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AUSTIN, Texas (AP) —
Health officials plan to ease steep Medicaid cuts slated for therapy programs for disabled children amid a legal challenge and increasing pressure from state lawmakers.
AUSTIN, Texas (AP) —
Lawyers for immigrant families denied birth certificates for their U.S.-born children by Texas health officials who refuse to recognize as valid certain forms of identification will argue for a federal judge to intervene against the state.
A federal judge in Austin will hear their case Friday as they seek an emergency injunction. The lawyers say harm is being done to the families and their children who need birth certificates to enroll in school and ensure parental rights.
Dozens of families and children sued the Texas Department of State Health Services after local authorities refused various foreign identifications. The state agency wants the suit dismissed.
The parents, from Mexico and Central America, aren't U.S. citizens. The Constitution guarantees the right of citizenship to their children because they were U.S-born.
BROWNSVILLE, Texas (AP) —
A federal judge has convicted a member of a border militia of federal firearms crimes after guns and thousands of rounds of ammunition were found in his motel room after a friendly fire incident involving a Border Patrol agent.
Kevin Lyndel Massey was found guilty Wednesday of four counts of being a felon in possession of a firearm. He remains in custody pending sentencing Jan. 4. He could receive up to 10 years in prison per count.
Massey's arrest was sparked by an August 2014 incident in which a Border Patrol agent pursuing a group of immigrants near the Texas-Mexico border fired several shots at a man armed with a rifle. The man was subsequently identified as a member of a border militia looking for immigrants. He wasn't injured.