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As Cavazos-Garcia prepares to leave, she said she is proud to see that TUSD is on an "upward trajectory." Contact reporter Alexis Huicochea at [email protected] or 573-4175.
Cavazos died at age 88 in San Antonio on Oct. 29, 2017. Shortly before leaving office in January, President Joe Biden posthumously awarded him the Medal of Honor at a White House ceremony.
Suspected MS-13 gangbanger Kilmar Abrego Garcia was paid up to $1,500 per smuggling trip and may have raked in more than $100,000 annually trafficking humans, including minors, according to witnesses.
The first day of a pretrial hearing for alleged MS-13 gang member Kilmar Abrego Garcia recessed after nearly six hours Friday. The judge has yet to rule on keeping him in custody.
The family of the late U.S Army Gen. Richard Cavazos spoke out this week on the redesignation of Fort Cavazos back to Fort Hood, a move the Army explained on Tuesday as honoring World War I and II ...
Richard Cavazos was a decorated war veteran In addition to being the Army's first Hispanic four-star general, Gen. Cavazos, a Texas native, was a decorated veteran of the Korean and Vietnam wars.
Abrego Garcia, of course, is the man who was mistakenly deported to the notorious CECOT prison in El Salvador despite a judge’s order that he couldn’t be deported there.
Donald Trump President Trump responds to return of alleged gang member Kilmar Abrego Garcia to US Trump expressed confidence in the DOJ, saying, 'I think their decisions have been very, very good.' ...
Then, Abrego Garcia was stopped on Interstate 40 in Putnam County, Tennessee. Contrary to the early reports, the indictment says he had nine, not eight, passengers with him.
Kilmar Abrego Garcia has been charged by the Trump administration with transporting illegal immigrants into the United States. The federal charges unsealed Friday stem from a traffic stop in 2022.
As a boy in El Salvador, Abrego García feared gangs, avoided recruitment Abrego García studied alongside gang members. But he showed “very good conduct,” according to his school.
Model, activist, and filmmaker Nyle DiMarco talks about his own college days ("I was a bit of an immature party-head") & why the lessons of 'Deaf President Now!' must be remembered.