logo
Memorial Day weekend records most boating while intoxicated charges in 5 years

Memorial Day weekend records most boating while intoxicated charges in 5 years

Yahoo07-06-2025
TYLER, Texas (KETK) — Texas game wardens saw the highest number of boating while intoxicated charges and responded to several boating collisions this past Memorial Day weekend, the Texas Parks and Wildlife Department (TPWD) said.
Disturbance call at Cascades subdivision leads to officer-involved shooting in Tyler
Memorial Day weekend is a holiday meant to honor and celebrate the lives of military personal who lost their lives while fighting for our freedom.
However, some Americans can take the celebration too far and when alcohol is combined with getting behind the wheel of a boat, it sometimes leads to bad outcomes. The Texas game wardens witnessed these outcomes this past Memorial Day weekend.
48 packages of hydroponic marijuana seized during East Texas traffic stop
'Our wardens don't just patrol the water, they serve wherever they're needed,' TPWD law enforcement director Colonel Ron VanderRoest said. 'This weekend was a good example of the depth of their commitment to public safety, responding in severe weather, major fire incidents and high-risk law enforcement situations.'
The Texas game wardens took care of business as they conducted over 10,000 vessel checks along with issuing more than a thousand warnings and citations.
Wardens also saw more serious charges including 53 boating while intoxicated, seven driving while intoxicated and 21 other arrest. Six boating collisions were reported with one them resulting in a death at Grapevine Lake.
Two drownings were reported at Red River and Elmendorf Lake along with a 5-year-old girl who was recued after being blown away on an inflatable tube at the Falcon International Reservoir, according to TPWD.
Online East Texas predator sentenced after sexual relationship with out-of-state minor
'When alcohol, crowded waterways and severe weather are in the mix, the risk of incidents can rise fast,' Texas Parks and Wildlife Department assistant commander for marine enforcement Cody Jones said. 'That's why we prioritize presence, visibility and swift response. We can't be everywhere at once, so we need the public to meet us halfway by boating responsibly. We are thankful for everyone who did over the holiday weekend.'
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 This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.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

Rachel Maddow Calls Out Trump's Authoritarian Moves
Rachel Maddow Calls Out Trump's Authoritarian Moves

Buzz Feed

time17 minutes ago

  • Buzz Feed

Rachel Maddow Calls Out Trump's Authoritarian Moves

Hot Topic 🔥 Full coverage and conversation on Politics MSNBC's Rachel Maddow says Americans no longer have to fear potential authoritarianism in their own country, because 'we are there' already — and cited President Donald Trump 's widespread immigration raids, detainments without probable cause, and use of military force. 'We have crossed a line,' she said on The Rachel Maddow Show, Monday. 'We are in a place we did not want to be, but we are there. The thing we were all warning about for the last few years is not coming, it is here. We are in it. This is what [it's] like, it turns out.' Maddow argued that large swaths of the country might easily overlook this downward slide, as movies are still being produced, sports continue to be played, and families are still discussing the same old issues they always have around their kitchen table each night. 'But also, at the same time, life in the United States is profoundly changing,' Maddow added Monday. 'It's profoundly different than it was even six months ago, because we do now live in a country that has an authoritarian leader in charge.' She then put it even more bluntly: 'We have a consolidating dictatorship in our country.' While the MSNBC host went on to acknowledge that this might sound 'melodramatic,' Maddow noted the US now seems to have its own 'secret police,' which is commonplace across dictatorships, in the Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency under Trump. 'A massive, anonymous, unbadged — literally masked — totally unaccountable internal police force that apparently has infinite funding but no identifiable leadership,' said Maddow. 'And they act in ways designed to instill maximum fear and use maximum force.' Maddow continued: 'I mean, when you imagine an authoritarian country, what you imagine is masked secret police breaking people's car windows and snatching people off the streets and out of church parking lots and courtroom hallways and taking them away with no charges, no notice, no paperwork, no explanation, not letting them see lawyers and then moving them secretly to what are effectively black site prisons where they won't tell you who's there and where no one's allowed in to see what's going on.' Experts have already warned that one such prison, Florida's immigrant detention camp that Republicans have dubbed ' Alligator Alcatraz,' is 'a human rights disaster waiting to happen.' Democratic lawmakers initially blocked from visiting were finally granted access last month and confirmed its horrid conditions. The president has justified nationwide crackdowns on undocumented workers, as well as the detainment, arrest, and deportation of college students and professors across the US, as necessary protection against supposedly violent and anti-American immigrants. Maddow argued it won't stop there, however, and that the US military in multiple states has already 'extended the legal boundaries of nearby military bases' by hundreds of miles 'so they can give active duty US troops the power to arrest and search people on US soil.' 'We are not heading toward something like this,' Maddow said Monday. 'We are there. It is here. It is the environment in which we are now living. And so, given that you now live in a country with an authoritarian leader, the question is: What can you do for your country?'

Trump administration considers releasing transcripts of DOJ interview with Ghislaine Maxwell

time2 hours ago

Trump administration considers releasing transcripts of DOJ interview with Ghislaine Maxwell

The Trump administration is considering publicly releasing the transcripts from Ghislaine Maxwell's interview with the Justice Department last month, multiple sources familiar with the internal discussions told ABC News. Maxwell's meetings with Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche took place for nine hours over two days. There is also an audio recording of the interview, the sources said, but it's not clear whether the administration plans to release the audio to accompany any public release of the transcript. The public release of the transcripts could come as soon as this week, the sources said. Maxwell, an associate of the late sex offender Jeffrey Epstein, was convicted of sex trafficking and other charges and sentenced to 20 years in prison in 2022, which she was serving at a federal prison in Tallahassee, Florida, until her recent move to a federal prison camp in Texas. She is appealing her conviction to the U.S. Supreme Court. Following his first day of meetings with Maxwell, Blanche tweeted that "The Department of Justice will share additional information about what we learned at the appropriate time." Maxwell's attorney David Markus, following both days of meetings, said Maxwell was asked about "one hundred different people," and said "she didn't hold anything back." Markus, however, declined to be specific about who Maxwell was asked about or whether she provided information about others who committed crimes against victims. Thus far, the administration has not revealed any details from what Maxwell said. CNN first reported the administration was considering releasing the transcripts. In an interview with Newsmax last week when asked when Americans could hear about the contents of the meeting, Trump said: "I don't know, because I haven't spoken about it, but he's a very talented guy, Todd Blanche, and a very straight shooter, and I think he probably wanted to know, you know, just to get a feeling of it, because we'd like to release everything, but we don't want people to get hurt that shouldn't be hurt. And I would assume that was why he was there. I want to release everything. I just don't want people to get hurt."

Why Reject Trump? It's the Corruption, Stupid
Why Reject Trump? It's the Corruption, Stupid

Newsweek

time7 hours ago

  • Newsweek

Why Reject Trump? It's the Corruption, Stupid

We all know Americans vote with their wallets. President Bill Clinton's first campaign ran on the slogan: "It's the economy, stupid." Today, with questionable economic news, maybe this means trouble for President Donald Trump. But forget the economy. Americans should be more concerned about the Trump-led corruption that has settled over Washington like a poisonous fog. Believe it. It's never been like this before. Can you name another president who accepted for his personal benefit a $400 million airplane from a foreign government? All of this is utterly unprecedented. A photo from Feb. 12, 2000, featuring Donald Trump, Melania Trump, Jeffrey Epstein, and Ghislaine Maxwell at Mar-a-Lago, Palm Beach, Fla. is seen. A photo from Feb. 12, 2000, featuring Donald Trump, Melania Trump, Jeffrey Epstein, and Ghislaine Maxwell at Mar-a-Lago, Palm Beach, Fla. is not elsewhere. At various times Trump has held up as his exemplars both Russia under Vladimir Putin and Hungary under Victor Orban. Yet Russia's economy under Vladimir Putin turned into a kleptocracy benefiting his friends while the rest of the country got poverty and war. While Orban engages in crony capitalism and crushes the rule of law, his country's economy is a basket case. Donald Trump wants their sort of power for the same ends. It's about extracting money. This past week, Trump's corrupt pursuits continued with a disgrace that should be burned into the conscience of everyone in Washington and the nation too. The CBS bribery transaction is now complete. Just before his election, Trump sued CBS seeking money for himself over a segment he said made Kamala Harris look too good. The lawsuit was widely denounced as a joke. But pending before the federal government since September 2024 was an application to transfer to Skydance the CBS news licenses of CBS' parent company, Paramount. While the suit continued, the application languished—for almost a year. Meanwhile, the head of the FCC revived and pursued an investigation of alleged CBS wrongdoing while CBS negotiated with Trump's personal attorneys. And then, wham! On July 2, 2025, CBS announced that it would give Donald Trump $16 million for his library to settle the lawsuit. On July 14, CBS late-night host Stephen Colbert described the CBS payment as a bribe. The next day, Skydance CEO David Ellison met with FCC Chairman Brendan Carr. We don't know what passed between them, but just two days later CBS chose that particular moment to announce that for "purely a financial decision" it would soon cancel Colbert's show, the most popular show in late-night television. And now we know that the bribery worked. One week after Colbert was fired and a few weeks after the $16 million was agreed, the FCC announced that the CBS license transfer was approved. As Sherlock Holmes might have put it, the connection is "elementary, my dear Watson." It's too bad that economic news dominated headlines rather than the consummation of the most obvious presidential crime in history. It follows lesser Trump crimes involving extortion of money using frivolous lawsuits against ABC and Facebook, and may be joined by payoffs from Trump's latest victims, Rupert Murdoch and The Wall Street Journal. These join a six-lane highway of money flowing to Trump from other dubious directions ranging from bitcoin to bibles. All this accompanies news this week that Trump's former personal attorney and now Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche had a nine-hour talk with Jeffrey Epstein partner and convicted sex trafficker, Ghislaine Maxwell. Was the meeting to get at the truth or to get at Maxwell? Place your bets, but we know that after the interview, with talk of pardon in the air and the DOJ continuing its refusal to release the Epstein files, Maxwell was transferred to a more comfortable minimum-security prison which normally has no room for her kind. Meanwhile, Trump has directed Texas Republicans to try to rig the next congressional election by redrawing the lines for districts in Texas to push Democratic representatives out of the House of Representatives. Texas officials were reluctant, but now they're doing it despite a walkout by local Democratic legislators. Republican Dustin Burrows, Speaker of the Texas House, recently said he's ready to arrest Democrats who stand in their way. But this week in corruption can still end on an economic note. Trump responded to lower-than-expected job numbers by firing for corruption the non-partisan expert in charge of job numbers. This gives him the chance now to hire someone who is actually corrupt and will give him numbers he likes. So, remember, it's not the disappointing job numbers that should upset us. It's not inflation or the tariffs. It's the corruption. It's the corruption. Thomas G. Moukawsher is a former Connecticut complex litigation judge and a former co-chair of the American Bar Association Committee on Employee Benefits. He is the author of the book, The Common Flaw: Needless Complexity in the Courts and 50 Ways to Reduce It. The views expressed in this article are the writer's own.

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