PR 022719

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SPORTS

ORANGE COUNTY

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Capt. Dickie Colburn Page 1 Section B

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County Record TheRecordLive.com

Vol. 58 No. 144

Week of Wednesday, February 27, 2019

The Community Newspaper of Orange, Texas

New touch-screen voting demos Thursday “We want to try to teach everybody how to use these machines,” Barrow said. “We will be using the voting machines instead of paper ballots.” Barrow explained in a January 22 appearance at Orange City Council that the new machines were required

to replace outdated machines in use now to help disabled voters. Provisional paper voting and curbside voting on paper will remain an option, but she wants everyone to use them. She explained the machines are not DREs [direct-

reading electronic machines] that register and count votes without a paper backup. In updating from paper Scantron-type ballots to the Express Vote machines, the Orange County voting records are not connected to a network that can be hacked. Each voter will present

their photo ID at a check-in station like usual, but instead of being handed a specific ballot for each entity (e.g. City of Orange and Little Cypress-Mauriceville CISD), the voter will get a card with coding at the top. COUNTY BUSINESS Page 3A

GEO ROQUE

Somebody’s brother and son Debby Schamber For The Record

Tina Barrow, Orange County Elections Administrator, demonstrates the touch screen entry system on a new electronic voting machine. RECORD Photo: Dave Rogers

Dave Rogers

For The Record

Touch-screen voting is coming to Orange County elections this spring. Tina Barrow, Elections Administrator, demonstrated how to use one of the county’s 34 new Express Vote voting machines at

Tuesday’s Commissioners’ Court. She and her staff will be conducting similar demonstrations at the Orange Public Library Thursday, Feb. 28 from 1:30 p.m. to 4:30 p.m. The Express Vote machines will be in place for the May 4 city and school board elections, she said.

Trial begins for Jacob Rougeau Debby Schamber For The Record

Dates and the age of the victim were the key to the case against Jacob Rougeau who is accused of continuous sexual assault. The case stems from incidents involving his daughter who testified she was 13 years old when she was sexually assaulted by her father. The reason why it is important in this particular case is according to the Texas Penal Code, by definition of continuous sexual assault, it is because of the offense during a period that is 30 days or more in duration, the person commits two or more acts of sexual abuse. In addi-

tion it states, at the time of the commission of each of the acts of sexual abuse, the actor is 17 years of age or Rougeau older and the victim is a child younger than 14 years of age. In addition, the penal code states, the penalty for an offense under this section is a felony of the first degree and punishable for a term of not more than 99 years and not less than 25 years. The victim testified her father would come to her room and lay down next to her in JACOB ROUGEAU Page 3A

Following the death of two-year-old Savanna Roque by the hands of her father, Geo Roque, his Rogue family is still searching for answers as this was not the man they knew. Yohavnis “Geo” Roque and his brother, Lazaro Roque, grew up in Florida. According to their mother, the boys had it all. Each had their own room and Christmas was a spectacular event in the young boys lives. Geo had an interest in dinosaurs and outer space as a boy. His mother went to the library on Saturdays to check out books on each subject for Geo to pour through. As he finished each book, he eagerly only wanted more books to read. On one memorable Christmas, Geo’s bedroom wall was decorated with a Yohavnis “Geo” Roque is seen here with his daughter Savanna in a selfie photo provided to The Record by Rogue’s family members. Savanna was just a toddler at the time. large flying pterodactyl. Like most teens he played Things turned upside come, he called Rachel for video games too. His favor- mother and she helped them ite was Warcraft which was along the way as they pre- down for Geo when an al- help. An alleged drunk drivpared for the birth of Savan- leged drunk driver de- er struck Rachel as she exita subscription game. stroyed his life the way he ed her car sending her body Life changed for Geo na. flying through the air and Rachel taught ballet and knew it. when he fell in love with RaSavanna was just weeks killing her. The driver also chel Foster whom he met on dance at a local school. an online dating sight. They There the future dancers old when on Father’s Day struck Geo’s vehicle which were together a few months loved their teacher. Later, evening, Geo ran out of gas resulted injuries to him too. when she found out she was Savanna was offered a and was stuck on the side of Geo had a punctured lung, pregnant. The young par- scholarship to the school a South Florida highway. He shattered bones in his left ents were overjoyed. They where her mother once had tried to call someone else, but when they couldn’t BROTHER AND SON Page 3A were living with Geo’s taught.

Gwen Boehme: LSCO keeps country girl active at 98 Dave Rogers

For The Record

Gwen Boehme has the recipe for lifelong fitness and, at 98 years of age, she knows a little bit about living. “I grew up in the country,” she said. “I had to pick stuff out of the garden. I took care of a lot of fruit. I helped pick it and can it.” That, she explained, is why she can spend three mornings a week walking, doing aerobics and lifting weights in a most improbable exercise class at Lamar State Col-

lege Orange. “I’m not a bit sore,” says the former switchboard operator who grew up in Anacoco, La., near the present day Toledo Bend Reservoir. Instructors Don Thomas and Butch Campbell have combined a “leisure learning” adult exercise class with a for-credit exercise class for young students. On Monday, Wednesday and Friday mornings they

warm up by walking several laps around the gym, then they form lines for stretching and aerobics. Then the class often moves over to a weight room to push a little iron. Thomas started the class 27 years ago with the help of a three-year grant to study exercise and the elderly. When the funding ran out, the seniors agreed to pay $59 per semester to keep the workouts coming.

Gwen Boehme, 98, and Helen Broussard, 79, are both in their third decade of membership in a seniors exercise class at Lamar State College Orange. RECORD PHOTO: Dave Rogers

That’s what Thomas calls “decisive independence.” “This is the only program like this in the state,” he said. And Campbell, who has merged his younger students in recent years, is learning. “He says his whole idea of senior citizens has changed,” Thomas said. You can say the same for the millennials in the class. “The [younger] students are scared of us at first,” says Helen Broussard, 79. “But at the end of the semester, they GWEN BOEHME Page 3A

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