logo
‘This is his memorial': Family responds to repeated vandalism at skatepark honoring late son

‘This is his memorial': Family responds to repeated vandalism at skatepark honoring late son

Yahoo12-05-2025
BUDA, Texas (KXAN) – A skatepark honoring a Buda teenager who died almost 14 years ago continues to be hit with pervasive vandalism, according to the city and the teenager's parents.
The city said people have occasionally defaced the Jackson Tyler Norris Memorial Skate Park since it opened in 2014, but the vandalism has 'escalated' in recent months. To make necessary repairs, the city was forced to close the park for several weeks, leading to frustration from some in the community.
'[Vandals] ripped out some of the sinks, they broke the toilets,' said Michelle Henley, a spokesperson for the city of Buda. 'Things were ripped out of the wall, in addition to graffiti.'
'We didn't want to have it closed, too,' Henley continued. 'I just don't think that the community understood how much damage was done and the process we have to go through [to fix it].'
Jackson Tyler Norris, 15, was hit and killed by a car while skateboarding on June 22, 2011. Following his death, his family donated his organs to seven people. A representation of the seven people he donated organs to is etched into the concrete of a skatepark feature.
Jackson's mom, Rebecca, told KXAN that city staff were touched by their story and decided to build a skate park, something Buda lacked at the time, in his honor.
'It was just overwhelming. It just all happened really quickly, but touching, honoring and beautiful,' Rebecca said.
The park has become a significant place for the family to remember their son. Rebecca and her husband, Anthony, said his cremains are buried beneath stone bricks under a gazebo at the park.
But oftentimes, they aren't able to visit the park due to vandalism-related closures.
'It's a special place to the family, but it's a special place to the city of Buda and the skaters who come here and enjoy this spot,' Rebecca said. 'I wouldn't walk into a cemetery with a sledgehammer and smash headstones. So why is it okay to come here and smash up [the park]?'
The city of Buda said it is installing cameras to hopefully deter vandalism.
'It's painful when it's closed for senseless acts of vandalism,' she continued. 'This is his memorial.'
Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Woman found dead in car in Rocklin parking lot, police say
Woman found dead in car in Rocklin parking lot, police say

CBS News

time22 minutes ago

  • CBS News

Woman found dead in car in Rocklin parking lot, police say

Authorities are investigating after a 21-year-old woman was found dead inside a vehicle in a Rocklin parking lot Wednesday afternoon. The Rocklin Police Department said officers responded to a call at 3:23 p.m. reporting an unresponsive woman along the 1000 block of Sunset Boulevard. When they arrived at the scene, officers located the woman inside the vehicle and confirmed she was dead. Police say there were no obvious signs of foul play, and the woman was found alone in the car. The Placer County Coroner's Office will release the woman's identity and determine the official cause of death.

Broward prosecutors present strongest evidence to prove Adam Crespo killed partner in 2019
Broward prosecutors present strongest evidence to prove Adam Crespo killed partner in 2019

CBS News

time36 minutes ago

  • CBS News

Broward prosecutors present strongest evidence to prove Adam Crespo killed partner in 2019

The trial of a Hallandale Beach man accused of killing his partner is reaching the midway point. On Wednesday, prosecutors presented their strongest evidence to prove Adam Crespo murdered Silvia Galva back in July 2019. Once more, the "bed" was a focal point of testimony, as prosecutors took the extraordinary step of building the actual bed in the courtroom to explain to the jury how Galva died. Crespo told Hallandale Beach detectives that after having a fight, Galva refused to leave their bedroom. He said he started dragging her off the bed and she grabbed onto a spear that was used as a bedpost. Crespo said he turned away, heard a snap and said somehow the spear had struck Galva in the chest. Tom Hill, who reconstructed the death scene, told the jury he tried to reenact all the different ways Crespo said Galva could have been stabbed—from accident to suicide. Hill narrated videos of the reenactment, telling the jury he set up scenarios duplicating what Crespo told them. But Hill said they were limited by time and other factors that influenced the results. He conceded to defense attorneys that the reenactments "didn't prove or disprove anything." After the bed was removed, prosecutors called the medical examiner who performed the autopsy. Dr. Benjamin Mathis had planned to show the jury Galva's actual breastplate but said because it had shifted in the liquid, it wasn't possible. Instead, he used autopsy photos to say it was a definite homicide, because the spear had gone through the breastplate to her back and that needed force. Testimony resumes Thursday.

Terrified by Trump raids, LA's undocument migrants hide at home
Terrified by Trump raids, LA's undocument migrants hide at home

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Terrified by Trump raids, LA's undocument migrants hide at home

For over a month, Alberto has hardly dared to leave the small room he rents in someone's backyard for fear of encountering the masked police who have been rounding up immigrants in Los Angeles. "It's terrible," sighed the 60-year-old Salvadoran, who does not have a US visa. "It's a confinement I wouldn't wish upon anyone." To survive, Alberto -- AFP agreed to use a pseudonym -- relies on an organization that delivers food to him twice a week. "It helps me a lot, because if I don't have this... how will I eat?" said Alberto, who has not been to his job at a car wash for weeks. The sudden intensification of immigration enforcement activity in Los Angeles in early June saw scores of people -- mostly Latinos -- arrested at car washes, hardware stores, on farms and even in the street. Videos circulating on social media showed masked and heavily armed men pouncing on people who they claimed were hardened criminals. However, critics of the Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) sweeps say those snatched were only trying to earn a meagre wage in jobs that many Americans don't want to do. The raids -- slammed as brutal and seemingly arbitrary -- sparked a wave of demonstrations that gripped the city for weeks, including some that spiraled into violence and vandalism. Alberto decided to hole up in his room after one such raid on a car wash in which some of his friends were arrested, and subsequently deported. Despite being pre-diabetic, he is hesitant to attend an upcoming medical appointment. His only breath of fresh air is pacing the private alley in front of his home. "I'm very stressed. I have headaches and body pain because I was used to working," he said. In 15 years in the United States, Trump's second term has turned out to be "worse than anything" for him. - 'Ghost town' - Trump's immigration offensive was a major feature of his re-election campaign, even winning the favor of some voters in liberal Los Angeles. But its ferocity, in a place that is home to hundreds of thousands of undocumented workers, has taken the city by surprise. Faced with mounting raids, migrants are limiting their movement as much as possible. In June, the use of the public transportation system -- a key network for the city's poorer residents -- dropped by 13.5 percent compared to the previous month. "As you're driving through certain neighborhoods, it looks like a ghost town sometimes," said Norma Fajardo, from the CLEAN Carwash Worker Center, a non-profit organization that supports these workers. It has joined forces with other groups to deliver hundreds of bags of food every week to those afraid to step outside. "There is a huge need for this," said the 37-year-old American. "It's very saddening and infuriating. Workers should be able to go to work and not fear getting kidnapped." In June, ICE agents arrested over 2,200 people in the Los Angeles area, according to internal documents analyzed by AFP. About 60 percent of them had no criminal record. Given the colossal resources recently allocated to ICE by Congress -- nearly $30 billion to bolster immigration enforcement, including funding to recruit 10,000 additional agents -- Fajardo says she is not expecting any let up. - 'New normal' - "It seems like this is the new normal," she sighed. "When we first heard of an ICE raid at a car wash, we were in emergency crisis mode. Now we are just really accepting that we need to plan for the long term." Food assistance has also become essential for Marisol, a Honduran woman who has been confined to her building for weeks with 12 family members. "We constantly thank God (for the food deliveries) because this has been a huge relief," says the 62-year-old Catholic, who has not attended Mass in weeks. Marisol -- not her real name -- has hung up curtains on the windows at her home entrance to block any view from outside. She forbids her grandchildren from opening the door and worries enormously when her daughters venture out to work a few hours to provide for the family's needs. "Every time they go out, I pray to God that they come back, because you never know what might happen," she said. Marisol and her family fled a Honduran crime gang 15 years ago because they wanted to forcibly recruit her children. Now, some of them wonder if it's worth continuing to live in the United States. "My sons have already said to me: 'Mom, sometimes I would prefer to go to Europe.'" rfo/hg/aks

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store