejected by the voters – can thumb their noses at the board and enjoy their sweet revenge. But the cost will not be borne by them. It'll be the taxpayers of the district that will pay for their personal vendettas and caprichos.

The same recipe for disaster happened in the TSC-Tercero case. On April 28, 2016, trustee Ed Rivera voted to extend Tercero's contract one more year which was seconded by Dr. Rey Garcia. Voting in favor of extending the contract were Kiko Rendon, Art Rendon, and Trey Mendez. The late Raymundo Hinojosa abstained, and only Adela Garza voted against it.

When the then-TSC majority voted to extend, they already knew that in September 2016 she had failed to obtain windstorm insurance with board approval in compliance with state law; allowed TSC checks to be stamped with signatures of people who were no longer trustees;failed to timely search and fill the position of vice president for finance and administration; failed to inform the board of the ailing nursing program and its pending suspension; and had refused a board member’s request that he personally sign and review checks in the amount of $10,000 or more and did not comply with a request for information sought by another member.
Image result for lily tercero
But who cares? Le the new board members and the remaining board majority they considered their personal enemies worry about the coming storm.

Rivera did not run for reelection that year and neither did Kiko Rendon, but they joined Garcia to carry the vote for Tercero's extension. Garcia would go on to lose his election two years later.

Is it any surprise that Kiko Rendon, Garcia and Rivera testified on behalf of Tercero in her federal lawsuit just concluded? Now they can do the cock-of-the-walk impersonations and feel smug in the belief that they stuck it to Adela, Mendez and Ruben Herrera.

But guess what guys?

Federal judge Andrew Hanen removed the sitting trustees from liability in Tercero's lawsuit. The ones you stuck it to was the taxpayers of the community college district.

The money verdict – if it follows the predictable pattern – will be whittled down in the appeals and negotiation process and will probably cost TSC taxpayers $2.5 million at best. But the attorneys' fees meter will keep on running.

The real cost will be borne by the people who live in the district, the same people you begged for their vote to put you on the TSC board. And this is how you choose to repay them?

A WISTFUL CRY FROM A LOCAL STRIP DANCE AFICIONADO...

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"Hey Juan, they closed both stilettoes! What are us degenerates to do? We can't very well go across, nos cortan la cabeza."

THE BAD HABITS OF ENTITLED PUBLIC SERVANTS

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(Ed.'s Note: Remember when former Cameron County Pct. 4 commissioner Dan Sanchez used to park in spaces reserved for law enforcement and constables at the Harrison St. county building?

Image result for dan sanchez, rrunrrunWell, Dan stopped doing it after we posted photos of his private vehicle on the restricted spaces.

Well, children, it appears that there is another public servant who thinks that the rules we mere mortals live by don't apply to special people like them.

A visitor to the tax office on Levee Street says he circled the block once or twice trying to find a parking space near the door and had to park about a block away.

Imagine his chagrin at walking to the building and seeing a Cameron County District Attorney SUV parked in a prohibited striped area.

"Don't the rules apply to everyone," he wrote as a caption to the photo he sent above. "Isn't everyone supposed to follow the rules, especially someone who is supposed to enforce the laws?"

CAN YOU BELIEVE IT HAS BEEN 65 YEARS AGO SINCE THEN?

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(Ed.'s Note: In observance of Veterans day 2018, we post this photo to remember the surge of patriotism exhibited by the citizen-soldiers of Brownsville during the nation's wars. The photo above shows a group of soldiers from the various services during the 1953 Charro Days parade. The Air Force, Navy, Marines and Army are all represented. The names of the soldiers attending Texas Southmost College are (not necessarily in order) Ray "Pat" Tamayo, Tacho Gomez, Ruben M. Torres, Joe Leal, and Charles Hernandez.

We know that Torres is the Marine, third from left. A section of FM 802 is named after him. He served two terms in the Texas Legislature as the local representative.What ever became of the rest of the soldiers? We thank one of our seven readers for the rare photo.)
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