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HOUSTON, March 9, 2021 /PRNewswire/ The felony indictment of Houston Police Department narcotics Officer Felipe Gallegos is politically motivated and part of Harris County District Attorney Kim Ogg s anti-police agenda, stated attorneys for the 12-year department veteran officer.
During a news conference one day after the murder indictment was announced, Houston trial lawyer Rusty Hardin said the charges Officer Gallegos faces are the result of Ms. Ogg jumping on the bandwagon of a political issue to further her career. A Harris County grand jury, at the request of the District Attorney s office, indicted a hero. No question about it. They indicted a hero, said Mr. Hardin. Everyone that was out there on August 28 of 2019 on Hardy Street knows that this man right here, Felipe Gallegos, was a hero. He saved lives in a situation in which four different police officers were shot.
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Texas doctor discusses firing over alleged COVID-19 vaccine theft: I did what I believe was expected – Mid-Utah Radio
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Fired Texas doctor defends giving away expiring COVID-19 vaccine doses: I did what I believe was expected
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He’s Too Mentally Ill To Execute. Why Is He Still On Death Row After 45 Years? Patch 2/18/2021
2021-02-04
Raymond Riles arrived on Texas’s death row in 1976, the year President Gerald Ford lost his reelection bid and the first “Rocky” movie debuted in theaters. Riles had been sentenced to death in Houston for killing a used car salesman named John Henry.
Forty-five years and eight presidents later, Riles remains there, having survived three cancelled execution dates to become the longest serving death row prisoner in the state and likely in the nation. He lives in near-total solitary confinement. Like many longtime death row prisoners, experts have repeatedly deemed him to be delusional and “grossly psychotic.” Sometimes he describes himself as God or “King Moto-Cherry Velt-Love.” Other times he worries that he will be sacrificed to Satan by his demonic captors. He once set himself on fire.