100% DONATION FOR VICTIMS IN PANHANDLE – AUCTIONING TWO ARABIAN ORYX BULLS!

100% Donation from this auction to victims of the panhandle fire!!! Arabian Oryx Bull! Auctions ends today at 1:00 p.m. Please reach out and help support the devastation left behind by the fire!

Godspeed, John Glenn…….

(CNN)John Glenn, the first American to orbit the Earth and a longtime US senator, died Thursday, according to the Ohio State University. He was 95.

It was announced Wednesday that Glenn had been hospitalized “more than a week ago,” according to Ohio State University spokesman Hank Wilson. He was at the James Cancer Hospital at the Ohio State University, but his illness was not disclosed.
Glenn had heart valve replacement surgery in 2014.
“With John’s passing, our nation has lost an icon and Michelle and I have lost a friend,” Obama said. “John spent his life breaking barriers, from defending our freedom as a decorated Marine Corps fighter pilot in World War II and Korea, to setting a transcontinental speed record, to becoming, at age 77, the oldest human to touch the stars. John always had the right stuff, inspiring generations of scientists, engineers and astronauts who will take us to Mars and beyond — not just to visit, but to stay. …
“The last of America’s first astronauts has left us, but propelled by their example we know that our future here on Earth compels us to keep reaching for the heavens.”
NASA Administrator Charles Bolden called Glenn a mentor, role model and dear friend.
“Glenn’s extraordinary courage, intellect, patriotism and humanity were the hallmarks of a life of greatness,” Bolden said. “His missions have helped make possible everything our space program has since achieved and the human missions to an asteroid and Mars that we are striving toward now.”
Former Apollo astronaut Buzz Aldrin said he was saddened by the loss of a “space pioneer and world icon.”
“I am very sorry that he has departed us with his wisdom. I join that crowd of people and the entire nation and the world in paying homage to his service,” said Aldrin from a hospital bed where he has been since he was evacuated recently from the South Pole.
Social media was flooded with remembrances and reactions immediately after news of Glenn’s death.

Janet Reno, First Woman to Be U.S. Attorney General, Dead at 78

Janet Reno, First Woman to Be U.S. Attorney General, Dead at 78

 

Janet Reno, First Woman to Serve as US Attorney General, Dies 2:19

Janet Reno, the first woman to serve as U.S. attorney general and the epicenter of several political storms during the Clinton administration, has died. She was 78.

Reno died early Monday from complications of Parkinson’s disease, her goddaughter Gabrielle D’Alemberte told The Associated Press. A niece of Reno’s, Daphne Webb, later confirmed her death to NBC News. Webb said Reno spent her final days at home in Miami surrounded by family and friends.

Image: Janet Reno
Janet Reno raises her arm to take an oath during congressional hearings for her nomination as U.S. attorney general on March 9, 1993. Wally McNamee / Corbis via Getty Images

Reno, a former Miami prosecutor who famously told reporters “I don’t do spin,” served nearly eight years as attorney general under President Bill Clinton, the longest stint in a century.

One of the administration’s most recognizable and polarizing figures, Reno faced criticism early in her tenure for the deadly raid on the Branch Davidian compound at Waco, Texas, where sect leader David Koresh and some 80 followers perished.

She was known for deliberating slowly, publicly and in a typically blunt manner. Reno frequently told the public “the buck stops with me,” borrowing the mantra from President Harry S. Truman.

Image: Elian Gonzalez
Elian Gonzalez in 2000. Alan Diaz / AP

After Waco, Reno figured into some of the controversies and scandals that marked the Clinton administration, including Whitewater, Filegate, bungling at the FBI laboratory, Monica Lewinsky, alleged Chinese nuclear spying and questionable campaign financing in the 1996 Clinton-Gore re-election.

In the spring of 2000, Reno enraged her hometown’s Cuban-American community when she authorized the armed seizure of 5-year-old Elian. The boy was taken from the Little Havana home of his Miami relatives so he could be returned to his father in Cuba.

After leaving Washington, Reno returned to Florida and made an unsuccessful run for Florida governor in 2002 but lost in a Democratic primary marred by voting problems.

The campaign ended a public career that started amid humble beginnings. Born July 21, 1938, Janet Wood Reno was the daughter of two newspaper reporters and the eldest of four siblings. She grew up on the edge of the Everglades in a cypress and brick homestead built by her mother and returned there after leaving Washington.

Image: U.S. President Bill Clinton and Janet Reno
Janet Reno and Bill Clinton in the White House in 1993. Consolidated News Pictures / Getty Images

After graduating from Cornell University with a degree in chemistry, Reno became one of 16 women in Harvard Law School’s Class of 1963. Reno, who stood over 6 feet tall, later said she wanted to become a lawyer “because I didn’t want people to tell me what to do.”

As prosecutor, Reno built programs to help reform drug dealers and combat domestic violence. Another program strong-armed deadbeat dads into paying child support, inspiring a rap song named after her.

It included the line: “All the money you get, all the checks you make; Janet Reno will make sure and take.”

In 1995, Reno was diagnosed with Parkinson’s after noticing a trembling in her left hand. She said from the beginning that the diagnosis, which she announced during a weekly news conference, would not impair her job performance. And critics — both Republicans and Democrats — did not give her a pass because of it.

Her last foray into politics was the race for Florida governor. Known for being down-to-earth — her home number was listed in a city directory both before and after Washington — and even folksy, she crisscrossed the state to campaign in a red Ford Ranger pickup truck.

But Reno lost the primary to Tampa lawyer Bill McBride despite her name recognition. Republican Gov. Jeb Bush defeated McBride to win a second term.

Image: U.S. President Bill Clinton and Janet Reno
President Bill Clinton names Janet Reno as attorney general during a Rose Garden ceremony on Feb. 11, 1993. ROBERT GIROUX / AFP/Getty Images

Bowhunter Facing Charges After Fatally Shooting His Hunting Partner by “Accident”

HUNTING NEWS

Bowhunter Facing Charges After Fatally Shooting His Hunting Partner by “Accident”

BowHunter

A man in Oregon is facing criminal charges for negligent homicide after police said he shot and killed his hunting partner with his bow.

According to KPTV, Michael Shawn Pekarek, called 911 reporting that he had shot Jeffrey Cummings with an arrow while the two were supposedly bow hunting together. Investigators said the two men spotted mule deer from their vehicle when Pekarek got out to attempt a shot on the animal.

Pekarek’s plea is that he turned towards Cummings – with his arrow ready to fire – to let him know the deer was moving, and shot Cummings in the abdomen. Michael Pekarek was later arrested and lodged at the Deschutes County Adult Jail on one count of Criminally Negligent Homicide, with a bail of $50,000.00. Cummings’ next of kin has been notified.

Something certainly smells fishy about his story. Either this was an unimaginably negligent action, or something more malicious.

There are a ton of red flags being raised here, because it basically goes against everything you ever learn about hunting safety. The rules I was brought up on were:

  1. Treat every gun as if it were loaded.
  2. Never point your weapon at something you don’t want to kill.
  3. Keep your finger off the trigger until you’re ready to shoot.
  4. Always be sure of your target before you shoot.

We’re all gearing up for hunting season, so take the time to reiterate the importance of each of these four rules before heading out afield.

1.0 Nyala 30″+ GENETICS!!! THESE DONT COME AROUND VERY OFTEN!!!

Listing Image

1.0 Nyala 30″+ GENETICS!!! THESE DONT COME AROUND VERY OFTEN!!!

STOCK YOUR RANCH WITH THIS SUPER EXOTIC!

WAITER RECEIVES $500 TIP AFTER SHOWING KINDNESS TOWARD GRIEVING WIDOW

WAITER RECEIVES $500 TIP AFTER SHOWING KINDNESS TOWARD GRIEVING WIDOW

A receipt shows a $500 tip given to Texas Applebees waiter, Kasey Simmons.

A receipt shows a $500 tip given to Texas Applebee’s waiter, Kasey Simmons. (Kasey Simmons)

A Texas waiter got the shock of his career after he received a whopping $500 tip on a bill totaling less than a dollar.

“I thought, ‘This has got to be a joke. There’s no way,'” Kasey Simmons of Little Elm told ABC News on Tuesday. “Then, I read that letter and I’m thinking, ‘This $500 tip is for real, dude!'”

Simmons, 32, was working the dinner shift at an Applebee’s restaurant in his hometown last Tuesday when a patron left the 135,000-percent tip on his table.

Earlier that day, Simmons had paid for a stranger’s grocery bill at a Kroger supermarket nearby.

“I noticed there was a lady standing in front of me,” he said. “It looked like she had been crying, because once in a while she’d glance over to me. I go up to her and say, ‘It’s not raining inside. There’s no reason to look so down. I’m sure you have a beautiful smile because you are a beautiful lady.'”

“It looked like she had a bad day. She kind of shut me down a little bit. I wanted to make her at least grin a little bit, and it wasn’t happening.”

Simmons offered to pay for the woman’s $17 grocery bill. After some coaxing, the stranger agreed, and Simmons succeeded in making her smile. He handed her his Applebee’s business card before bidding her farewell and heading to work, he said.

Waiter Kasey Simmons is seen in an undated photo. (Kasey Simmons)

“Every time I get to work, I say, ‘It’s a great day. I’m going to make some friends and make some money,'” Simmons said. “This day happened to be the worst day of my Applebee’s career. I was having such a bad night that I was about to walk out of [that] place, and this lady comes in and I said, ‘Hey, my name’s Kasey. I’m just letting you know that I am so far behind and I’m in the weeds right now.'”

Simmons told the customer that it would be about 45 minutes before he could wait on her and her family. He offered to buy the drinks, which was all they ordered.

Simmons later returned with a 65-cent check for a flavored water, the cheapest item on the menu, a request from the diner so she could leave a tip, Simmons said.

“By this point I said, ‘This lady’s crazy,'” Simmons joked. “I brought her the check, and she asked me to split the 65 cents between two credit cards and I said, ‘Are you serious?’ I think she wanted to see if I was a real nice guy or a fake nice guy. The real nice guy splits it, and brings the lady her check.”

Simmons divided the check, placing 37 cents on one receipt. The woman left Simmons $500 on that one, making a grand total of $500.37.

Waiter Kasey Simmons received a $500 tip along with this note while working at an Applebee’s in Little Elm, Texas. (Kasey Simmons)

Sitting on the table was also a note that read, in part:

“On behalf of the Sullivan family, I want to thank you for being the person you are. On one of the most depressing days of the year, (the death of my father’s 3 year anniversary) you made my mother’s day wonderful. She has been smiling since you did what you did.”

Simmons was shocked by the huge tip.

“Even with what I did at the grocery store, I would want someone to do for my daughter, mom or grandmother,” he said. “If they looked the way that woman did at Kroger, I would pray you would do the same.”

Simmons said he hopes to meet the family face-to-face to express his gratitude.

Related Topics:

BREAKING NEWS: OBAMA ATF ANNOUNCES BACKDOOR AMMO BAN!

BREAKING NEWS: OBAMA ATF ANNOUNCES BACKDOOR AMMO BAN!

Fellow Conservative,

This is not a drill. The Obama administration just implemented a new regulatory change that has sent the entire firearms industry into a tailspin overnight.

A key ingredient necessary for making gunpowder has been re-classified as a high explosive, making it illegal for any company within the industry to transport or store it as they have for decades.

It all stems from how the ATF regulates a chemical compound known as nitrocellulose. For decades, the firearm industry has been allowed to store and transport wetted nitrocellulose without having to treat it as a high explosive. Manufacturers deliberately mix the chemical compound with water to make it less volatile.

Overnight, the ATF just completely changed its regulations, turning everyone in the ammunition industry into felons if they do business the way they have for decades.

The entire industry is now at a standstill. Without nitrocellulose, you can’t make smokeless gunpowder. Without smokeless powder, there’s no ammunition.

This is the real deal. If this regulation stays in place, it will take months for the industry to recover and send ammunition prices through the roof!

Don’t let Obama’s ammunition ban go through. Stand and fight! Click to force Congress to STOP Obama’s ATF from implementing this new crippling regulation!

There’s nothing “sexy” about ATF regulations pertaining to wetted nitrocellulose. This isn’t going to get any coverage in the media. Start talking to the average American about nitrocellulose and other chemical compounds and their eyes will start to glaze over.

The chemistry isn’t really all that important. This new regulation has ground the entire domestic ammunition manufacturing industry to a halt.

The ATF gave the industry no notice. No grace period. This came down overnight. The entire supply chain for this crucial gunpowder component is now non-compliant.

This isn’t the first time that Obama has gone after ammunition components. Two years ago, the administration shut down the last remaining lead smelter in the United States.

Just a few weeks ago, the administration redefined the term “firearm manufacturer” to include gunsmiths, forcing thousands of small businesses to pay thousands of dollars a year in new fees to the State Department just to be allowed to stay in business.

Obama knows that any grandiose attempt at disarmament will fail. They tried to push gun control through Congress in 2013 and failed miserably. So, they are doing everything they can behind the scenes to attack the firearms industry and gun owners alike.

They just made it impossible to commercially produce gunpowder in the United States. Left unchecked, this regulation will leave gun shop shelves bare. If the industry is able to recover and become compliant, say goodbye to affordable ammunition.

You are receiving this email because you have stood with us against the anti-gun Obama administration in the past.

I am calling on your support one more time. Rise up and STOP this backdoor ammunition ban before it cripples the entire gun industry!

Obama just launched a backdoor ban on ammunition. Don’t let him get away with this! Stand and DEMAND that Congress put a stop to this lawlessness!

This is the real deal. If Obama isn’t stopped, it’s game over.

Your brother in arms,

Joe Otto
Conservative Daily

Survival DIY: 7 Steps to Building an Aluminum Lamp

W TO

Survival DIY: 7 Steps to Building an Aluminum Lamp

Step 7 B Survival Lamp 7-29-16

21
Shares

A DIY survival lamp can come in handy for many situations. Not only can it provide a needed light source during a power outage, but you could cook food over it in a pinch, or use it to take the chill out of the air during a cold evening.

This lamp burns on petroleum jelly, or what most people know by the brand Vaseline. The wick of this lamp is a cotton ball, and the lamp’s base and structure is made from aluminum foil.

It’s easy to construct and can burn anywhere from 15 minutes to an hour; the duration varies on how much Vaseline is in the lamp. Let’s get started.

You’ll need:

  • Knife
  • Two large sheets of aluminum foil
  • Vaseline
  • Cotton ball
  • Match, lighter, or flint and steel

Steps:

  1. Fold up one sheet of foil as shown in the picture below.

Lamp Step 1 7-29-16

  1. In the middle of the foil, cut in a circle with your knife, but cut only halfway through the foil. Vaseline will be placed in that hole.

Lamp Step 2 7-29-16

  1. Fold up the extra length of the foil as shown below.

Lamp Step 3 7-29-16

  1. Place a large amount of Vaseline in that circular hole. The more you use, the longer the lamp will burn.

Lamp Step 4 7-29-16

  1. Dip a cotton ball in Vaseline and then spread it all over the ball. Place the cotton ball into the Vaseline-filled hole in the foil.

Lamp Step 5 7-29-16

  1. Fold the second sheet of foil in the same manner as the first piece. Place the second sheet of foil under the first as shown below.

Lamp Step 6 B 7-29-16

  1. Light the cotton ball with the fire igniter of your choice. After a few seconds, the lamp should burn intensely.

Lamp Step 7 A 7-29-16

Lamp Step 7 Final 7-29-16

Warning: Keep this aluminum lamp away from any flammable objects. I recommend placing it on a rock when used outdoors while camping, or a cookie sheet or other metal object when used indoors. I suggest making an aluminum survival lamp for each room in your home so you’re prepared for a power outage.

Images by Blake Alma

Congratulations to the following users on WildlifeBuyer.com!

Congratulations to all the winners of the August Drawings!
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Congratulations to the following users on WildlifeBuyer.com!

**Drawing for the 5% commission fee for sellers next sell on WLB is….Jc3x

**Drawing for $100.00 credit towards buyers next purchase is…BigIron

**Drawing for FREE MONTHS SUBSCRIPTION TOEXOTICPRICES.COM … These 5 WLB users either bid on auctions, bought auctions or sold auctions ….

bubsflo
H2TX
ROLANDO
Kjoutdoors
Bobbypyle

****Call the office by Friday August 19th to claim your prizes.*****

210-807-4247

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GARNER STATE PARK

Generations of Texans have spent summer days floating in the clear, cool waters of the Frio River.

On the Cool, Clear Frio River:

Families enjoy swimming, dancing and hiking

Fun traditions and beautiful scenery bring people back to Garner State Park time after time. Besides easy access to the Frio, the park offers many miles of hiking trails and camping options.

Things to Do

Garner State Park is a great place to visit for a swim or hike, or to enjoy a relaxing weekend. With 2.9 miles of Frio River winding through 1,774 acres of scenic Hill Country terrain, the park offers lots to see and do!

Swim in the Frio River or float its waters on an inner tube, operate a paddle boat, and hike 11 miles of scenic trails. You can also camp, study nature, picnic, canoe, fish, play miniature golf, geocache and ride bikes. And, of course, you can dance. Take a virtual tour with our Interactive Trails Map. If you plan to swim or float at the park, read through our swimming safety tipsbefore you come.

Overnight visitors can stay in screened shelters, cabins or campsites. Large groups can rent the screened shelter or group campsite. The park’s concessionaire sells meals and snacks during the busy season, and rents the pavilion in the off season.

Learn more about the park’s features at the visitor center. You can also shop for souvenirs.

Summer Dance:  Since the 1940s, young folks (and the young at heart) have been gathering at the park’s concession building on summer evenings for a jukebox dance. They still do so today. Arrive early, as parking lots get full and gates can close as early as 8:30 p.m.

The concession building and dance pavilion, as well as other park facilities, were built by the Civilian Conservation Corps. To learn more about the CCC, visit our History page.

Equipment Rentals

Visitors can rent paddle boats, kayaks and inner tubes, as well as tables, barbecue pits, heaters and fans. The park’s concessionaire operates a tube shuttle and putt-putt golf course during busy seasons. Rent a small locker near the boathouse for stashing your valuables. For more information, visit Garner State Park Concessions.

Volunteer Opportunities

Volunteers play a vital role at Garner State Park. You can serve as a park host, maintain trails, help restore habitat, lead educational programs, or tackle other park tasks. We need your help! To get involved:

Ranger Programs

Learn about the park’s CCC history, traditions and nature from a ranger. Rangers lead nature hikes. They offer programs on geocaching and geology, as well as programs for kids. Check the Events page for upcoming events, or contact the park to arrange special programs for your group.

Area Attractions

Visit the Briscoe-Garner Museum to learn about two famous Texas politicians. Fort Inge, once a frontier fort and Texas Ranger camp, now hosts occasional star parties. In summer, join a Frio Bat Flight tour to see the nightly exodus of one of the largest Mexican free-tailed bat colonies in the world. Visit the Uvalde Visitors Center and the Frio Canyon Chamber of Commerce for more information.

Other TPWD parks nearby include Hill Country, Lost Maples and Devil’s Sinkhole state natural areas, and Kickapoo Cavern State Park.

234 RR 1050
Concan, TX 78838

Latitude: 29.598887

Longitude: -99.743981

(830) 232-6132

Make reservations online

Reserve by phone: (512) 389-8900

Entrance Fees
  • 13 years and older: $7 Daily
  • Child 12 Years and Under: Free

Hours

8 a.m. to 10 p.m.

Office Hours

Peak Season (Memorial Day – Mid-August):
8 a.m. to 11 p.m., daily.
Entrance gate locked at 11:30 p.m. nightly.

 

Non-peak Season (Mid-August – Memorial Day):
Sunday – Thursday:  8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.
Friday – Saturday:  Hours vary due to visitation; call office for current hours.
Entrance gate locked at 10 p.m. nightly.

Closures due to maximum capacity

When the park reaches maximum capacity, it will close to day visitors (as early as 10 a.m. on Saturdays and Holidays)  and will reopen by 6 p.m. If you are planning to visit for the day, please arrive early and have a back-up plan in case of a closure. Customers with camping reservations will be able to enter during these closures.

Busy Season

Memorial Day weekend through Labor Day weekend and other holidays

Climate

January average low is 37 degrees. July average high is 97 degrees. Wettest months are May and October.

National Weather Service forecast for this area

Elevation

Hilltops average approx. 1,800 feet

Drawn Hunt Application Deadlines Approaching

unting

Drawn Hunt Application Deadlines Approaching

Hunting

Drawn Hunts are your chance at affordable hunting throughout the state. And this year there are more opportunities than ever before – new exclusive Private Lands Dove Hunts, hunts on U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service National Wildlife Refuges, and many more E-Postcard Hunt categories. 12 hunt categories have application deadlines in August, so apply today!

CHECK OUT THESE DEALS!

August Specials! Calling all Buyers and Sellers~~~
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Check out the deals we have for you this week!
Tuesday August 9th through Friday August 12th!
We will have several drawings for some awesome prizes!

Sellers sell your animals this week and have your name entered into a drawing for 5% commission. There will be 1 Winner! *****For every animal you sell your name will be entered into the drawing****** (Example: Sell 10 animals….Your name will be entered 10 times into the drawing)

All Buyers will be entered into a drawing for a $100 credit towards their next purchase. (1 Winner!)

*******ALL BUYERS AND SELLERS WILL BE ENTERED INTO A DRAWING. 5 LUCKY WINNERS WILL BE DRAWN FOR A FREE MONTHS SUBSCRIPTION TO EXOTICPRICES.COM*******

Don’t miss out on these awesome prizes! Sellers get your animals on Wildlife buyer.com and Buyers start your bidding!!!

TUESDAY AUGUST 9th-FRIDAY AUGUST 12th!!!

Copyright © 2016 Wildlife Buyer, LLC, All rights reserved.
Wildlife Buyer!

Our mailing address is:

Wildlife Buyer, LLC

2658 Walter White Rd

Leakey, Tx 78873

Texas infant’s death linked to Zika

Texas infant’s death linked to Zika

From the Texas Department of State Health Services

AUSTIN, TX – Texas has confirmed that an infant who recently died in Harris County had microcephaly linked to the Zika virus. The baby passed away shortly after birth and is the first Zika-related death reported in Texas.

During her pregnancy, the mother was in Latin America, where she was infected, and the baby acquired the infection in the womb. Recent test results confirmed the baby’s condition and link to Zika. The mother and baby are classified as travel-related cases, and there is no additional associated risk in Texas.

Last month Texas reported the state’s first case of microcephaly linked to Zika, also a Harris County infant.

“Zika’s impact on unborn babies can be tragic, and our hearts are with this family,” said Dr. John Hellerstedt, Texas Department of State Health Services commissioner. “Our central mission from the beginning has been to do everything we can to protect unborn babies from the devastating effects of Zika.”

DSHS is coordinating with Harris County Public Health and the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to follow the cases.

Texas has reported 99 cases of Zika virus disease, including the two infants with microcephaly from Harris County. All Texas cases are related to travel abroad to areas with active Zika transmission. There have been no reported cases of Zika virus disease transmitted by mosquitoes in Texas, but Texas is on alert for the possibility local transmission.

With its link to microcephaly, Zika poses a serious threat to unborn children. DSHS is tracking the number of pregnant women with Zika in the state, working with providers and reporting weekly data to the national Zika pregnancy registry. DSHS is studying past microcephaly data to understand the prevalence and patterns of this condition in Texas. 

DSHS has been emphasizing precautions, specifically for travelers and pregnant women, through an ongoing public education campaign and via www.TexasZika.org.

RECOMMENDED STORIES

Judge Halts Child Care License for Dilley Detention Center

Judge Halts Child Care License for Dilley Detention Center

Citing the potential for abuse at the center, a Travis County judge prevented Texas’ child welfare agency from licensing the facility for child care.

The entrance to the 500-bed Karnes County Residential Center for detained immigrant moms and kids.

Alexa Garcia-Ditta
The entrance to the 500-bed Karnes County Residential Center for detained immigrant moms and kids.

A state district judge has temporarily halted Texas’ efforts to license the second of two immigrant family detention centers in the state as a child care facility.

On Wednesday, Travis County Judge Karin Crump ruled that Texas’ emergency child care license rules — devised specifically for the detention centers — could put children detained in the South Texas Family Residential Center in Dilley at risk of abuse.

In her order, Crump took issue with a new Texas Department of Family and Protective Services (DFPS) rule that allows children to stay in rooms with unrelated adults.

The new rules “allow, and have allowed, for situations with children that are dangerous and this temporary injunction addresses those concerns,” Crump said, reading from her order in court. As evidence, Crump pointed to sexual abuse allegations made by a plaintiff. The woman alleged in court documents that her daughter had been spoken to and touched inappropriately by another woman sharing their room at the Karnes County Residential Center in South Texas.

Crump issued the Dilley injunction after a seven-hour hearing Wednesday. The order leaves in place a child care license issued in April to the Karnes County facility.

In May, mothers detained with their children at Dilley and Karnes City filed suit against DFPS, arguing that the agency has no authority to issue child care licenses. The Austin nonprofit Grassroots Leadership is also a plaintiff in the suit. The Dilley and Karnes facilities currently hold about 1,800 women and children, many of whom are asylum-seekers and refugees from Mexico and Central America.

Bob Libal, executive director of Grassroots Leadership, praised Crump’s decision in comments to reporters after the hearing.

“What we heard over the last few weeks, and I think what we’ve known, is that the reason for the licenses was not about the protection of children,” he said.

At issue in Wednesday’s hearing — a continuation of a May 13 hearing in the case — was whether the child care licenses would cause “irreparable harm” to detained families during the lead up to a full trial, scheduled for September. Then, Crump is set to take up the plaintiffs’ broader claims concerning DFPS’ authority to license the facilities.

Robert Doggett, an attorney with Texas RioGrande Legal Aid and counsel for the plaintiffs, told the court Wednesday that the licensure is a “significant departure” from DFPS’ mission of protecting children.

In late April, DFPS approved a license for Karnes, despite allegations of child sexual abuse at the facility and state inspections that turned up safety deficiencies.

Texas’ attempt to grant residential child care licenses to detention centers beganquietly last fall, after DFPS tried to create a new child care licensing category without seeking public input. Grassroots Leadership went to court and won a temporary injunction against the state’s backdoor efforts in November, and officials subsequently called a series of public hearings about the licensures.

Attorneys for the plaintiffs argued in court on Wednesday that the state’s main motivation is to keep family detention centers in compliance with the 1997 Flores v. Meese agreement, which prohibits detention of children in unlicensed facilities. If the Texas detention centers can’t get licensed by the state, they may run afoul of the agreement.

That puts the future of the Dilley detention center in question. For now, both Karnes and Dilley will remain open and litigation is almost certain to continue.

Expert witnesses for the plaintiffs testified Wednesday that detention puts “trauma piled upon trauma” on immigrant children, causing long-term physiological and emotional damage.

“These children have had their own traumatic histories,” said Dr. Luis Zayas, dean of the University of Texas at Austin’s School of Social Work, “and then we place them in detention where they are under considerable fear, threat and deprivation of what most normal kids in the community or in a therapeutic facility would experience.”

Both DFPS officials and representatives for the for-profit companies that run the detention centers said in court that the licenses enhance safety by giving the state some oversight over federal facilities.

Without a license, “these facilities will remain self-regulated, unaccountable to the state and without the same public reporting requirements,” said Todd Disher, attorney with the Texas Attorney General’s office.

Crump wrote in her order that because immigrant detention centers are already required to comply with state standards requiring employee background checks and investigations into complaints, her decision does “not diminish DFPS’ capacity to protect the children in any significant way.” She granted DFPS the authority to take “the same protective actions” at the unlicensed Dilley facility as it might at the licensed Karnes facility.

PLEASE HELP FUND THE WYLDEN HUBBARD ACCOUNT……

Need Blackbuck or Axis to stock your ranch?  Looking for Welding Service. Wildlife Buyer has several auctions for to help donate Wylden Hubbards fund today. Login and Bid.

Good Morning WLB Friends!

We hope you had a great weekend. We have several auctions ending today to  help fund the Wylden Hubbard account. We will be taking donations for the Hubbard’s fund through this week. If you would like to donate anything to help raise money for the The Hubbard’s please contact the office. You can email pictures of your items to auction@wildlifebuyer.com or you can text the pictures to Nina at 210-827-8074.  Please forward a description of the item and include where the pick up is and if you offer delivery.

Our prayers are with the Hubbard family.

Click the link below to take you to the auction site to bid on the auctions.
http://wildlifebuyer.com/Browse/C160535/Exotics_Deer

Memorial for ‘American Sniper’ Chris Kyle unveiled in Texas

Memorial for ‘American Sniper’ Chris Kyle unveiled in Texas

Supporters and spectators take photos of the Chris Kyle statue after the unveiling Thursday, July 28, 2016 at the Chris Kyle Memorial Plaza in Odessa, Texas.

Supporters and spectators take photos of the Chris Kyle statue after the unveiling Thursday, July 28, 2016 at the Chris Kyle Memorial Plaza in Odessa, Texas. (Jacob Ford/Odessa American via AP)

A memorial for slain Navy Seal and “American Sniper” author Chris Kyle has been unveiled in the West Texas city where he was born in 1974.

Ceremonies were held Thursday in Odessa to unveil the granite-and-limestone Chris Kyle Memorial Plaza, which also includes a bronze statue of Kyle. It is a privately funded memorial.

Several trees from ex-President George W. Bush’s ranch near Crawford were purchased by memorial organizers and moved to the site earlier this year.

Kyle and friend Chad Littlefield were killed in 2013 at a Texas shooting range. A former Marine was convicted in their deaths and sentenced to life in prison.

Kyle’s autobiography was the basis for the 2014 film “American Sniper,” starring Bradley Cooper.

Texas voter ID law violates Voting Rights Act

Appeals court: Texas voter ID law violates Voting Rights Act

By Ariane de Vogue, CNN Supreme Court Reporter
Updated 6:10 PM ET, Wed July 20, 2016

Story highlights
The ruling is a victory for voting rights advocates
Texas passed the voter ID law in 2011 but it did not go into effect until 2013

(CNN)A federal appeals court said Wednesday that Texas’ voter ID law, which critics consider to be one of the strictest in the nation, violates the Voting Rights Act.

The 5th Circuit Court of Appeals, based in New Orleans, sent the case back down to the lower court for consideration of the appropriate remedy consistent with the opinion. The majority said that the lower court had not “erred” when it found the law has a “discriminatory effect on minorities’ voting rights.”
“In light of the impending election, we order the district court to file its order regarding the proper discriminatory effect remedy as soon as possible. The parties have expressed a willingness to work cooperatively with the district court to provide a prompt resolution of this matter, and we urge them to do so to avoid election eve uncertainties and emergencies,” the court said.

Attorney General Loretta Lynch praised the ruling.
“I am pleased with today’s decision by the full U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit holding that Texas’s 2011 photographic voter identification law violates Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act,” Lynch said in a statement. “This decision affirms our position that Texas’s highly restrictive voter ID law abridges the right to vote on account of race or color and orders appropriate relief before yet another election passes.”
But Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton said it was “unfortunate” that the court had not upheld the law in its entirety.
“Preventing voter fraud is essential to accurately reflecting the will of Texas voters during elections, and it is unfortunate that this common-sense law, providing protections against fraud, was not upheld in its entirety,” he said in a statement.
The ruling is a victory for voting rights advocates.
“No American should ever lose their right to vote just because they don’t have a photo ID. This is an enormous victory for voters in Texas,” said Myrna Perez, deputy director of the Brennan Center’s Democracy Program.
Election law expert Rick Hasen noted in a blog post that the remedy is “NOT going to be to strike the Texas Voter ID law as a whole, but instead fashion some kind of relief that gives people who have a reasonable impediment to getting an ID the chance to get one.”
He said one possibility could be to allow those who are unable to obtain an ID to sign an affidavit as to their identification.
The challenge marks one of several voting rights cases that are percolating through the courts in the final months of the election. On Tuesday, a federal judge softened a Wisconsin voter ID law, allowing those who had difficulty obtaining the proper identification the option of signing an affidavit as to their identity.
At the heart of many of the challenges — which include issues such as voter ID, early vote cutbacks and same-day registration — is a raging battle between Republicans who say they hope to fight voter fraud and improve public confidence in the election process and Democrats who say the true aim of several of the laws and procedures is to create a substantial burden on the right to vote, particularly for minority voters.
Texas passed the voter ID law in 2011 but it did not go into effect until 2013 after the Supreme Court invalidated a key section of the Voting Rights Act. Challengers said it was one of the strictest nationwide because it allows only a limited set of eligible IDs.
Although lower courts ruled against the law, the Supreme Court allowed it to remain in effect for the 2014 election over the strong objection of Justices Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Elena Kagan and Sonia Sotomayor.
The law requires voters to present certain government-issued photo IDs when voting in person which includes a Texas driver’s license, a Texas election identification certificate, a US Passport and a military identification card. Critics point out that while the state accepts a license to carry a handgun as a permissible form of ID, it does not permit federal or state government IDs nor a student ID.
Critics said the limited number of qualified photo identifications created a substantial burden on the right to vote for those unable to obtain the proper identification.
“No one doubts our unwavering duty to enforce antidiscrimination law,” wrote Judge Edith H. Jones, in a stinging dissent on behalf of herself and four colleagues. The fractured opinion was 9-6 on the discriminatory intent finding. “But in this media-driven and hyperbolic era, the discharge of that duty requires the courage to distinguish between invidious motivation and shadows. The ill-conceived, misguided and unsupported majority opinion shuns discernment,” she wrote.

A legendary figure of the King Ranch and ranching community has passed away.

Alberto
A legendary figure of the King Ranch and ranching community has passed away, officials announced this week.
Alberto “Lolo” Treviño, a long-time cowboy – or more accurately, a kineño – of the King Ranch, died on Sunday, July 10 in Corpus Christi.
Treviño was born on March 5, 1930 in Corpus Christi, and spent his life not with his feet in the sand on the beach, but trekking through the South Texas brush on a horse and saddle. Those who worked with Treviño on the King Ranch described him as a humble and sweet man, with amazing storytelling skills.
“Lolo always had stories to tell, and they were almost like parables,” Toni Nagel Mason, director of visitor program services for the King Ranch, said on Tuesday. “He had so many stories of growing up on the ranch and working as a cowboy, whether they were humorous or things that he learned.”
Mason said Treviño played an integral part in the ranching company – from a young age, he lived the old fashioned life of a cowboy. Treviño grew up in the Laureles division of the King Ranch, Mason said, and showed exceptional skills even at a young age. He was only in his teens when he broke in the thoroughbred racehorse Assault, who went on to become the 1946 Triple Crown winner.
“What he shared with the world was such a treasure – his experience and insight were invaluable,” Mason said.
After Treviño retired as a cowboy in the late 1980s, he became a part-time tour guide for the King Ranch, serving as a real-life historical link to the past.
“Lolo would serve visitors camp coffee and pan de campo and tell stories, which everyone just loved,” Mason said. “He’d tell visitors about life on the ranch and what it’s like to work as a cowboy, and answer questions. He would always end by playing the harmonica and singing ‘You are my sunshine.’ That was his favorite.”
“When Lolo and his brother Gilbert, sang together, it would make the hair stand on your arms. It was wonderful,” she added.
Treviño would also showcase his leather craft-making skills, which included everything a cowboy needs – horse harnesses, lariat ropes, bull whips and quirts, which are used to guide horses.
“He was a master craftsman of a variety of leather items. All these items are now made with machines, but he crafted the items beautifully by hand,” Mason said.
With his knowledge and skills, Treviño was featured numerous times in various articles, magazines, history events and museums, such as the Institute of Texan Cultures in San Antonio, the Texas Historical Commission, and the Smithsonian Museum in Washington, D.C.
Locally, Treviño was a staple at the Ranch Hand Breakfast, dressed in full cowboy gear and sharing his many stories with visitors from around the world.
Treviño worked on the King Ranch for more than 70 years, Mason said, before his “last ride” this weekend. He was 86 years old, she said, and was still working as a tour guide as recently as two months ago.
“He was almost like an ambassador of Texas, which would be the best way to describe him and what he did after his retirement, sharing his knowledge,” Mason said. “Even after he retired, he kept going. The cowboy life was what he knew and loved. He will be greatly missed by staff, visitors, and everyone who held him dear in the community.”
Visitation will take place after 4 p.m. on Wednesday, July 13 at the Turcotte-Piper Mortuary Chapel. A rosary will be recited at 7 p.m. Wednesday at the chapel. A funeral Mass will be celebrated at 10 a.m. Thursday at St. Martin’s Catholic Church in Kingsville.

Texas Inmates Break Out of Cell to Save Guard Who Stopped Breathing and Collapsed

Texas Inmates Break Out of Cell to Save Guard Who Stopped Breathing and Collapsed

Watch: Inmates escape to help jail guard who collapsed 0:28

A Texas jailer who suddenly stopped breathing is now alive and well — thanks to a group of inmates who busted out of a holding cell to save him.

The inmates were in the basement of the Weatherford District Courts Building on June 23 awaiting court appearances when the guard sitting outside their pen slumped onto the floor, Capt. Mark Arnett with the Parker County Sheriff’s Office told NBC News.

“He was just talking to them, and he just kind of collapsed,” Arnett said Saturday. “As soon as the jailer went down, they started to yell.”

Inmates Break Out of Holding Cell to Help Jailer 1:11

When that didn’t attract the attention of anyone upstairs, the group of eight or so inmates, all of whom were shackled, broke out of their holding cell.

“They grabbed his radio and tried to radio for help,” Arnett said.

Deputies upstairs heard the commotion. They came down and called for emergency personnel, who performed CPR on the jailer and used a defibrillator to shock his heart.

“He stopped breathing. They couldn’t find a pulse on him,” Arnett said.

The entire incident was captured on surveillance video.

Inmates in Texas broke out of a holding cell to save a deputy who stopped breathing on June 23. Parker County Sheriff’s OFfice

The jailer, who doesn’t want to be identified, is healthy now and is returning to work on Monday, Arnett said. The precise medical condition he suffered hasn’t been disclosed.

One of the inmates, Nick Kelton, said he feared he would get in trouble for breaking out.

“We were worried they’re going to come with guns drawn on us,” Kelton, who referred to himself as a meth addict often landing in jail, told ABC affiliate WFAA, which first reported the story.

The holding cell only has a “pretty flimsy lock gate” on it, unlike the reinforced doors of jail cells, Arnett said.

“All the inmates, they’re in handcuffs,” he said. “We just stick them in there so they’re not wandering around and so they don’t grab somebody’s gun.”

Arnett, however, praised the altruistic inmates for their quick action.

“They definitely saved his life. There’s no doubt about that,” he said.

Dallas sniper attack: 5 officers killed during protests against police.

Dallas sniper attack: 5 officers killed during protests against police.

By Faith Karimi and Ralph Ellis, CNN
Updated 8:59 AM ET, Fri July 8, 2016

Now Playing Police: Suspect said he…
dallas police officers shot gunshots heard sot ctn_00000022.jpg
Gunshots ring out in Dallas, officers killed

Video from balcony shows Dallas shooting
People rally in Dallas, Texas, on Thursday, July 7, 2016 to protest the deaths of Alton Sterling and Philando Castile.
Black motorist Philando Castile, 32, a school cafeteria worker, was shot at close range by a Minnesota cop and seen bleeding to death in a graphic video shot by his girlfriend that went viral Thursday, the second fatal police shooting to rock America in as many days. / AFP / Laura Buckman (Photo credit should read LAURA BUCKMAN/AFP/Getty Images)
Dallas shooting witness: People were trampled

Witness describes Dallas police officer getting shot
police officers shot dallas texas witness sot ctn_00010002.jpg
Dallas shooting witness: I heard about 20 gunshots
tx shooter witness_00000000.jpg
Dallas Witness: ‘Complete pandemonium’ after shooting

Disturbance in Dallas sends people running
active shooter police training orig_00004326.jpg
How police respond in ‘active shooter’ situations

When can police shoot?
TOPSHOT – Bystanders stand near pollice baracades following the sniper shooting in Dallas on July 7, 2016.
A fourth police officer was killed and two suspected snipers were in custody after a protest late Thursday against police brutality in Dallas, authorities said. One suspect had turned himself in and another who was in a shootout with SWAT officers was also in custody, the Dallas Police Department tweeted.
/ AFP / Laura Buckman (Photo credit should read LAURA BUCKMAN/AFP/Getty Images)
Chaos in Dallas as 12 officers are shot
Law enforcement officials wait outside the emergency room entrance at Baylor University Medical Center.Now Playing
Police: Suspect said he wanted to kill white officers
Bystanders stand near pollice baracades following the shootings.
Shooting at Dallas protest in 60 seconds
A Dallas police officer, who did not want to be identified, takes a moment as she guards an intersection in the early morning after a shooting in downtown Dallas, Friday, July 8, 2016. At least two snipers opened fire on police officers during protests in Dallas on Thursday night; some of the officers were killed, police said.
Desperate calls from Dallas officers during ambush
People rally in Dallas, Texas, on Thursday, July 7, 2016 to protest the deaths of Alton Sterling and Philando Castile.
Black motorist Philando Castile, 32, a school cafeteria worker, was shot at close range by a Minnesota cop and seen bleeding to death in a graphic video shot by his girlfriend that went viral Thursday, the second fatal police shooting to rock America in as many days. / AFP / Laura Buckman (Photo credit should read LAURA BUCKMAN/AFP/Getty Images)
‘It looked like an execution’
dallas police officer shooting ground vo_00003228.jpg
See video of Dallas shooting
president obama reacts to dallas shootings from warsaw poland_00000000.jpg
President Obama reacts to Dallas shootings from Warsaw
dallas police shooting chief david brown negotiating with suspect sot_00001104.jpg
Police: Suspect said he’s going to kill more
dallas police officers shot gunshots heard sot ctn_00000022.jpg
Gunshots ring out in Dallas, officers killed

Video from balcony shows Dallas shooting
People rally in Dallas, Texas, on Thursday, July 7, 2016 to protest the deaths of Alton Sterling and Philando Castile.
Black motorist Philando Castile, 32, a school cafeteria worker, was shot at close range by a Minnesota cop and seen bleeding to death in a graphic video shot by his girlfriend that went viral Thursday, the second fatal police shooting to rock America in as many days. / AFP / Laura Buckman (Photo credit should read LAURA BUCKMAN/AFP/Getty Images)
Dallas shooting witness: People were trampled

Witness describes Dallas police officer getting shot
police officers shot dallas texas witness sot ctn_00010002.jpg
Dallas shooting witness: I heard about 20 gunshots
tx shooter witness_00000000.jpg
Dallas Witness: ‘Complete pandemonium’ after shooting

Disturbance in Dallas sends people running
active shooter police training orig_00004326.jpg
How police respond in ‘active shooter’ situations

When can police shoot?
TOPSHOT – Bystanders stand near pollice baracades following the sniper shooting in Dallas on July 7, 2016.
A fourth police officer was killed and two suspected snipers were in custody after a protest late Thursday against police brutality in Dallas, authorities said. One suspect had turned himself in and another who was in a shootout with SWAT officers was also in custody, the Dallas Police Department tweeted.
/ AFP / Laura Buckman (Photo credit should read LAURA BUCKMAN/AFP/Getty Images)
Chaos in Dallas as 12 officers are shot
Law enforcement officials wait outside the emergency room entrance at Baylor University Medical Center.
Police: Suspect said he wanted to kill white officers
Bystanders stand near pollice baracades following the shootings.
Shooting at Dallas protest in 60 seconds
A Dallas police officer, who did not want to be identified, takes a moment as she guards an intersection in the early morning after a shooting in downtown Dallas, Friday, July 8, 2016. At least two snipers opened fire on police officers during protests in Dallas on Thursday night; some of the officers were killed, police said.
Desperate calls from Dallas officers during ambush
People rally in Dallas, Texas, on Thursday, July 7, 2016 to protest the deaths of Alton Sterling and Philando Castile.
Black motorist Philando Castile, 32, a school cafeteria worker, was shot at close range by a Minnesota cop and seen bleeding to death in a graphic video shot by his girlfriend that went viral Thursday, the second fatal police shooting to rock America in as many days. / AFP / Laura Buckman (Photo credit should read LAURA BUCKMAN/AFP/Getty Images)
‘It looked like an execution’
dallas police officer shooting ground vo_00003228.jpg
See video of Dallas shooting
president obama reacts to dallas shootings from warsaw poland_00000000.jpg
President Obama reacts to Dallas shootings from Warsaw
dallas police shooting chief david brown negotiating with suspect sot_00001104.jpg
Police: Suspect said he’s going to kill more
dallas police officers shot gunshots heard sot ctn_00000022.jpg
Gunshots ring out in Dallas, officers killed
Story highlights
Twelve officers shot; two civilians injured in Dallas
It was the deadliest incident for U.S. police since September 11, 2001

(CNN)[Breaking news update, published at 8:59 a.m. ET]

A suspect who died after a standoff with Dallas police said he wanted to kill white people — especially white officers — and that he was upset about “the recent police shootings,” and that he acted alone, Dallas Police Chief David Brown told reporters Friday.
The suspect eventually was killed by a bomb that authorities detonated, Brown said.
“We saw no other option but to use our bomb robot and place a device on its extension for it to detonate where the suspect was,” Brown said. “Other options would have exposed our officers to grave danger. The suspect is deceased as a result of detonating the bomb.”
Five police officers were killed and seven others were injured in the ambush in Dallas that began Thursday night, officials have said, in the deadliest single incident for U.S. law enforcement since September 11, 2001. Two civilians also were injured in the shootings, the office of Dallas’ mayor has said.
Most of the injured Dallas police officers have been released from a hospital, Brown told reporters. The officers’ conditions are improving, Brown said.
“All I know is that this must stop — this divisiveness between our police and our citizens,” Brown said. “We don’t feel much support most days. Let’s not make today most days. Please, we need your support to be able to protect you from men like these, who carried out this tragic, tragic event.”
Brown said an investigation into the ambush continues.
“I’m not going to be satisfied until we’ve turned over every stone. We’ve got some level that this one suspect did do some of the shooting. But we’re not satisfied that we’ve exhausted every lead,” he said. “So if there’s someone out there who’s associated with this, we will find you, we will prosecute you, and we will bring you to justice.”
[Original story, published at 8:17 a.m. ET]
Shooters killed five officers at a protest over police violence in downtown Dallas, sending screaming crowds scrambling for shelter and spurring an investigation into who was behind the ambush.
The deadly gunfire erupted in Dallas on Thursday night as videos showing two African-American men shot by police in Louisiana and Minnesota spurred protests and debate over police use of force across the country.
Authorities say three people are in custody and one suspect is dead in Dallas. They haven’t revealed details about the shooters or their motives.
Twelve officers were shot, and some of the injured officers are undergoing surgery, authorities said. The shooting was the deadliest single incident for U.S. law enforcement since September 11, 2001.
Two civilians were also wounded, according to Scott Goldstein, chief of policy and communications for the mayor.
Here’s what we know:
— At least 10 police officers were shot by snipers during the protests, Dallas police Chief David Brown said.
— Brown said it’s unclear how many suspects were involved, but three people are in custody.
— Police negotiated and exchanged gunfire with a suspect for hours at a parking garage in downtown Dallas. That suspect is dead, a law enforcement official told CNN. The official did not say how the suspect died.
— “The suspect told our negotiators that the end is coming,” Brown said. The suspect at the garage also told negotiators more officers were going to get hurt, and that bombs had been planted all over downtown.
— Police found no explosives during primary and secondary sweeps of the area, Dallas police Maj. Max Geron said Friday morning on Twitter.
Officers shot during Dallas protest
Photos: Officers shot during Dallas protest
— Two of the shooters were snipers who fired “ambush-style” from an “elevated position,” Brown said.
— Officers killed include one officer with DART, the Dallas Area Rapid Transit agency, which operates buses and commuter rail in the city and surrounding suburbs.
— DART identified the officer killed as Brent Thompson, 43. He joined the transit agency in 2009, and was its first officer killed in the line of duty, DART tweeted.
— Thompson got married two weeks ago to a fellow transit officer, DART police Chief James Spiller told CNN’s “New Day” on Friday.
— Witness Ismael Dejesus said he filmed a shooter from his hotel balcony about 50 yards away. He described the gunman as carrying a weapon with a “pretty big magazine.”
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Who are the slain officers?
— Retired FBI Special Agent Steve Moore said an attack of that magnitude required advance work.
— “This was an attack planned long before — waiting for an opportunity to go,” Moore said. “I think there was so much logistically, ammunition-wise. They may not have planned the location, they may not have planned the vantage point. But they had prepared for an attack before last night’s shooting is my guess.”
— President Barack Obama, who is in Warsaw, Poland, said his team is keeping him updated. “We still don’t know all the facts, we do know there’s been a vicious, calculated and despicable act on law enforcement,” Obama said. “I believe I speak for every American when I say we are horrified.”