Tuesday, November 1, 2011
Ranger Police Officer Arrested for Stalking and Assault
Abilene, Texas
A Ranger police officer was arrested over the weekend and now faces felony charges, including stalking and assault. According to authorities, Jonathan Blevins Matthis repeatedly punched a woman and sent her text messages threatening her with bodily harm.
The 28-year-old police officer, Matthis, was arrested Friday and charged with stalking, assault and making terroristic threats. Matthis has since been released from the Eastland County Jail on a combined bond of $105,000.
Court records lay out the timeline of abuse.
Matthis began dating the victim in February, when the woman was a senior in high school. The woman now attends Cisco College. According to an arrest warrant filed by Texas Rangers, who assisted in the investigation, Matthis worked part time for the Munday Police Department before becoming a full-time officer with the Ranger Police Department.
At the time the relationship began, Matthis lived in Arlington and worked two weekends a month for the Munday Police Department, according to court records.
The woman, whose age was not given, said the relationship became abusive, and Matthis "would shove her around and throw her on the ground," court records indicate.
The victim told Texas Rangers that she found out she was pregnant with Matthis' baby in July, and that he forced her to get an abortion, according to the criminal complaint.
The woman said Matthis was fired from the Munday Police Department as a result of rumors of an improper relationship, according to the criminal complaint.
According to the criminal complaint, the woman said the pair would have sex every weekend night that Matthis was in town to work. The relationship continued when he became employed in Ranger, she said, and the two would have sex in the Ranger Police Station when no other officers were around.
In mid-August, Matthis is alleged to have punched the woman in the face during an argument at the police station.
Another argument erupted in late August, also at the police station, according to the criminal complaint. Matthis is alleged to have pinned her against the wall by her arms and then bent over and bit her in the upper-right chest area, causing heavy bruising.
During the alleged assault, the woman said she doubled over in pain, and Matthis continued to punch her in the head and abdomen, according to the criminal complaint.
The woman suffered black eyes from the assault, according to the complaint.
After the alleged assault, the woman ended the relationship, according to the complaint, but after about a month, Matthis contacted her to continue the affair.
After she resisted, Matthis is alleged to have begun stalking her, according to the criminal complaint.
Matthis, the woman said, began sending her text messages indicating he knew where she was and was watching her.
One message said, "Baby you know I love u I only hit you because you deserve it I refuse to let u go again u can't walk out on me what u would get is a thousand times worse than a beating," according to the criminal complaint.
Matthis also sent threatening messages to a man he believed was the woman's boyfriend, court records state.
HPD DWI Bat Van Update: Judge Threatens Top Houston DA Assistants With Jail Time
Houston, Texas
KTRK-TV (ABC13) is reporting on new information in the ongoing investigation of criminal activity within the Harris County District Attorney's Office.
Court documents filed this morning reveal District Court Judge Susan Brown is threatening to jail two of DA Pat Lykos' top deputies, along with two other county staffers. The top deputies are Carl Hobbs, in charges of the DA's grand jury division, and Steve Morris. The two others are court reporters -- the people who take down testimony and prepare transcripts. The four are all being called to court next Monday morning to explain why they have transcripts of what should be secret grand jury testimony.
The testimony is apparently part of a Grand Jury investigation into possible criminal wrongdoing surrounding concerns over HPD BAT Van DWI tests.
Now it turns out (according to court documents) that the DA's office has transcripts of some testimony.
The DA's office is not commenting at this point.
League City Police Chief Accused Of Issuing Ticket Quota
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| League City Police Chief Michael Jez | 
League City Police Chief Michael Jez is under fire, after allegations have surfaced that he is requiring officers to write at least two tickets per day or face disciplinary action.
Ticket quotas are illegal and violate the Texas Transportation Code.
Officer Sean Arena sent his complaint to all of the city's leaders, including the mayor, and to the district attorney and attorney general on Oct. 19.
Arena claimed that he was pressured by the chief and one of his captains to write more tickets.
"Over the period of the past 18 months, there has been a clear push by League City Police administration to ensure League City patrol officers conduct a 'certain amount' of traffic stops each workday," Arena wrote.
When asked for comment, Jez referred all questions to City Attorney Arnold Polanco. Polanco declined to answer questions, citing that city policy prevents him from discussing any case that is under investigation.
Sunday, October 30, 2011
Houston Police Department's DWI BAT Van Debacle Continues
Houston, Texas
Last week, new developments surfaced in the investigation surrounding the Houston Police Department's DWI BAT Vans. The investigation moved in on the Harris County District Attorney's Office, leading District Attorney Pat Lykos to take to the airways in a television interview.
For those living outside of the Houston area, or needing a refresher on how and when the the investigation began, Houston Criminal Defense Attorney Mark W. Bennett has put together a timeline. His terrific blog, Defending People, not only covers the investigation from the beginning to where we are now, but also raises an important question following the interview with District Attorney Pat Lykos.
During the interview, Lykos suggested that she did not trust HPD to tell the truth concerning DWI testing.
Mark's question, which I think we all would like to know the answer to:
"Well, Ms. Lykos, if you don’t trust HPD to tell you the truth about DWI testing, why do you trust HPD to tell you the truth about anything?"
Friday, October 28, 2011
Video Details Bryan Police Shooting
Bryan, Texas
Back in May, we featured a story from Bryan, Texas, involving a shooting incident between police officer William “Bill” Cross and Johnnie Walton Harris, Jr. In that incident, an innocent bystander was also hit by a stray bullet. The family of Johnnie Harris and others in the community questioned the use of force.
One month later, a grand jury declined indicting Cross.
The 14-year veteran resigned from the Bryan Police Department on July 18 -- less than 24 hours before Chief Eric Buske was to make public the findings of an internal investigation into the shooting.
His resignation, because of civil service statues voted into use by Bryan residents in 1979, effectively sealed the results of that internal inquiry.
The patrol car video has now been released, following an open records request, providing more insight to the timeline of the shooting incident.
The Timeline (The Bryan Eagle)
The video does capture Cross running after Harris with his firearm in the ready position and a sliver of the start of the shooting, but Harris and the construction worker are not visible.
One second before firing, Harris' mother can be heard saying, "Y'all don't have to shoot him, sir," as her son runs to the officer's patrol car.
District Attorney Bill Turner said his office will respect the decision of the grand jury and has no plans to again present the case to a different panel.
Back in May, we featured a story from Bryan, Texas, involving a shooting incident between police officer William “Bill” Cross and Johnnie Walton Harris, Jr. In that incident, an innocent bystander was also hit by a stray bullet. The family of Johnnie Harris and others in the community questioned the use of force.
One month later, a grand jury declined indicting Cross.
The 14-year veteran resigned from the Bryan Police Department on July 18 -- less than 24 hours before Chief Eric Buske was to make public the findings of an internal investigation into the shooting.
His resignation, because of civil service statues voted into use by Bryan residents in 1979, effectively sealed the results of that internal inquiry.
The patrol car video has now been released, following an open records request, providing more insight to the timeline of the shooting incident.
The Timeline (The Bryan Eagle)
- Cross was on patrol just after 10 a.m. May 6 when he responded to a call of a suspicious person near the intersection of Martin Luther King Jr. Street and Texas Avenue.
 
- As can be seen and heard on the video, Cross approaches 20-year-old Harris and begins basic questioning, including asking why he is in the area.
 
- The discussion ends about 20 seconds later and a scuffle between Harris and Cross begins.
 
- The day of the shooting and throughout the inquiry, police said Cross opened fire after Harris reached for his firearm.(Not visible from the in-car video)
 
- At one point, Cross said to Harris, "I'll shoot you," and Harris responded by pulling his jacket open, making a wide target of his chest before sprinting across the street.
 
- Harris' mother, Janice Walton, and grandmother, Betty Sims, pulled up behind the patrol car right after the struggle began.
 
- The chase that lasts about 40 seconds, ends after Cross fires seven rounds, hitting Harris and 18-year-old Juan Garcia, a construction worker who was in the area and hit by a stray bullet.
 
The video does capture Cross running after Harris with his firearm in the ready position and a sliver of the start of the shooting, but Harris and the construction worker are not visible.
One second before firing, Harris' mother can be heard saying, "Y'all don't have to shoot him, sir," as her son runs to the officer's patrol car.
![]()  | 
| Former Bryan Police Officer Bill Cross | 
District Attorney Bill Turner said his office will respect the decision of the grand jury and has no plans to again present the case to a different panel.
Sugar Land Police Officer Arrested for Drunk Driving
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| Photo Courtesy KTRK-TV | 
Stafford, Texas
A police captain out of Sugar Land has been arrested after he was allegedly driving drunk near the scene of a fiery big rig wreck.
It was just after 11:30 on Thursday, when the Stafford Police Department was assisting the Sugar Land Police Department with traffic control near the scene of a vehicle fire.
According to investigators, at approximately 12:13am, a vehicle tried to drive through a blocked intersection and an officer stopped the vehicle. Upon contact with the driver, identified as Sugar Land Police Department Captain Michael Lund, the officer determined Lund was intoxicated.
Sugar Land Police Department was contacted and they requested that Stafford Police Department investigate this incident.
Michael Lund was arrested and booked into the Fort Bend County Jail for driving while intoxicated. Lund has posted bond and has been released from Fort Bend County Jail.
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