Quantcast
Channel: EL RRUN RRUN
Viewing all 8009 articles
Browse latest View live

ZENDEJAS OFF TO CALIFAS. SEEKING GREENER PASTURES?

$
0
0
By Juan Montoya
Sources close to the office of Esperanza Zendejas, the superintendent of the Brownsville Independent School District, say she is off to California for the third time in as many weeks, and the speculation is that she is there to interview for a superintendent's gig.
The BISD elections have turned out to be more contentious than ever and, apparently, Zendejas sees her four-vote majority in danger.
Before, with the support of Joe Rodriguez, Carlos Elizondo, Cesar Lopez, and Jose Chirinos,
Zendejas could put up with the sniping from pesky Catalina Presas-Garcia and later, from Minerva Peña, the anti-evolution born-again Christian who sought to establish an independent image as her reelection approached.

Peña is one of those people who pander to the evangelicals in this city who still can't cope with the geological evidence that shows the world was not created in seven days, that human being evolved like other species on earth, and that different cultures and religions can still co-exist peacefully without a lightning bolt crashing down from the heavens to smite the non-believers.

Listen to her speak publicly (if you can bear the thought), and what you get is a homily with more "God bless yous" and appeals to Providence than a Bishop Flores sermon. She has found out that religion, as patriotism to some, is a nice, safe refuge from which to delve in local politics.
It's a measure of our local electorate, that a core group of her supporters think her style of politics is just fine, thank you. She may be inarticulate, adorably brash and naive, pero es muy buena gente.

She is the classic gabber at social functions who is not above spreading a bit of juicy gossip when it may leave some sort of political profit in return from the listener.
Peña has seen the tides of fortune change during her tenure on the BISD board. At first, she went along with the Rodriguez, Lopez, Elizondo, and Chirinos majority and cooperated to remove Otis Powers from the president's chair. But she didn't realize that it would be her head rolling down the steps of the Glass Palace that would be next. Sure enough, the inevitable happened and the boys turned on her and she was out.

Kent Whittemore is giving her a run for the money. Whittemore, a veteran administrator at BISD, has sought to distance himself from the majority policies that have shifted the priorities of the district away from small class sizes, supporting Spacial Needs students, and other decent goals, to pay homage to the Jock Gang who imagine the BISD becoming a football power in South Texas. Anna Elizabeth Hernandez Oquin (rAnna McDonald), has used her McDonald's franchises to make her run at Peña, but apart from having a Fren-Fry font on her logo, not much has been seen or heard from her on the hustings.
The Rodriguez dream of establishing a football powerhouse at the BISD, of course, will never happen, but that hasn't stopped the Rodriguez Gang to plunk down $800,000 to cover a football field with artificial turf at high schoos, and even a middle school or two.

And he even threw in an indoor training center for his protege Tom Chavez's Rivera High School.
Football prowess never happened even during the Rodriguez Reign as coach and Athletic Director, but as we said, it's all about imagine. In this town, reality is shunted aside in favor of putting out a good front.

We may be the backwater of the United States, but by god, we can dance zumba with the best of them, have more kids dipping fishing poles in a resaca than anyone else, and cover more surface space with bike trails than we have sidewalks for people to walk on. And, oh yeah, we also bought ourselves the All-American City designation.

The administration and the BISD lawyers have allowed just about anyone to run for a seat on the board of trustees. Already, with Head Cheez Erasmo Castro making a run at incumbent Presas-Garcia and pressing on the heels of Laura Perez-Reyes, the documentation is in the hands of his opponents that will disqualify him from holding the position because of a felony conviction for forgery in his youth. The Brownsville Herald, which prides itself in not publishing political ads unless you can document where the ink in your pen came from, has allowed one Frank Mar to run two ads accusing Castro of not only having the conviction, but also of being named in other, less unpalatable acts involving filing immigration forms for poor clients without proper authority.

Perez-Reyes, meanwhile, has been the recipient of funds from BISD vendors who despise Garcia-Presas, although, to her credit, the challenger's campaign ads have not attacked the incumbent.

That slack has been picked up by BISD general counsel Baltazar Salazar, a mediocre education lawyer related by his sister's marriage to the Lucios and being subsidized by taxpayers at a generous $264,000 salary. Salazar has been sloppy and is the main suspect in the formation of the Brownsville Taxpayers PAC which has paid for at least three mass mailings against Presas-Garcia.

After it was discovered that its treasurer listed his "office or residence" at 925 N. Iowa – a vacant lot being sold by Salazar's sister Liz Vera's realty company – the PAC's next report to the Texas Ethics Commission listed a Houston address. But it didn't take but 15 minutes for documentation to show that the house in Houston is owned by Baltazar Salazar and his wife Maria.

As we said, he is a bit sloppy in his deceit. The only money reported in its TEC finance reports by the PAC for its website and printing and mailing the anti-Presas-Garcia literature, was $13,000 from Salazar.

The last thing Zendejas wants is to have Dr. Sylvia Perez-Atkinson beat Chirinos (a member of the Gang of Four) elected to the board. After all, it was with Zendejas' connivance that Atkinson was shown the door at BISD. But with a well-funded campaign and a horde of supporters, her worse nightmare may well become reality. Her nearest opponent, firefighter Rigo Bocanegra, lacks the financial purse to counter her campaign, and at least one source has told us of bounced checks as the campaign is in the home stretch. Only a late-game surge from Team Rigo could make it close. Of course, if he filed his reports on time, we may have a better idea of the breadth of his support.

At stake in all of this is control of a $500 million budget, the education of 45,000 students and the employment of 7,000 employees.

Zendejas – from previous experience – has shown that she can see the writing on the wall, even if misspelled. She has left a trail across the country in school districts where she was courted by a board majority, wore out her welcome as the districts succumbed into personnel turmoil and bad finances, and then walked away when the next board ousted the previous majority and bought out her contract.

She cannot only read the writing on the wall, but the omens are all bad. Even the Giant Pumpkings contest turned out to be a dud. Instead of giant calbazas, the merciless South Texas sun stunted the gourds, as the vote in this BISD election may stunt her dreams of staying on as superintendent here and fizzle at the polls.

It appears, as the baseball prophet said, that it's deja vu all over again.

DUNKIN WRONG SAYING HILLARY HAS "BLOOD ON HER HANDS"

$
0
0
By Juan Ortega
Special to El Rrun-Rrun

Someone called my attention and I got a chance to read Robert Dunkin's letter to the editor published Nov. 1 in the Valley Morning Star disparaging Democratic Party presidential nominee and former U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton.

The writer – Robert Dunkin, of Harlingen – double-guessed the many committees in the U.S. Congress and other bodies who have investigated the terrorist attack on the U.S. embassy in Benghazi, Lybia, and charged that Ms. Clinton has "blood of our military men on her hands" because of her actions.

With all due respect for Mr. Dunkin's military service, how easy it is for critics like him, at home and far away from the scene of the events, to rush to judgment at a safe distance from the action.
And in contrast to some family members of the four men who died in the embassy attack, Dunkin says that Clinton, as secretary of state, made the decision "based on politics."

None other than a sister of one of the men has castigated the Republican-led House of Representatives and said that her brother had written her to tell her that his embassy was not better protected from exactly this type of attack because that august body had denied Clinton's Department of State its budgetary request for more funds for that specific purpose.

In fact, one of the reasons that Obama has issued so mnay executive orders is simply because an obstructionist congress has refused to cooperate with him in any significant issue like immigration reform, phasing out farm subsidies for agribusiness corporation, and fighting voting suppression of minorities and the poor.

This type of facile partisan criticism is the type we have come to expect from detractors of the Clintons, President Barack Obama, and other politicians.
If you are a Democrat, you are a "liberal."
If you do not favor the policies of the U.S., you are a traitor.

Don't they remember that both Democrats and Republicans have fought alongside one another in this nation's wars? Don't they remember that men and women from every socioeconomic class, race and religion have become brothers in arms to defend this country? As the commander-in-chief, you have command over the lives of all of the men and women from every walk of life that serve in our Armed Forces.
Everyone bleeds red, Mr. Dunkin.

Not long ago, before he became a candidate for the nation's highest office, Republican nominee Donald Trump funded the "birthing" fringe group movement out to prove that Mr. Obama was not a U.S. citizen.

And also not so long ago, Trump also criticized Vietnam veteran and prisoner of war John McCain, of Arizona for having been captured while a combat pilot during the war. His insults against the disabled, women, Muslims, and Mexicans are well documented.
Dunkin also says that "It breaks my heart that the Democrats have run three war protestors as presidential candidates."

For his information, one of the rights that we enjoy in this country is the right of free speech, expression and assembly. That right has been made possible through the defense of our nation by our nation's veterans. I don't have to agree with what you say, but I will defend your right as an American to express your opinion. That's the law we live by as written in our U.S. Constitution.

Trump – unlike Mr. Dunkin and countless Rio Grande Valley residents – was able to acquire draft deferments during the Vietnam War. The first four were student deferment.  He – unlike most poor whites and minorities – could pay to go to college. The fourth was for a bone spur in his heel – he doesn't remember which one it was now – that kept him from servig in the war.
When asked to produce the letter from his doctor explaining the bone spur which "went away in time," as he told the New York Times, he was unable to produce it.
Is this what Dunkin would call a "draft dodger?"

Mr. Dunkin's standards for presidential nominees strikes me as dubious at best, and malicious at worst. While we can respect his military service – an air controller in radar station removed from the action – we must question his obvious double standard in the case of both presidential nominees.

VICTOR CORTEZ WAS A MINOR PLAYER IN CAMARENA PROBE

$
0
0
By Juan Montoya
New revelations by the supervisor of the operation investigating the torture and February 1985 death of DEA agent Kike Camarena that the CIA and the Mexican government were behind the crimes have spurred questions into the role of a Republican candidate for Cameron County Sheriff.

Victor Cortez, former chief of Internal Affairs and Public Integrity Unit with the Cameron County District Attorney's Office, said he was kidnapped, tortured and ultimately had to be rescued after he volunteered to join Operation Leyenda, headed by Supervisor Hector Berrellez to find those responsible for Camarena's death.

Operation Leyenda was formed in 1986 and Berrellez was named as its head.
Berrellez and former DEA official Phil Jordan are now alleging that CIA operatives killed Camarena trying to find out how much he knew of narcos and government offiicals' ties to the drug cartels.
Just recently, the two former DEA agents say two former CIA operatives had turned over Camarena to the Mexican narcos.

Their revelations came two months after Mexico's release of kingpin Rafael Caro Quintero from prison. Caro Quintero and two other high-level drug-traffickers had been sentenced to 40 years for their roles in Camarena's kidnapping, torture and murder.

They were not the only ones. Former CIA contract pilot Tosh Plumlee joined Jordan and Berrellez in making the allegations. Celestino Castillo III, another former DEA agent and author of "Powderburns: Cocaine, Contras and the Drug War," told LA Weekly that Jordan, Berrellez and Plumlee "are right on the money."
Cortez told a local daily that he had arrested Sergio Espino Verdin, an ex-commander of the Dirección Federal de Seguridad, the Federal Security Directorate, but that the Mexican government had released him and – after he himself was kidnapped and tortured – ordered Cortez out of the country as a person non grata.

Espino Verdin is still listed among the most wanted by the United States, as is Rafael Caro Quintero, the leader of the organization referred to in U.S. federal court records as the Guadalajara Narcotics Cartel.
Cortez said he was seized in a car and then found out the informant he was with had firearms in the trunk and the car they drove was not registered. On August 13, he was arrested by Mexican police, held and tortured, until his supervisor rescued him.

He told the local daily that from Mexico he was transferred to Tucson, Az., where he became an instructor and group supervisor and the was assigned to Quantico, Bolivia, San Antonio, Ecuador and California.
His last post when he retired from the DEA in 2008 was Miami. He returned to Brownsville, and worked for U.S. Customs and Border Protection Internal Affairs in McAllen.

After Cortez was reassigned to Tucson, Berrellez went on to indict four cartel members. They were convicted in U.S. federal court in 1992. Ruben Zuno Arce, a wealthy Mexican businessman and son-in-law to former Mexican President Luis Echeverría Álvarez, was convicted of kidnapping, as were Juan Ramón Matta Ballesteros, a Honduran drug trafficker, and Juan Jose Bernabe Ramirez, a former Mexican policeman.

Javier Vasquez Velasco was convicted of murdering two American tourists in Guadalajara on the orders of druglords who mistook them for DEA agents.
Another man allegedly involved in the Camarena killing got off far easier: the doctor who was believed to have injected him with adrenaline to keep him coherent while being tortured – the doctor who'd been kidnapped in April 1990 by Mexican bounty hunters working on Berrellez's orders.

"The shit hit the fan because it was all over the news that this doctor had been kidnapped by the DEA out of Mexico," Berrellez, whose name was leaked as the orchestrator of the kidnapping, told LA Weekly.
In that article, it states that the Mexican government protested the kidnapping as a violation of national sovereignty and issued a warrant for Berrellez's arrest. They also demanded that Machaín be returned to Mexico. A district judge in Los Angeles dismissed the charges and ordered the doctor released.

Cortez is now running for Cameron County Sheriff based on his exploits in the Camarena investigation. But what were his actual, tangible accomplishments?
The man he captured is still on the loose as is Caro Quintero. He had to be rescued by his supervisor because he was careless and let himself get captured and had to be taken out of the country. And drugs still flowing across the border.

Now, with Berrellez's revelations that the whole thing had been orchestrated by the CIA and the U.S. government, it's clear that his role in the Camarena investigation was a relatively minor asterisk in the larger context.

For more on this story, click on links below:

http://www.laweekly.com/news/how-a-dogged-la-dea-agent-unraveled-the-cias-alleged-role-in-the-murder-of-kiki-camarena-5750278

http://www.elpasotimes.com/news/ci_24343140/ex-dea-officials-make-bombshell-allegations-about-kiki



EDUCATIONAL SUCCESS IS MEASURED...ONE STUDENT AT A TIME

$
0
0
By Carla Gutierrez
Graduate, Porter High School

Dear Ms. Caty Presas-Garcia,

I cannot thank you enough for the big impact you have made in my life. You are a role model to me and you inspired me to achieve many of my goals. I still remember when I first got called to the office wondering what I had done wrong, thinking I could have possibly been in trouble for skipping, for being disrespectful, for being a bully, or maybe because someone had already noticed I was utilizing drugs.

But no, that wasn't the case. I got called because the presence of a strong independent woman was in campus and, yes, that was you .

I remember when we were in that room trying to figure out what was happening. A group of trouble makers, pot heads, lost kids, basically kids that needed guidance occupied that room asking ourselves why we were called. You were in that room with a smile on your face and a book on your hands looking at each one of us and said we were all beautiful.

You asked each one of us if we thought we were beautiful. You asked me and I answered yes. I lied. You then started talking about how nothing in life is easy but you have to work hard and be dedicated in order to be successful. You told us about your past, your present, and what you had set for the future. I started asking myself how a woman who did not have it easy in life became so successful, loving and caring.

As you kept on talking I noticed you had so much passion for what you do and how you never expected nothing in return other than to see people succeed and be happy. You where there to guide us. You did not judge us because of who we were or what we did. To you it didn't matter because you believed in us.

You believed that we could make a change, that we would be successful, that it didn't matter what people said we have to always believe in ourselves. Coming out of that room I started thinking how you where right in every way. Every visit you made was always great. You would always encourage us and advice us which made me feel this woman cares. You weren't there because you had to. You were there because you wanted to see us succeed. I changed my ways and how I thought about me. My thoughts had changed. I was now beautiful!

I can't tell you how eager I was when I had the opportunity to do a project about someone who we admire and had made a change. As soon as they told us I went and told my counselor with no hesitation Mrs. Cathy Presas has to be the one. You have offered so much I just don't know how you do it. I still remember one of your favorite quotes

"My fellow Americans, ask not what your country can do for you, ask what you can do for your country." - John F. Kennedy

You do so much for others you are so caring  and one truly inspirational woman. I got the chance to sit with you one on one and ask you questions. I learned a variety of things of the person who I admire so much. I love how you are so outspoken, independent, hard worker, dedicated, loving, caring, I would keep on but I wouldn't finish.

Mrs. Presas thank you, thank you for all your support, for your advice, guidance, but most of all love! I was very proud of myself when I walked that stage and saw that I made you proud. The lady who inspired me, the one that little by little with her awesome advice help me quit my bad habits, believe I was beautiful, and that I could be successful.

Thank you for keeping your word when you said you were the one that would hand me my diploma. I know those tears on your face that day of graduation were because you were seeing us being successful and accomplishing one of our goals.
I love you and God bless you. ️

P.S. I kept asking for your number but no one knew it 'till today that I got the chance to pick that lovely gift and she gave it to me.Thank you! Oh, I know I never told you, but I refer to you as my godmother. I believe God puts people in our way to make a change. You have made it, so you are my God mother!!!!!!!

OTIS POWERS SUPPORTER RESPONDS TO PHIL COWEN ADS

$
0
0
Dear Editor,

For weeks now, Otis Powers' opponent for Place 3 on the board of the Brownsville Independent School District has had a free hand in the pages of the local newspaper. I thank the El Rrun-Rrun blog for giving me the chance to respond to set the record straight.

1. He accuses Otis of “conspiring” to get the former BISD CFO to file a grievance. If you read the quote from his “documentation” you can see that the former administrator was asking him for advice on how to protect his job. He was his friend and an able administrator and Otis did. Friends do that.

2. He blames Otis for not firing a teacher who had been indicted for an inappropriate relationship with a high school student. I don’t know where he got his law degree, but obviously it was not it was at a law school that teaches that everyone is presumed innocent until proven guilty. The teacher in question had only been charged, not convicted. To fire someone and deprive them of a livelihood based upon a mere charge and not a conviction violates every legal standard in our constitution. He did say, after all, that he was a lawyer, did he not?

3. Even more serious is the fact that these discussions on these cases all took place in executive session. The discussions there require the utmost discretion for the protection of people’s privacy. For Otis to comment on the specifics of a case would expose him, and, more importantly, the district, to legal action by the accused. Phil knows this. As a result, he has sought political benefit that has amounted to him punching a man whose hands are tied.

4. Phil was on the BISD board when student transportation was shifted to a private carrier, Durham Bus Service. In 1992, bus drivers rebelled against the unfair labor practices, organized, and went out on strike. As many as 55 of them were fired because the board – instead of owning up to its responsibilities to labor – hid behind the contract with the private company and the drivers, our neighbors, paid the price. That was the origin of the labor troubles we have had with our bus drivers up to now. Thanks a lot Phil!

Cowen hides behind simplistic and jingoistic slogans like “I’m BISD Proud!” Unlike him, Otis has worked over the years to make our district better and to have our students perform at higher levels and lets the results speak for themselves.

Our BISD was recognized in 2008 as the most improved school district in the United States and received the Board Award that gave our students $1 million in scholarships when he served as vice-president of the board.

And that same year our school board was recognized as the most efficient and effective board in the country and was awarded the Council of Urban Boards of Education (CUBE) Award.

No amount of mudslinging can compare to that, Mr. Cowen. I know who I'm going to vote for, and it's not you.

NEECE HINTS HE WILL BE AROUND AFTER RETIREMENT

$
0
0
By Juan Montoya
Did anyone perchance see the presentation made during the last Brownsville City Commission meeting in honor of Municipal Courts Week?
If you did, then you didn't miss the acceptance speech by Chief Municipal Court Judge Ben Neece. Neece accepted the award and also announced his retirement at the end of the year.


To anyone who has seen the judge hold court, these are not welcome news. Bilingual to a degree that makes himself understood to most local Spanish speakers, Neece guides the uninitiated through the legal brambles facing them and shows the the options available to them.
If the defendant's economic situation is not there to pay the fines outright or would put the household budget in danger, there are always payment arrangements that can be made or community service instead of fines.

In accepting the award, Neece glanced over at District 4 Commissioner John Villarreal and said pointedly that he would be retired but that he would still be around to keep an eye on the conditions of the city, and in particular the downtown area.
If you take a gander at the city map by district, you will see that most of the downtown area lises within District 4. Neece and his brother are already renovating a historic building next door to the Manitou Department Store, founded by Don Enrique Manitou, smack-dab in the middle of District 4. (Click on graphic to enlarge map.)


This won't be Neece's first foray into downtown renovation. He and Brownsville Society for the Arts founder George Ramirez virtually instilled life into the decrepit Market Square area with their Crescent Moon that later transformed into the Half Moon. Over the last few months, it has gone through remodeling and the installation of a kitchen to be opened in the next few months.

Before the Half Moon, it was hard to find live music downtown except for conjuntos playing at Friday and Saturday night bailes at La Movida or Carta Brava and El Callejon.
Since then, El Hueso del Fraile has built up a following for Musica Nueva and some new establishments have followed in their footsteps.

Neece's down-to-earth temperament on the bench will be missed in municipal court. But if we hold him at his word, we're sure he will be a presence in the revitalization of downtown, if not occupying one of the seats on the city commission.

ROSE GOWEN'S BIKES STOLEN, USED TO TRANSPORT ILLEGALS

$
0
0
By Juan Montoya
Thanks to the rental bikes installed in the downtown area,
the city facilitated the transportation of at least three illegal immigrants – unless someone was riding double – to a site where they could go multi-modal and jump on a passing train for their trip northward.

Early Saturday, residents near the Rio Del Sol Subdivision out towards FM 511 came upon three abandoned bicycles that were part of the city campaign to encourage people to ride a bicycle instead of driving their cars.

This was perfect for the suspected illegal immigrants who easily disabled the security features on the bike racks and then simply jumped on them to go catch the train northward.
How do we know they may have been stolen by illegal immigrants?
Police found a gallon of flavored water in a gallon jug, a favored method for immigrants to carry water. Also, a pair of shorts left in one of the bike baskets had a pair of shorts that were still wet from crossing the river. But there weren't just any old immigrants, witnesses say.

One of them left a backpack in the haste to scurry away that contained – among other things – a package of condoms for health protection.
All three bikes were abandoned by the railroad tracks by the Rio Del Sol subdivision many miles from downtown.

As far as anyone knew, no one had reported these bikes stolen or missing. According to the city you rent the bikes by the hour or day and opening the locks requires a cell-phone application. Are illegals app-savvy? And is 
there a fund to pay for the bikes' use or has the city figured out a way to charge the illegals?

There is no telling how many thousands of dollars have been spent promoting the use of bicycles, building bike trials, narrowing streets to provide bike lanes for the bike riders who haven't materialized, and choking off business downtown so suburbanites and their progeny can coast down Elizabeth and Washington on the closed streets.

In a way it's good to know that all the travel and wining and dining by city staff and officials in Austin San Antonio supposedly to get the feel and the low down to bring these bikes to our friendly city actually provided someone a service.

They don't call us the All-American city for nothing. We're so friendly we provide free transportation at taxpayers expense to illegals to transport themselves to their ride out of Brownsville to bigger cities with jobs.

CATY SUES SALAZAR, WIFE, AND ESCOBEDO FOR DEFAMATION

$
0
0
By Juan Montoya
With one day left before election day for four places on the board of the Brownsville Independent
School District, Jaime Escobedo, a vendor of the district as well as BISD general counsel Baltazar Salazar may be wishing that the thousands they spent to beat trustee Caty Presas-Garcia do not result in her defeat.

Salazar, wife Maria, and Jaime Escobedo, who does business with the BISD providing armored-car services, among other things, are named along with the treasurer of the Brownsville Taxpayers Political Action Committee (BTPAC) listed as Juan Flores Leal, in a defamation lawsuit filed Friday by Mission attorney Frank Garza.
In her lawsuit (2016-DCL-07379) filed Friday, Presas-Garcia says the defendants engaged in a conspiracy to publish false information in an attempt to defeat her in her reelection bid for the board of the BISD.

Specifically, Presas-Garcia charges that Escobedo paid for an advertisement that was published in the Brownsville Herald on Wednesday, Nov. 2, that stated that she had been sued by the BISD for delinquent taxes knowing that to be false.
She also charged that the BTPAC – funded solely by defendant Salazar – paid for at least three mass mailings, one of which repeated the false claim that she and her husband had not paid their school property taxes.

In her lawsuit, she says that the documentation provided by Escobedo to the newspaper contained case numbers that he asserted referred to Presas-Garcia. The cause numbers provided the Herald as documentation for the ad were: Cause 2008-07-4311-C which was non-suited in 2008, and Cause 2008-07-3858-C, for 1999, 2001, 2003, and 2006.

The property in question actually belonged to Catalina Loya Garcia, of 554 Florence , Brownsville Texas.


In the Nov. 2 ad, Escobedo – under his own name – says he could forgive Presas-Garcia for "being delinquent on your BISD property taxes."
A subsequent publishing of the same ad in the newspaper indicates that the offending comments of tax delinquency with the BISD were removed.

That is the same assertion made by the BTPAC in at least one of three massive mailouts that arrived in residents' homes before and during the early voting period for the BISD election.
In that one, the mailout asserts that Presas-Garcia was "sued by Cameron County for delinquent property taxes owed. And she was sued by BISD for delinquent property taxes, WOW!


In her lawsuit, Presas-Garcia says the assertions on taxes were defamatory. "The statement was defamatory because it unambiguously and maliciously asserts an act that is false in order to discredit and tarnish the reputation of the Plaintiff."

But it is the hidden hand of board counsel Salazar and the PAC that is cited by Presas-Garcia in her lawsuit which she says indicates that a conspiracy was hatched to sabotage her reelection chances. The address listed as "residence or office" of the BTPAC's treasurer Flores Leal in the finance report to the Texas Ethics Commission was first listed as 9245 N. Iowa Road, in Brownsville, an empty lot for sale. That lot was listed as a property being sold by Liz Realty. That firm is owned by Liz Vera, a BISD teacher and Salazar's sister.

Later, after social media disclosed that no such person lived at the Iowa Road address and that it even lacked a mailbox, the second TEC finance report filed on the eighth day before the election showed that address had changed to 9574 Ravensworth, in Houston. A check of the Harris County Appraisal District showed that the property belongs to Baltazar and Maria Salazar. Later research showed that the house was vacant than that the electric meter had been removed. There was no trace that the person listed as BTPAC treasurer – Juan Flores Leal – had ever lived at either one of the locations.


In her lawsuit, Presas-Garcia asks for simple and special damages.
"Defendants' false statements caused injury to Plaintiff, which resulted in the following damages: injury to character or reputation, injury to feelings, mental anguish. Further, since Defendants are liable for defamation per se Plaintiff is presumed to be entitled to these general damages. Additionally, as special damages, Defendants are liable to Plaintiff for loss of past and future earnings caused by Defendants' false statements.

"Furthermore, Plaintiff's injuries resulted from Defendants' malice, which entitles Plaintiff to
exemplary damages under Texas Civil Practice and Remedies Code..."

Presas-Garcia said that she is also pursuing a complaint against Salazar with the TEC for submitting false information for a PAC and with the Texas State Bar for unethical conduct. 
As we said at the start, Salazar and Escobedo may now wish that the thousands they spent in their effort to defeat Presas-Garcia's re-election bid will fail. Otherwise, they're on the hook for some big bucks.  

WILL IT BE LA PALANCA OR LEGAL PERFORMANCE AT 445TH?

$
0
0
(We received this in the email in support of Rene De Coss. We have met him and he is the real deal. He is facing an uphill fight against the palanca (straight ticket) vote that favors Democrat Gloria Rincones, so we will see how that goes.) 

IT'S ALL ABOUT GETTING IT RIGHT

As a judge, one carries an enormous responsibility to assure that the law is applied fairly and impartially and – most importantly – correctly.
The law may be an abstract, but every decision we make affects breathing, living human beings. It may send someone to prison for many years for a crime. Or it may free wrongfully accused persons.

We can't afford to get something "partially" right, or wrong. Every "i" has to be dotted and "t" crossed to give all the parties in a trial an even playing field.

When judges fail in the application of the law, it mocks the concept of a fair and impartial legal process that can result in a murderer walking our streets, kidnappers thumbing their nose at their victims, criminals attacking our la enforcement officers without facing any consequences, and brings dishonor to our profession.

I am proud to say that in the 1,000 or more cases over which I have presided, only two have had appeals filed regarding procedure and one already came back upholding my decision, finding no error. There is only one still in the appeals process.

We're all humans and no one's perfect. But rest assured that if you decide to keep me on the bench of the 445th District Court as your judge this November 8, every decision that I make will be based on sound legal principals that will prevent such grievous miscarriages of justice.

Let's get it right the first time.

STOLEN RENTAL BIKES FROM BROWNSVILLE BLAMED ON ALIENS

ACTS OF KINDNESS GO A LONG WAY WITH SPECIAL NEEDS KIDS

$
0
0

(Ed's Note: We received these photos and message from the mother of the child above. She is Kistina Rodriguez and her child Jonathan. is a special needs child. In this message she sends a thank you to Veterans Memorial H.S. Chargers football player Ismael De Leon, #35, for participating in a program partnering runners with special needs children like her son.)

By Kristina Rodriguez
There is a group that me and my kids are part of. It is called Run with RGV where kids with special needs are partnered with runners, people who work out, or anybody that is willing to go the extra mile and dedicate the things that they can do that maybe our little one cannot.

This is Ismael De Leon, #35, VM Chargers. This young man has a heart of gold. Sometimes he will wake up before dawn just to go for a swim or run a mile for my son Jonathan and tonight he had him walk on the field with him. He had the whole team sign a football for him. 
It's amazing how many good people are out there. We need more of you.
Congratulations on tonight's win!      

MCHALE PREDICTS CLINTON VICTORY, EXCITING TUESDAY NIGHT

$
0
0
By Dr. G.F. McHale-Scully
From The McHale Report.blogspot

Image result for jerry mchaleNobody could be happier about the ending of this election cycle than me. I haven't watched television since last week. After listening to 18 months of hysteria, I didn't want to hear that high pitch in the frantic last days that would have caused my dog Pancracio to start howling with pain.


I had no problems voting for Clinton, which was my way of asserting that Obama deserves a third term. A president is judged in three areas: national defense, the economy and social issues.

He kept us out of war while eliminating hundreds of Islamic terrorists. The Middle East has been a mess since the days of the Old Testament. There is no resolution to the hatred among Muslims and their rancor toward Israel. That part of the world is a quagmire from which there is no escape. We can operate more effectively from the periphery. Have we already forgotten Iraq and Afghanistan?

Obama inherited a financial catastrophe from the incompetent George W. Bush who used to pound his chest and brag about his keeping America safe except for the unfortunate fact that more than 3,000 Americans died on his watch while he was asleep at the wheel on 9/11. Under Obama the stock market has soared, unemployment is under 5 percent and there has been steady albeit slow financial growth.

Socially, Obama isn't a born-again Christian who wants to substitute the Bible for the Koran in the United States, has had no interest in legislating a woman's vagina and supports a live-and-let-life sexual lifestyle among consenting adults.

Clinton has the experience and temperament to manage the country. Trump doesn't. He can't even manage himself. Democrats used to criticize County Judge Carlos Cascos because he wasn't the architect of any grand accomplishment. Over the many years at his post, he had more than his share of achievements, but he succeeded by managing the county well.

Taxes weren't raised, scandals were a rarity and the day-to-day business went smoothly with him at the helm. There were never any cries of corruption or backroom dealings. (His greatest accomplishment may have been keeping bought-and-sold Democratic county judges out of office.) He epitomized accountability and transparency.

Clinton has the same ability to manage. (I'm conceding in advance to my Republican drinking buddies that she may have a problem with corruption, accountability and transparency. Nobody's perfect!)

I don't believe Trump possesses the intangibles. And he hasn't filled me with the confidence that I would want to extend him the opportunity to be the most powerful person in the world.

Tonight, however, I will be glued to the television. We are into the last five minutes of a NBA basketball game when everything is decided. The local elections, particularly the BISD donnybrook, will keep me hypnotized to the screen since I'm a true aficionado of all things political, big and small. And I hope that by the time I go to bed the voters will have declared Clinton the winner.

My oldest son is joining me at my apartment. We'll feast on steaks and chase these repasts down with a few bottles of wine. Unlike most Tuesday evenings, this will be an exciting night.

THE FALLOUT ON 3 STOLEN CHIZCAS TRANSPORTING ALIENS

$
0
0
By Juan Montoya
Suddenly, city officials who lauded the idea of placing rental bikes costing in the thousands of dollars for rent in downtown sites have gone silent over the recent theft of three of them (or more) and used by illegal aliens to catch a train out of town.
Heralded as a move to improve city residents' health and to make the city bike-friendly, the bikes were supposed to be theft proof and could only be operated by the use of an app on a person's cell phone.

Well, if car thieves from Matamoros can hot wire the most modern cars and drive them across the river, what made city officials think that they couldn't break into the bike racks and make off with the new bikes?
In the case of three bikes, the police told a local broadcaster that they didn't know who took the bikes, whether they were in fact stolen, or whether the perpetrators meant to return them.
"Right now we're just handling it as a missing bikes case," a BPD spokesman told the reporter.

The bikes were found, along with a backpack and a gallon of flavored water, out toward FM 511 in the Rio Del Sol Subdivision. That subdivision is adjacent to the railroad tracks leading northward. A pair of shorts left on one of the bikes was still wet from the swim across the river. The backpack also contained a package of condoms.

The fact that the city is spending so much money on the bikes, app software, and the maintenance agreements with the vendors didn't sit well with
some local residents.

The whole biking thrust has been spearheaded by city commissioner rose Gowen, as has the proliferation of bike and hike trails.
One of her fellow commissioners, Rick Longoria, said he had voted against the idea of the rental bikes because he suspected something like this might happen.
"The only vote against it. Right here.," He wrote. "Waste of our taxpayers money,"

Dino Chavez followed suit and said that if every politician was held accountable for funds wasted, stolen of used inefficiently during their tenure, they would think twice about how they spent it.
"It's quite different when the money you are spending is not your own."
Others, most notably Ruben Gallegos, Jr., questioned the continued emulation of large urban centers in Central and North Texas such as Austin and Ft. Worth who have the rental bikes saying that one size does not necessarily fit all.
"(Brownsville) does not have a bustling downtown or a road system that is bike friendly," he wrote. "Just because it works in Austin or Ft. Worth doesn't mean it will work here...It amazes me how much one aggressive commissioner can do regardless of the validity of the idea."
And Zeke Silva (in whose neighborhood the three stolen bikes were found) pitched in his two-cents worth on the issue.
"We paid stupid tax payers money for bikes to give away. How much money has the poorest city in the United States of American lost over commissioner Rose Gowen wanting to grandstand over her project? Now they want GPS on every bike..."

But, according to the police and the city administration, no crime has occurred and no theft has been reported. They'll probably just throw more good money after bad as usual.

NOT A GOOD NIGHT FOR INCUMBENTS IN BISD RACE

$
0
0
By Juan Montoya
It was not a good night for incumbents of the board of trustees of the Brownsville Independent School District.
Three of the incumbents – Jose Chirinos, Caty Presas-Garcia and Otis Powers – went down in defeat. Not even the expected surge in voter turnout expected for election day could save them.

The winners were Position 3, Philip Cowen,  Position 5, Laura Perez-Reyes, Position 6, Minerva Peña, the only surviving incumbent, and Position 7, Dr. Sylvia Perez-Atkinson.

The closest race was between Position 3 incumbent Powers and Cowen. Unofficial results indicate that Cowen garnered 9.323 votes to Powers' 9,175, a 148-vote difference. A surprising Jorge Valdez racked up 7,956, Argelia Miller got 4,008 and Josette A. Cruz got 2,847.

Almost 67 percent of the vote in that race – as in the other races – was cast during the early voting period not including the mail-in ballots. In every case, the winner of the early vote went on to win the election.

Powers actually won the election-day voting 2,724 to Cowen's 2,327 (by 397 votes), but couldn't make up the early vote advantage Cowen had accumulated that had him beating Powers 6,632 to 6,189 (by 443 votes). The difference in the totals is explained by the 364 mail-in votes for Cowen and 262 for Powers.

In the case of Position 5 incumbent Caty Presas-Garcia, she was the victim of the perfect storm. Faced by support for her opponent and eventual winner Perez-Reyes by an unholy alliance made up of BISD general counsel Baltazar Salazar, vendor Jaime Escobedo, and insurance mogul Joe Salazar, she was unable to counteract three mass mailouts and newspaper ads denouncing her for costing the district millions through lawsuits. That actually stuck, apparently, and she went down to third place in the four-candidate totals.

The surprise candidate in this race was that of Head Cheez Erasmo Castro, who tallied 10,901 to Perez-Reyes' 11,861. Perez-Reyes, who had been a protege of politiquera Tomasita Chavez, was second among all candidates with 406 mail-in votes. Only Dr. Atkinson polled more mail-in votes with 419 in her race.

Minerva Peña, in Position 6, continues to surprise, easily out-polling her challengers with 12,051. Her closest rival was retired BISD administrator Kent Whittemore, with 8,236. Even perennial candidate Robert Uresti came in with 6,708 votes. Peña has continually pandered to the comadre vote and has benefited from her network of church ladies and neighborhood acquaintances. All politics, as the saying goes, is local.

In the Position 7 race, Dr. Perez-Atkinson had won the race at the end of early voting with 8,717 of her 13,217 total coming in during that period. Not one of her four opponents – firefighter Rigo Bocanegra (7,446), incumbent Chirinos (7,635), unknown Norberto Rangel (1,842) and Orlando Treviño (3,224), in their total vote, got more than Atkinson's 8,717 early-vote total.

Come the next board meeting, the roster for the BISD school board will be Joe Rodriguez, Cesar Lopez, Carlos Elizondo, Philip Cowen, Minerva Peña, Laura Perez-Reyes, and Atkinson.

It takes a special something to declare and run for the BISD board, the lowest rung of the public ladder. To all those who gave us a choice, our gratitude.

As far as the BISD goes, let the games begin!

TEAM SAENZ TAKES THE BIG ONE; SO MUCH FOR "KINGMAKER"

$
0
0
By Juan Montoya
Image result for team saenz, cameron countyIn the final days of the general election, Cameron County District Attorney Luis Saenz and his brother Mario made it clear that they were supporting four candidates: Rigo Bocanegra in the school board, Republican Victor Cortez in the county sheriff's race, Leo Lopez as a write-in for tax assessor against indicted taxman Tony Yzaguirre, and made a $100 contribution to Erasmo Castro in the school board race as well.
Unfortunately, all four went down to blazing defeat.

Perhaps the unkindest cut of all was the fact that Yzaguirre, facing trial in Corpus Christi in January on charges filed by Saenz in Cameron County, garnered 49,799 votes, well above the 36,111 straight-ticket (palanca) Democratic votes cast here. That means that another 13,688 voters filled in the Yzaguirre oval on the ballot on top of the 36,111 who pulled the palanca.

Image result for team saenz, cameron countyBocanegra, who posted photos of himself with Mario and Luiz in the closing days of the voting period, came in third in the Position 7 election behind Dr. Sylvia Atkinson and incumbent Jose Chirinos.

Cortez, in his charge-the-windmills race against five-term winner Omar Lucio for sheriff, got 30,146 to 59,099 votes for the "old man." A major emphasis of the Cortez camp was Lucio's age and charges that he no longer had the energy to perform his job. Cortez used to be the chief of Saenz's Public Integrity Unit and Saenz had Cortez tag along with him in apparent support since late February during the Charro Days parade. El chicle no pego, apparently.

Lopez, who ran a futile write-in campaign against Yzaguirre, had to split the write-in votes with Randy Gonzalez. The pair pulled in some 15,973 votes together, no match for Yzaguirre's 49,799.

Team Saenz is probably fortunate that no more local elections are on tap until 2017 when the City of Brownsville commission holds its elections. Until then, they might want to scrutinize their strategy to become "kingmakers" in Cameron County.

Or DA Saenz might simply want to put politics aside for a spell and try to get some convictions in his criminal cases.

RIVERA, GARCIA SIDE WITH TERCERO IN TSC LAWSUIT

$
0
0
By Juan Montoya
Image result for dr. rey garcia, tscBy now we've all probably heard about the lawsuit filed in federal court by former Texas Southmost College President Lily Tercero after she was terminated by the board of trustees.
Tercero protests that she was not provided with due process in her termination hearing, that she was not fired for good cause, that she wants the board to pay her for three years that the former board of directors extended her contract until May 1, 2019 ($228,228 x 3= $684,684), and that they de made to pay damages and attorneys fees.

She, of course, makes no mention of the fact that under her watch the TSC nursing program is, for all practical purposes, DOA, that she unilaterally extended the windstorm and hail property insurance contract without going out for proposals and without board approval, and that she was using the signature stamp of trustees no longer on the board to make payments to vendors and individuals that amounted to more than $1.5 million.

Her attorney (as lawyers are wont to do) blames individual trustees – Adela Garza, Trey Mendez, Ruben Herrera, Ramon Hinojosa and Dr. Tony Zavaleta – for her alleged wrongful termination and give a get-out-of-jail ticket to trustee Dr. Rey Garcia and Art Rendon. Both of these gents voted not to terminate Tercero. Additionally, Rendon is said to have been pushing for the windstorm insurance carrier to be picked before the company sued for a Temporary Restraining Order to keep the trustees from considering the proposals from other carriers.

Besides the general allegations by her attorneys that the individual board members were picking on her, that she was being asked for too much information, and that she was being asked to do things that hadn't been approved by a majority of the board, they also charge the defendants with breach of contract.

But it is the exhibits attached to the lawsuit that have caught the eye of legal observers. Her attorney Richard A, Illmer, of Dallas, included a glowing letter of support from former trustee Ed Rivera where he describes her performance as "stellar" and says her extension of the windstorm insurance contract was a "matter of urgency" and that he did not find her actions as "surreptitious in any way."

This is from Rivera, the trustee who jumped ship and ran for commissioner of the Port of Brownsville and used his girlfriend's Brownsville address instead of his in Laguna Vista because he lived outside the TSC district.
Tercero used Rivera's rubber-stamped signature even after he was replaced on the board June 27 by Dr. Tony Zavaleta. Her use of the bogus rubber-stamped signatures continued until late July and early August. It wasn't until August 5 or 6 that chairperson Adela Garza's countersignature stamp was used on checks Tercero approved. This was despite the fact that the administration had her signature stamp on file from her serving as a board officer on a previous term



Tercero also used the signature rubber stamp of former TSC chairman Kiko Rendon way after he was replaced by local attorney Ruben Herrera on May 18.
In all, Tercero paid out some $1.5 million in checks from TSC to individuals and vendors using the obsolete rubber-stamp signatures. And when new trustee Herrera wanted to personally sign checks paid by TSC over $10,000, Tercero considered his request illegal since no board action had been taken directing her to do it.



But it is the letter to Adela Garza by Dr. Rey Garcia that elicited the most attention. His style of
writing – besides being melodramatic – borders on the maudlin. In one sentence he calls chair Garza's style "despotic and tyrannical" that he charges she is "counter-productive to student success."

Garcia also contends that the continuing requests from Garza and other members for information from Tercero created "distractions" that "I am sure contributed to our missing the deadline for windstorm insurance."

 He close with "May God help you! Blessings, RG."



Local attorneys who have practicves in the local federal court say it is highly irregular for these type of exhibits to be attached to complaints and motions before the federal bench. But even more serious, they say that Rivera and Garcia, in effect, have joined the side of Tercero and the attorneys who have sued TSC for damages.

And in our pursuit of a copy of a letter Garcia is said to have written against Garza and her fellow trustees to TSC's accrediting agency, we have been told by TSC that they do not have any such correspondence.



Good morning, Mr. Montoya.
Per your Public Information Act request on Oct. 24, 2016, Texas Southmost College (TSC) does not have any documents regarding any communication between TSC Board of Trustee Dr. Reynaldo García and the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools Commission on Colleges (SACSCOC).

TSC was also unable to obtain any documents regarding your request from Dr. García or SACSCOC.
Edgar Chrnko Salas
Director of Marketing & Community Relations



We know that there is such a letter and that Garcia wrote SAC to complain about the actions of his fellow trustees on the TSC board. Why the accrediting agency? What do they do? Oh, yeah, they can give or withdraw accreditation.

Not to worry, we will eventually get a copy of the letter that trustee Garcia does not want anyone to see. With friends like Rivera and Garcia, why does TSC need enemies?

MINNIE, PHIL MIFFED OVER STYMIED SWEARING INS

$
0
0
By Juan Montoya
It's an old tradition at the Brownsville Independent School District.
After every school board election, the superintendent usually calls in the winners and has the secretary of CFO Lorenzo Sanchez – in this case Pat Perez, also BISD board secretary– do an informal swearing in in the board room.
"It's like a courtesy from the superintendent and the district," said a former trustee. "Pat Perez usually does the swearing in. Everyone knows about it."

Well, this time there was no congratulatory phone call to the three new members Laura Perez-Reyes, Phil Cowen, Dr. Sylvia Perez-Atkinson, or the single incumbent Minerva Peña.
Sources close to the board say that when Peña and Cowen went to the main office and knocked on the door, no one wanted to open the door. Once inside the building, they knocked on the board room door and CFO Sanchez opened the door just a crack and did not allow them to go inside and let Perez swear them in.

"He told them that he was under strict orders from administration not to allow anyone in the board room," they said. "Apparently, Superintendent (Esperanza) Zendejas wasn't pleased with some of the election results."
Until the jut-passed election BISD election, Zendejas enjoyed the support of the board majority controlled by Joe Rodriguez. Rodriguez, with Jose Chirinos, Carlos Elizondo and Cesar Lopez, gave her a two-year extension and upped her salary past $250,000 just before the elections. Now, with the board reorganization coming up, no one knows what majority will form. Already there are indications that the majority is chafing under Rodriguez's one-man show and may opt to form a majority where he doesn't guide their direction. Rodriguez recently suffered a stroke that left him bed-ridden for almost  a week.

With Cowen going after incumbent Otis Powers for not being more pro-active and involved with the personnel grievances as he should have been and crowing up his achievements in his past live as BISD president, it is likely he will want to take a direct hand in making some changes on the board and the district.

Add the election of Atkinson, a former Assistant Superintendent at BISD, to the board mix, and the dynamics become unpredictably volatile.

Could it be that perhaps the election results didn't go Zendejas' way?
   

IS THIS ANY WAY TO RUN A BROWNSVILLE METRO SYSTEM?

$
0
0
(Ed.'s Note: For years now, the Brownsville Urban System has been crowing up its winning of awards, grants, recognitions, etc. But throughout all those years, scenes like the one above sent to us by one of our (is it seven or eight?) readers show just how modern and efficient they are at moving our mobility-challenged residents around town. The picture above is near the intersection of Price and Old Port Isabel Road. The two ladies above are huddled waiting for the bus under overcast skies and holding a baby. We have posted photos of the unassembled bus shelters in the BUS barn. Most people don't know that BUS is managed by a non-city company and that its managers answer to the company, with a city rep on its staff. A company with a contract with the city will provide only the minimal service to keep its profit margin healthy. If the profit margin is not there, they're gone. Oversight of their operation is lax and is one of the many things on the plate of city manager Charlie Cabler, an urban planning-challenged ex-cop without a clue of what mass transit should be. Until something changes, get used to seeing the people getting this dismal level of service. 

THE U.S. MARINE CORPS: TWO DISTINCTLY DIFFERENT VIEWS

$
0
0
November 10, 2016

Each year on or around 10 November, Marines gather in groups large and small to celebrate our history, honor the memory of those who have gone before us, and rekindle the bond that unites all generations of Marines. This year, we mark the 241st anniversary of our Corps—241 years of uncommon valor, innovation, and combat excellence.

Marines, we are part of something bigger than any of us could imagine. Whether you fought in the battles of World War I, in the Pacific during World War II, in Korea or Vietnam, in Desert Shield or Desert Storm, or in the streets of Iraq and Afghanistan—or you are just starting out on your Marine Corps journey—we are all part of an elite family of warriors. For the rest of your life, the first term people use to describe you will be “Marine.”

When the Continental Congress stood up two battalions of Marines in 1775, a culture of discipline, vigilance, professionalism, and military excellence was born that has characterized our Corps for nearly two and a half centuries. As Marines, we have a profound respect for our traditions and heritage, and for taking care of each other. We know we’re strongest when we’re together as a team. Wherever you are celebrating our Corps’ birthday this year, look around at the Marines beside you and remember the bonds forged in training, in garrison, and in combat. Take this time to reconnect.

We are Marines for life. It’s our responsibility, our duty, to maintain and build upon the legacy of those who have gone before us. What we do today, guided by what we’ve learned from past generations, will determine the future of our Corps. So as we celebrate this 241st anniversary of our Corps, we also look ahead and prepare for our next success. Take pride in carrying our legacy forward.

Happy Birthday, Marines!

Semper Fidelis,



Robert B. Neller

General, U.S. Marine Corps

Commandant of the Marine Corps
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
MOST DECORATED MARINE (3 MEDALS OF HONOR) SPEAKS HIS MIND


"I spent 33 years and four months in active military service and during that period I spent most of my time as a high class muscle man for Big Business, for Wall Street and the bankers. In short, I was a racketeer, a gangster for capitalism.

I helped make Mexico and especially Tampico safe for American oil interests in 1914.

I helped make Haiti and Cuba a decent place for the National City Bank boys to collect revenues in.

I helped in the raping of half a dozen Central American republics for the benefit of Wall Street.

I helped purify Nicaragua for the International Banking House of Brown Brothers in 1902-1912.

I brought light to the Dominican Republic for the American sugar interests in 1916.

I helped make Honduras right for the American fruit companies in 1903.
In China in 1927 I helped see to it that Standard Oil went on its way unmolested.

Looking back on it, I might have given Al Capone a few hints. The best he could do was to operate his racket in three districts. I operated on three continents.”

– U.S.M.C. General Smedley D. Butler, War is a Racket: The Antiwar Classic by America's Most Decorated Soldier

(His first Medal of Honor was presented following action at Vera Cruz, Mexico, 21-22 April 1914, where he commanded the Marines who landed and occupied the city. Maj Butler "was eminent and conspicuous in command of his Battalion. He exhibited courage and skill in leading his men through the action of the 22nd and in the final occupation of the city."
The following year, he was awarded the second Medal of Honor for bravery and forceful leadership as Commanding Officer of detachments of Marines and seamen of the USS Connecticut in repulsing Caco resistance on Fort Riviere, Haiti, 17 November 1915.

During World War I, he commanded the 13th Regiment in France. For exceptionally meritorious service, he was awarded the Army Distinguished Service Medal, the Navy Distinguished Service Medal, and the French Order of the Black Star. When he returned to the United States in 1919, he became Commanding General of the Marine Barracks, Quantico, Virginia, and served in this capacity until January 1924, when he was granted leave of absence to accept the post of Director of Public Safety of the City of Philadelphia. In February 1926, he assumed command of the Marine Corps Base at San Diego, California. In March 1927, he returned to China for duty with the 3d Marine Brigade. From April to 31 October he again commanded the Marine Barracks at Quantico. On 1 October 1931, he was retired upon his own application after completion of 33 years' service in the Marine Corps.)

FUNERAL SERVICES FOR FAUSTINO "TINO" GARZA ANNOUNCED

$
0
0
 
(Ed.'s Note: We are saddened to hear of the passing of Faustino "Tino" Garza, a pharmacist and the husband of Texas Southmost College board chair Adela Garza.
Mr. Garza had suffered an illness for some time and his Creator decided to take him home for his eternal rest. He died Wednesday surrounded by family.

We extend our most sincere condolences to Adela and the Garza family. Mr. Garza was a U.S. veteran, a good husband, father and provider. He was a dedicated professional who excelled in his craft with sensitivity and concern for his patients.)

Services will be held tomorrow, Friday, Nov. 11, at Sunset Memorial Funeral Home,
657 Springmart Blvd., Brownsville.
Viewing is scheduled from 4-7 p.m.
Military honors will be held at 6:30 p.m.
A Rosary will be said at 7 p.m.
A Holy Mass will be held Saturday at 10 a.m. at St. Luke's Catholic Church, 2850 E Price Rd, Brownsville.
Viewing all 8009 articles
Browse latest View live


<script src="https://jsc.adskeeper.com/r/s/rssing.com.1596347.js" async> </script>