Brian Encinia Charged With Perjury In Sandra Bland’s Case
Brian T. Encinia, the police officer who arrested Sandra Bland, has been charged with perjury—and that’s likely to be the extent of the criminal justice system’s involvement in the case.
Brian T. Encinia, the police officer who arrested Sandra Bland, has been charged with perjury—and that’s likely to be the extent of the criminal justice system’s involvement in the case.
How the once troubled Texas Forensic Science Commission put the state at the forefront of the criminal justice reform movement.
Tiede, not Sanders.
Last week, former Oklahoma City police officer Daniel Holtzclaw was convicted on 18 charges, ranging from rape in the first degree to forced oral sodomy, after being accused of sexually assaulting 13 women. The case ended up making national headlines, and the details of how Holtzclaw raped so many women–and
Who better to investigate wrongful conviction cases than exonerees?
A death penalty in decline.
After an incident last week saw several young black people on Sixth Street punched by police, the question of who’s allowed to misbehave in Austin’s bar district is especially relevant.
One of the more tragic cases in Texas in recent memory continues its journey through the legal system.
”Booger Red,” a film by Berndt Mader and based on a Texas Monthly story, premieres at the Austin Film Festival.
With the increased difficulty of maintaining a pentobarbital supply, Texas and Arizona are accused of importing an unapproved drug.
Fort Worth defense attorney Bryan Wilson lands a body blow in his quest to claim the ”most ridiculous lawyer in Texas” crown.
A dark incident almost twenty years ago put Greg Torti on the sex offender registry for life. But the real story, he insists, is much more complicated.
Critics denounce this arm of forensic science as bogus and subjective.
Video footage of a teenage boy placed in a chokehold by school resource officers adds a new layer to an ongoing debate.
Come back through, Willie/Snoop/Nelly/Fiona Apple!
The district attorney of Dallas County is making headlines for all the wrong reasons. What happened?
The personal life of the slain sheriff’s deputy is no one’s business, but it could be important to his alleged killer's defense.
A panel determined that District Judge Jeanine Howard undermined public confidence after a controversial statement.
Whataburger landed itself in another pickle—but not the kind on its tasty burgers.
A curious case of courthouse nuptials.
Baylor, bared.
According to Blanca Borrego's family, she was taken into an exam room where sheriff's deputies were waiting for her.
What Ahmed Mohamed's case tells us about the American dream.
Thirty-eight years after Kerry Max Cook was convicted of murder, he continues to seek exoneration. And now he might finally have a chance to convince the courts of his innocence.
Over a month after Sandra Bland’s death, the local city council voted to rename a road Sandy Bland Parkway.
The sentencing phase of the trial began immediately after Ukwuachu was found guilty Thursday night, and reached its conclusion Friday afternoon.
A much-talked-about football player at Baylor University—whom coaches “expect back” this fall—is currently on trial for the sexual assault of a fellow student. Questions now swirl around what the program knew and when they knew it.
Transparency and action after an officer-involved shooting could indicate a fundamental shift.
An Angelo State football player was shot and killed by police in Arlington over the weekend, and questions remain.
The hard truth behind police misconduct in Prairie View and McKinney.
In the wake of Sandra Bland's death, activists have spent their summer in the heat, holding signs, and declaring that "as long as there's injustice in the world, people need to be sitting somewhere."
We can't ignore law enforcement's failure to secure proper medical treatment.
How new low-income housing and a SCOTUS decision could shake things up, and why they desperately needed it.
The last few days of the life of Sandra Bland tell us things about ourselves, and the culture we’ve built, that we’d rather not know.
Innocence Project of Texas executive director Scott Henson says his organization is about more than DNA evidence.
Pamela Colloff writes about the first prosecutor to be disbarred under a new law in Texas.
Officials in Waller County say that the woman’s death was a suicide. Her friends and family don’t believe it. And there are 64 other deaths in Texas this year make it harder to trust the official story.
A colorful man with a colorful bird had a hard time in the Tyler police station.
A small measure of justice was served when the State Bar of Texas stripped Charles Sebesta of his law license and formally disbarred him.
District judge Carter Tinsley Schildknecht, of Dawson County, was reprimanded by the State Commission on Judicial Conduct for, among other offenses, holding a fifteen-hour court session that ran until four in the morning, during which she allowed no formal meal or bathroom breaks.
A mounted police officer grabs the camera of a man filming a tense incident on Sixth Street, and a fellow officer steps in to shoot a stream of pepper spray into the man’s face. But how many videos of police behaving badly can we handle?
The viral story of a pool party in McKinney became the latest flashpoint in the ongoing conversation about police and race in America.
It’s time to consider what role social media should have in policing.
“I can’t breathe.” Yet again.
Mimi Swartz cross-examines the Court of Criminal Appeals’ unprecedented sanctions against a death penalty lawyer.
Solid reporting from the University of Texas School of Journalism investigates the gender and racial makeup of law enforcement in Texas.
The way Texas punishes truancy is downright Kafka-esque—and it’s finally getting a lot of attention.
Kristen Lindsey, the Brenham veterinarian who bragged about killing a cat with a bow and arrow on Facebook, is persona non grata on social media now.
Following a string of complaints about alleged harassment, assault, and rape, a transgender inmate in Texas was moved to a special “safekeeping” unit in what LGBT activists consider a significant victory.
Burleson County law enforcement apparently prefers officers use a different standard than rock-paper-scissors when determining infractions.