The Dallas Examiner Headlines for Sept. 26

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VOL. XXXIII  • SEPTEmBER 26, 2019

50 cents

Paid Parental Leave Policy

Arresting Black Children

Dallas City Council approves budget, census count underway State/Metro Pg 2

By DIANE XAVIER The Dallas Examiner

The Dallas City Council unanimously approved the Fiscal Year 2019-2020 Budget of $3.8 billion at its Sept. 18 City Council briefing. It was the first time since 2014 the council voted unanimously, 15-0, in favor of approving the budget. “I want to congratulate everyone here for getting to this final step and passing this budget,” Mayor Eric Johnson said. “We’ve had four workshops on the budget, and we have heard from citizens across numerous town halls of which several I was able to attend. We have had three public hearings on the budget, and we have asked a lot of questions and have heard several amendments to this budget. I hope that today we approve a budget that reflects our commitment to public safety,

but also continues much-needed human and social programs and demonstrates our fiscal restraint by not increasing our property tax rate by holding steady.” Dallas City Manager T.C. Broadnax also thanked the community for their involvement at the town hall meetings regarding the budget. “I want to thank the community for showing up to the 41-plus community meetings regarding the budget,” Broadnax said. “There was great insight given and many more needs addressed by the community.” A large portion of the budget will go toward public safety and first responders. About $162 million will go toward the Dallas Police and Fire Pension System, which is an increase of $5.2 million from last year. The fiscal year will begin Oct. 1. The City Council also heard a briefing on the Dallas 2020

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi – Photo by Miguel Gutierrez Jr..The Texas Tribune

Kimberly Bizor Tolbert, chief of staff for the city of Dallas – The Dallas Examiner screenshot from the city of Dallas video

census. “Ensuring a full count is vital to our city,” Johnson said. “We will lose $1600 every year per person for every person we don’t count. If you add that up, an undercount will cost us millions of dollars in federal funding for roads, schools and health care.” Kimberly Bizor Tolbert, chief of staff for the city of Dallas, stressed the importance of getting the census accurate. “We know that we have to get the census right,” Tolbert said.

White House – Official White House photo

“There is no room for us to not put the effort in place to ensure that every single residence in this community is counted. Our census team is working hard, and we made a lot of good progress in this last year, and we are working with the mayor’s Complete Count Committee and really building those important partnerships that will really help us make this census effort successful.” Brett Wilkinson, managing director of the Office of Strategic Partnerships and Government Affairs for the city of Dallas, said the U.S. Constitution mandates a census count must be held every 10 years. “Those dollars have direct impact on planning for schools, transportation, health programs and other community needs,” Wilkinson explained. “The census information is used to

See City Council Page 9

President Donald J. Trump during a bilateral meeting Tuesday at the United Nations Headquarters in New York City. – Official White House photo by Shealah Craighead

White House drama shakes up battleground Texas races By PATRICK SVITEK and ABBY LIVINGSTON The Texas Tribune

WASHINGTON – It was almost another one of those Trump-era days when the mayhem of the national capital could be felt back home in Texas. Except this day felt bigger, more consequential, and some members said, possibly even a little frightening. House Democrats moved swiftly and with fierce determination toward impeachment after a whistleblower revealed information about a phone call between President Donald Trump and Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelensky. It was an unfathomable act only a week ago, as members of Congress grappled over revelations that Trump allegedly withheld military aid from Ukraine in exchange for a politicized investigation into the business activities of the son of his possible 2020 rival, former Vice President Joe Biden. “We were not expecting this. We didn’t orchestrate this,” said U.S. Rep. Sheila Jackson Lee, a Houston Democrat, later adding, “This is frightening. I just don’t think we can wait much longer.” Democrats across the Capitol echoed her sentiment. There was a startled sense to the way the day played out. What made the moment so dramatic was that, across the country and in Texas, vulnerable freshmen Democrats said they would push for impeachment if the Trump administration did not release a whistleblower complaint over the Ukranian matter.

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Few seemed interested in discussing the possible reelection ramifications back home in their districts, and the political mood changed so quickly that it appeared some of these Democrats were flying blind – they had not had time to test out how impeachment will play in their districts. “Here you have a clear case of the president abusing his power very directly against a political rival; the Mueller report involved many different pieces … this is a much more direct interaction that the president had with a foreign president,” said U.S. Rep. Joaquin Castro, D-San Antonio, echoing numerous other Capitol Hill Democrats Tuesday. The dramatic turn began Tuesday morning, when U.S. Rep. Colin Allred, D-Dallas, issued a statement saying that if the director of national intelligence did not turn over the whistleblower report, “the only remaining option is for the House to begin impeachment proceedings.” About two hours later, U.S. Rep. Lizzie Pannill Fletcher, D-Houston, put out a statement saying that the House “should act swiftly to investigate and should be prepared to use the remedy exclusively in its power: impeachment.” The statements from the two most endangered Texas Democrats in Congress – both flipped historically red districts last year – drew swift criticism from national GOP groups and the Republican Texas candidates already targeting the two in 2020. Fletcher was a particular focal point for Republican umbrage. One of her challengers, military veteran Wesley Hunt, released a flood of robocalls to voters in the

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district that said Fletcher “is just like the radical squad – she hates President Trump so much that it distorts her view of reality. I’m Wesley Hunt and I will stand with President Trump.” Allred’s and Fletcher’s races weren’t the only ones in Texas where the growing impeachment drumbeat reverberated Tuesday. Hours before House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s announcement, Wendy Davis, the leading Democratic candidate to challenge U.S. Rep. Chip Roy, R-Austin, joined the impeachment calls with a statement that sought to thread a needle, calling on lawmakers to “launch an impeachment inquiry and then immediately return the focus” to issues like health care. Among the Texas GOP congressmen who chose to weigh in Tuesday, skepticism and caution were common. The group included U.S. Rep. Michael McCaul – another Republican in a tough reelection fight – who spoke out in his capacity as the top Republican on the House Foreign Affairs Committee. “Unfortunately, House Democrats are moving forward to impeach President Trump based on only press reports and hearsay,” he said. “It’s a disappointing rush to judgment because we don’t even have the basic facts yet.” The three Democrats challenging McCaul, meanwhile, had all backed an impeachment inquiry before Tuesday. One of them, Austin doctor Pritesh Gandhi, issued a statement Thursday afternoon calling on the incumbent to “set politics aside and

See Impeachment Page 7

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Perspectives Pg 5

The Indigent Project – Part VI Free at last, a new path

Attorney Drew Willey (left) and U.S. Marine vet Marvin Wilford – Photos by Trevor Paulhus/The Texas Tribune and Texas Monthly

By NEENA SATIJA

Texas Tribune and Texas Monthly

“Are we ready on Wilford?” asked Sage. It was Nov. 30, 2018, and through a gray door, Wilford entered the Travis County courtroom, a sweater peeking out from under his jail uniform. His new lawyer, a 42-year-old with a scruffy beard named Andy Casey, patted him on the back. After replying softly to a few questions from the judge, Wilford was taken to jail one last time, for processing. With that, he was free. After almost a year of waiting, it was an anticlimactic ending. Not even his wife was there to celebrate. She’d caught the flu and was stuck at home. To Wilford, the lack of fanfare was perfectly emblematic of how simple his case could have been. Casey had called Christine Wilford as soon as he was appointed to the case. It had taken a few months, but he’d examined the evidence, witness list and video, then negotiated a deal with the prosecutor: If Marvin Wilford pleaded guilty to a misdemeanor assault for being involved in the scuffle, the felony charges would be dropped. The maximum sentence was a year, which Wilford had already served. “The one thing you do see him carrying in the video is a cane,” Casey said. A month later during Christmas, Christine had bought him a ring to wear next to his wedding band, a symbol of all they’d been through together. Marvin had applied for a small business loan to start an online hat shop; his mother had loved hats, and he planned to name the venture after her: Marie Antoinette and Sons Hat Shop. He could not speak about Espersen without getting agitated. “How old does a Black man have to be before y’all stop trying to destroy his life?” he asked. During a meeting with Sage in regard to Espersen’s caseload, she noted that the numbers can be misleading. Sitting in her office, she pulled up a spreadsheet from her own courtroom. “As of Jan. 2, I have the most cases [of any judge],” she declared – specifically, 1,200. “That’s not for the whole year. Just right now.” But one defendant on her list, for instance, was facing 20 charges. Handling 20 cases for one person is very different from handling the cases of 20 people, Sage stressed. It’s true that caseload numbers come with caveats. Casey, for example, was overloaded, yet he still managed to give Wilford the necessary attention. But his caseload was not nearly as high as Espersen’s. And, it’s also true that Sage doesn’t deal with 1,200 cases by herself; she has a team of prosecutors who have their own staff, including investigators and assistants – resources that most defense attorneys do not

See Indigent Page 3

Inside

Pink Peppermint Project to host GlamCon Experience

State/Metro . . . . 2

Editorial . . . . . . . 4

Perspectives Pg 5

Perspectives . . . 5

Health . . . . . . . . 7

Calendar . . . . . . 8

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Classifieds . . . . 9 0

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