A family sits shattered, after a brother stands accused of killing his sister, restraining his significant other and stabbing himself early last week.
Photo: Montgomery County detectives work a scene where they say Jordan Boijseauneau, 19, beat his sister to death, tied his girlfriend up and stabbed himself several times. He was released from the hospital July 26 and is in the Montgomery County Jail on $500,000 bond. (Tribune Photo/Caleb Harris)
Jordan Abel Boijseauneau, 19, of Hockley, is now in the Montgomery County Jail on charges that he beat his sister, Estephani Boijseauneau to death at their family home on Marshburn in the Glenwood area, July 24.
Montgomery County sheriff’s deputies, Magnolia Police and Montgomery County Precinct 5 deputy constables all responded to a 911 call from a neighbor who said Jordan’s 15-year-old girlfriend had escaped the home by cutting through duct tape restraints. She told detectives she had been held for nearly three hours. “The suspect’s girlfriend was in the house at the time,” Montgomery County Sheriff’s Lt. Bill Bucks said. “She escaped the residence and called police.”
Officers found the body of Estephani Boijseauneau just inside the home’s front door. Detectives said she had been beaten throughout the house, by unknown objects.
They made a quick sweep of the home and determined that Jordan had fled the scene. A short time later they found a man inside an abandoned home nearby, but determined it was not the suspect.
After another search of the home, deputies found Jordan underneath a pile of clothes in a closet. He was suffering from self-inflicted stab wounds and was under the influence of some unnamed drugs, according to detectives. He was rushed to the hospital, treated and jailed on Thursday afternoon. Family members sat at the scene in complete shock. “They’re obviously devastated,” Bucks said. “They lost one child to a murder and another who is in custody for it.”
Jordan Boijseauneau was recently released from the Harris County Jail, on charges of sexual assault of a minor. Police sources believe that the minor was the same 15-year-old who escaped from Jordan.
According to Tomball detective A. Chambers, Jordan Boijseauneau was caught engaging in sexual activity by Tomball patrol officers, May 12.
“The patrol officers drove up on a suspicious vehicle at Jeurgens Park, made contact and observed Jordan and a 15-year-old female in sexual activity,” Chambers said. “He lied about his age and told officers he was 16.”
Jordan was arrested at the scene and charged with Sexual Assault of a Minor and Failure to Identify. He later posted a $30,000 bond.
Jordan’s Facebook page shows a smiling couple, who he says is his girlfriend, however some law enforcement sources told the Tribune that the pair had recently traveled to Mexico to marry, after Jordan was freed from the Harris County Jail.
Notes from various friends and relatives posted to Jordan’s Facebook page, expressing sadness and also encouragement for the suspect.
The following comment is one of several posted to his Facebook page and is not edited for content or grammar.
“Hey cousin. (Our) family had been watching the news a lot lately (and) words getting out of the situation that occurred. I know this must be hard for you to wake up in the hospital and realize what you have done to Estephani, but like I said earlier today -- no matter what happens or happened we are family and we will stay strong (with our) head up for fighting for your sister and stand by you. That wasn’t you I know and the family and friends know the drugs (took) control,” the comment stated.
Jordan Boijseauneau’s bond was set at $500,000. As of press time his first court appearance had not been set.
WASHINGTON (AP) — The Obama administration, roiled by the first killing of a U.S. ambassador in more than 30 years, is investigating whether the assault on the U.S. consulate in Libya was a planned terrorist strike to mark the anniversary of the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks and not a spontaneous mob enraged over an anti-Islam YouTube video
President Barack Obama vowed in a Rose Garden address that the U.S. would "work with the Libyan government to bring to justice" those who killed Ambassador Chris Stevens and three other Americans. Intelligence officials said the attack on the Benghazi consulate was "too coordinated or professional to be spontaneous," according to a U.S. counterterrorism official.
The official spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to discuss the incident publicly.
National Security Council spokesman Tommy Vietor said it would be premature to "ascribe any motive to this reprehensible act."
The attack, which came hours after a mob stormed the U.S. Embassy in Cairo and tore down the U.S. flag, was presumed to have been triggered by a movie, whose trailer has gone viral on YouTube, depicting the Islamic prophet Muhammad in disrespectful ways. In an extraordinary move, Gen. Martin Dempsey, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, called anti-Islamic preacher Terry Jones and asked him to stop promoting the film. A spokeswoman said the church would not show the film Wednesday evening.
"Make no mistake. Justice will be done," a somber Obama pledged at the White House, Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton at his side.
He ordered increased security at U.S. diplomatic missions overseas, particularly in Libya, and said he condemned "in the strongest possible terms the outrageous and shocking" attack. Clinton said she was particularly appalled that the attack took place in Benghazi, which the U.S. had helped liberate from dictator Moammar Gadhafi during the Arab Spring revolution in Libya this year.
The aftermath of the two attacks also stirred the U.S. presidential campaign, where until Wednesday, foreign policy had taken a back seat to the struggling economy.
Obama spoke shortly after the Republican presidential nominee, Mitt Romney, criticized the administration for statements issued before and after the Cairo attacks that expressed sympathy for those insulted by the video.
"I also believe the administration was wrong to stand by a statement sympathizing with those who had breached our embassy in Egypt instead of condemning their actions," Romney told a morning news conference. "It's never too early for the United States government to condemn attacks on Americans and to defend our values."
Obama and Clinton made a rare joint visit to the State Department, where grieving colleagues of Stevens and the other three Americans killed in Benghazi gathered in a courtyard. The president also ordered U.S. flags to be flown at half-staff at government and military buildings and vessels around the world until sunset on Sept. 16. Flags had already been lowered in many places to commemorate the victims of the 9/11 attacks.
Clinton denounced those who might kill over an insulting movie.
"There is no justification for this," Clinton said. "None. Violence like this is no way to honor religion or faith and as long as there are those who would take innocent life in the name of God, the world will never know a true and lasting peace."
Underscoring the administration's frustration, Clinton wondered aloud about the attack in Benghazi, which Gadhafi had once threatened to destroy.
"This is not easy," she said. "Today, many Americans are asking, indeed I asked myself, how could this happen? How could this happen in a country we helped liberate, in a city we helped save from destruction? This question reflects just how complicated and, at times, just how confounding, the world can be."
"But we must be clear-eyed in our grief," she said, saying the attack was carried out by a "small and savage group" not representative of the Libyan people. She noted that Libyan security guards had tried to fight off the attackers, had carried Stevens' body to the hospital and led other consulate employees to safety. Several of the Libyan guards also were killed.
Stevens, a 52-year-old career diplomat, was killed when he and a group of U.S. employees went to the consulate to try to evacuate staff as the building came under attack by a mob wielding guns and rocket propelled grenades. Stevens is the first U.S. ambassador to be killed in an attack since 1979, when Ambassador Adolph Dubs was killed in Afghanistan.
Three other Americans were also killed and the State Department identified one of them as Sean Smith, an Air Force veteran who had worked as an information management officer for 10 years in posts such as Brussels, Baghdad and Pretoria. Smith was also well-known in the video game community.
The identities of the others were being withheld pending notification of relatives.
"The mission that drew Chris and Sean and their colleagues to Libya is both noble and necessary, and we and the people of Libya honor their memory by carrying it forward," Clinton said.
U.S. officials said some 50 Marines were being sent to Libya to reinforce security at U.S. diplomatic facilities.
Stevens spoke Arabic and French and had already served two tours in Libya, including running the office in Benghazi during the revolt against Gadhafi. He was confirmed as ambassador to Libya by the Senate earlier this year.
Associated Press writers Jim Kuhnhenn, Kimberly Dozier and Lolita Baldor contributed to this report.
Copyright 2012 The Associated Press.
BENGHAZI, Libya (AP) — A mob armed with guns and grenades launched a fiery attack on the U.S. Consulate, killing the U.S. ambassador to Libya and three other Americans. President Barack Obama strongly condemned the violence, vowed Wednesday to bring the killers to justice and tightened security at diplomatic posts around the world.
The attack that killed Ambassador Chris Stevens — the first U.S. ambassador to die in the line of duty since 1979 — came on Tuesday's 11th anniversary of the Sept. 11 terrorist strike and presented a new foreign policy crisis for the United States in a region trying to recover from months of upheaval.
While the deadly assault was initially blamed on an anti-Islamic YouTube video, U.S. officials say the Obama administration is also investigating whether it was a planned terrorist strike to mark the anniversary of 9/11. Intelligence officials said the attack on the Benghazi consulate was too coordinated or professional to be spontaneous, according to a U.S. counterterrorism official who spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to discuss the incident publicly.
Libya's interim president, Mohammed el-Megarif, apologized for what he called the "cowardly" assault on the consulate, which also killed several Libyan security guards in the eastern city. Just before the Benghazi violence, protests also flared in Egypt, where crowds angry over the film climbed the walls of the U.S. Embassy in Cairo and tore down an American flag, which they replaced briefly with a black, Islamist flag.
The demonstrators in Cairo cited an obscure movie made in the United States by a filmmaker who calls Islam a "cancer." Video excerpts posted on YouTube depict the Prophet Muhammad as a fraud, a womanizer and a madman in an overtly ridiculing way, showing him having sex and calling for massacres.
The brazen embassy assaults — the first on U.S. diplomatic facilities in Libya and Egypt — were signs of the lawlessness that has taken hold in the two countries after revolutions ousted their autocratic secular regimes and upended the tightly controlled police state. Islamists have emerged as powerful forces, and security forces have largely broken down.
In Libya, the volatility is further compounded by the wide availability of heavy weapons and the numerous armed militia factions that remain more powerful than security forces. Notably, an Islamic militant group known as the Omar Abdel-Rahman Brigades claimed responsibility in June for a bomb that went off outside the same U.S. Consulate in Benghazi, causing no injuries. The group at the time said the bombing was in retaliation for the killing of al-Qaida's then-number two, Abu Yahya al-Libi in a U.S. drone strike in Pakistan.
Stevens, 52, died as he and a group of embassy employees went to the consulate to try to evacuate staff during the attack late Tuesday by a mob of protesters, including gunmen armed with machine guns and rocket-propelled grenade, attacked.
The crowd, which numbered several thousand strong, moved on the consulate, firing in the air outside the compound. The consulate is a one-story villa located in a fenced garden in downtown Benghazi. A small contingent of Libyan security forces protecting the facility also fired in the air, trying to intimidate them, said Wanis el-Sharef, the deputy interior minister of Libya's eastern region.
But faced with the mob's superior size and firepower, the Libyan security withdrew, el-Sharef said. Gunmen stormed the building, looted its contents and torch it, he said.
By the end of the assault, much of the building was burned out and trashed. On Wednesday, Libyans wandered freely around the burned-out building, taking photos of rooms where furniture was covered in soot and overturned. Walls were scrawled with graffiti.
Details of how the Americans were killed were still being pieced together Wednesday. But according to al-Sharef's account, two distinct attacks took place.
Al-Sharef said Stevens and a consulate staffer who had stayed behind in the building were killed in the initial attack on the consulate.
The rest of the staff successfully evacuated to another building nearby, preparing to move to Benghazi Airport after daybreak to fly to the capital, Tripoli, he said.
Hours after the storming of the consulate, a separate group of gunmen attacked the other building, opening fire on the more than 30 Americans and Libyans inside. Two more Americans were killed and 32 wounded — 14 Americans and 18 Libyans, he said.
There was no immediate confirmation of al-Sharef's account.
Dr. Ziad Abu Zeid, who treated Stevens, told The Associated Press that he died of asphyxiation, apparently from smoke. In a sign of the chaos during the attack, Stevens was brought by Libyans to the Benghazi Medical Center with no other Americans, and no one at the facility knew who he was, Abu Zeid said.
Stevens was practically dead when he arrived before 1 a.m. Wednesday, and "we tried to revive him for an hour and a half, but with no success," Abu Zeid said. The ambassador was bleeding in his stomach because of the asphyxiation but had no other injuries, he said.
The State Department identified one of the other Americans killed as Sean Smith, a foreign service information management officer. The identities of the others were being withheld pending notification of next of kin.
"I strongly condemn the outrageous attack on our diplomatic facility in Benghazi," Obama said in Washington, adding the four Americans "exemplified America's commitment to freedom, justice, and partnership with nations and people around the globe."
Obama ordered increased security to protect American diplomatic personnel around world.
"Make no mistake we will work with the Libyan government to bring to justice the killers who attacked our people," he said.
Obama added: "We reject all efforts to denigrate the religious beliefs of others, but there is absolutely no justification for this type of senseless violence, none."
Stevens was a career diplomat who spoke Arabic and French and had already served two tours in Libya, including running the office in Benghazi during the revolt against Gadhafi. He was confirmed as ambassador to Libya by the Senate earlier this year.
Before Tuesday, five U.S. ambassadors had been killed in the line of duty, the last being Adolph Dubs in Afghanistan in 1979, according to the State Department.
El-Megarif offered his condolences to the U.S. and also vowed to bring the culprits to justice and maintain close relations with Washington.
"We extend our apology to America, the American people and the whole world," el-Megarif said.
In Benghazi, the bloodshed stunned many Libyans, especially since Stevens was popular among many factions and politicians, including Islamists, and seen as a supporter of their uprising last year against longtime dictator Moammar Gahdafi.
The leader of Ansar al-Shariah, an armed ultraconservative Islamist group, denied any involvement in the attack.
"We never approve of killing civilians, especially those who helped us (like Ambassador Stevens)," said Youssef Jihani. "We are well-educated and religious."
The violence raised worries that further protests could break out around the Muslim world as knowledge of the anti-Islam movie spread.
So far, the reaction was limited.
About 50 protesters burned American flags outside the U.S. Embassy in Tunisia's capital Wednesday but were kept away from the building by reinforced security. And in Gaza City, dozens of protesters carrying swords, axes and black flags chanted "Shame on everyone who insults the prophet." The rally was organized by supporters of a militant group aligned with the ruling Hamas movement.
In Cairo, some 200 Islamists staged a second day of protest outside the U.S. Embassy on Wednesday, but there was no repeat of the previous day's scaling the embassy walls.
"Obama we are all Osama," chanted some of the bearded ultraconservatives, alluding to the al-Qaida leader Osama bin Laden.
Mahmoud Mohammed, a 25-year-old factory worker, demanded a U.S. apology for the offending film and the prosecution of those behind it. "They violated the honor of the prophet and his wives, and made him out to be sex crazed. This is nonsense," he said.
The uproar over the film also poses a new test for Egypt's new Islamist president, Mohammed Morsi, who has yet to personally condemn the riot outside the U.S. Embassy in Cairo or say anything about the offending film. Many of the protesters demanded he speak out against the movie.
His spokesman, Yasser Ali, condemned the film. While the government is responsible for the security of foreign diplomatic missions, he said, it guarantees the right of peaceful protests.
"However, the state will deal firmly with any irresponsible attempts to break the law," he said.
Egypt's top prosecutor, meanwhile, has placed the names of 10 Christian Egyptians living abroad on the list of arrest-on-arrival at the nation's airports. The 10 include two clerics and a well-known, U.S.-based Christian activist who is promoting the offending film.
If arrested, the 10 would be questioned on allegations of showing contempt to religion and could possibly be charged and tried.
Afghanistan's government sought to avert an outbreak of protests. President Hamid Karzai condemned the movie, which he describes as "inhuman and insulting." Authorities also temporarily shut down access to YouTube, the video-sharing site where excerpts of the movie were posted, said Aimal Marjan, general director of Information Technology at the Ministry of Communications.
The two-hour movie that sparked the protests, titled "Innocence of Muslims," came to attention in Egypt after its trailer was dubbed into Arabic and posted on YouTube.
A man identifying himself as Sam Bacile, a 56-year-old California real estate developer, said he wrote, produced and directed the movie.
He told the AP he was an Israeli Jew and an American citizen. But Israeli officials said they had not heard of Bacile and there was no record of him being a citizen. They spoke on condition of anonymity because they are not permitted to share personal information with the media.
Separately, the film was being promoted by an extreme anti-Muslim Egyptian Christian campaigner in the United States.
Michael reported from Cairo. Associated Press writer Esam Mohamed in Tripoli, Matthew Lee in Washington, Joseph Federman in Jerusalem and Sarah El Deeb in Cairo contributed to this report.
Copyright 2012 The Associated Press.
An illegal immigrant has pleaded guilty in a Harris County court to murdering a woman in 2003 and leaving her body in wooded area in Tomball, but the victim’s family is upset about the sentence.
Joel Guadalupe Sanchez, 34, pleaded guilty in Judge Susan Brown’s courtroom Sept. 12, after a plea bargain was reached with Harris County prosecutors. Brown sentenced Sanchez to 10 years behind bars.
Tomball investigators were able to tie Sanchez to the murder of Sandra Williams last year, after a state DNA check received a hit from evidence entered by the Tomball Police Department.
Williams’s body was found by a witness who had been flying a remote control plane around the 900 block of Persimmon. The witness notified Tomball Police.
Williams’s body was savagely beaten and she was tied up. A sledgehammer with her blood was found nearby.
“The body was bound and it appeared there was trauma to the head,” Tomball detective Gary Hammond said. “We recovered DNA off the body.”
After forensic evidence was collected, Hammond tried to find out information about the victim and her connection to Tomball. He hit a brick wall.
“It was very difficult,” he said. “No one could give me a tie to the Tomball area.”
Hammond kept in touch with the victim’s mother Lula Washington and the victim’s daughter Crystal Williams, even as the case grew cold over the years. Both of the family members reside in North Carolina.
“I told (Washington) at the beginning that we would find the person responsible and she reminded me of that every time we talked,” Hammond said.
The case remained cold until 2010, when Hammond received a phone call that a prison inmate, who underwent required DNA testing, had come back as a match to DNA found at the crime scene. That inmate was Joel Sanchez.
Hammond then went to the prison unit where Sanchez was incarcerated and obtained a saliva sample. That DNA test also proved a match.
“He said he didn’t know (the victim),” Hammond recalled. “Saying you don’t know someone isn’t a plausible reason for why their DNA was found on the victims body.”
Another break came when the girlfriend of one of Williams acquaintances said that Sanchez came to their home looking for Williams.
“She said that (Sanchez) came by their house looking for Williams,” Hammond said. “He was really mad because she had taken his car and had not returned it.”
A connection to Tomball was established when Hammond learned that Sanchez had family that lived near the crime scene.
That evidence was enough to pursue charges of murder against Sanchez last May.
Sanchez’ lawyer, Monica Gonzales, said the decision to plead guilty was his alone.
“He pled guilty,” Gonzales said. “The evidence against him was only circumstantial, but it was his choice to plead guilty.”
While Williams’ family is satisfied that their loved one’s killer was caught, they are upset with the Harris County District Attorney’s Office nonetheless.
“At least they got the person that did it,” Washington said. “I thought he should do more years though.”
Both Washington and Williams said no one from the district attorney’s office contacted them to ask about the plea bargain, or to tell them when a court date would be.
“I thought they would call because we planned to be there, but we didn’t hear anything from them,” Washington said. “The only way I found out is because Mr. Hammond called to tell us.”
“I want to know why he killed her,” she added. “Why did he do the things he did to her?”
Williams agreed with her grandmother.
“He didn’t just shoot my mom,” she said. “He brutally murdered her and gets 10 years? It’s not right. They knew that I kept up with the case all these years and they never contacted me.”
She blames the system for several cracks, including that Sanchez is an illegal immigrant.
“This dude --- this illegal immigrant --- he’s a terrorist too,” she said. “He came here, killed a United States citizen and he will be out by the time I’m 35.”
The district attorney’s office did not return repeated calls for comment before press time.
“I would like to know how he knew my mom and why he did what he did,” Williams said. “My mom has three grandchildren she will never meet.”
HOUSTON (AP) — A Houston woman has been charged with killing her spouse during an argument that included her daughter.
Police say 46-year-old Dedra Jackson was being held Monday on a murder charge. The case involves Saturday night's fatal shooting of 44-year-old Nathaniel Jackson at a residence.
Police say Dedra Jackson had a confrontation with her 22-year-old daughter and her husband was shot when he tried to intervene. Nathaniel Jackson was dead at the scene.
Bond has been set at $75,000 for Dedra Jackson. Online jail records did not list an attorney for the woman, who was booked on Sunday.
Copyright 2012 The Associated Press.
HOUSTON (AP) — Houston police say a dispute over one dancer bumping another led to gunfire that left three men dead and three women wounded.
Police on Tuesday appealed to the public to provide information in the search for the gunman.
Police say the incident began early Sunday inside Club ICU then moved to the parking lot where a fight broke out.
Police spokesman John Cannon says the initial dispute was over one woman bumping the other while both were on the dance floor.
Police identified the three men who died as 38-year-old Gilbert Kibble, 22-year-old Curtis Stewart and 26-year-old Felipe Castillo. Names of the three women who were wounded haven't been released.
Cannon says police are trying to determine whether the two women who originally argued were among the three injured females.
Copyright 2012 The Associated Press.
Harris County Sheriff's Office investigators are seeking the public's help in identifying and locating a person of interest. The man is wanted for questioning in the Nov. 12, 2012 shooting death of
Coty Beavers, 28, at his northwest Harris County apartment.
Working from information provided by an eyewitness, an artist has sketched a likeness of the subject – a man with dark hair and thick dark eyebrows, wearing eyeglasses.
The man was seen asking about Beavers at the Legacy Park Apartments, 10801 Legacy Park Drive, a few days before Beavers was shot multiple times at the complex.
Beavers was the twin brother of Cory Beavers, who had been the boyfriend of Gelareh Bagherzadeh, 30. She was shot to death while driving to her townhouse in the Galleria area of Houston, reportedly after visiting Cory Beavers. Bagherzadeh was an outspoken critic of the government of Iran, where she was born.
Her killing is being investigated by the Houston Police Department. Investi-gators with HPD and HCSO have disclosed no evidence linking the killings of Coty Beavers and Bagherzadeh.
Anyone with information about the subject should call the Sheriff's Office Homicide Division at 713-967-5810 or Crime Stoppers of Houston at 713-222-TIPS.
EDINBURG, Texas (AP) — A South Texas man must serve life in prison without parole for killing his common-law wife and her 12-year-old sister in a fight over his drug use.
A judge in Edinburg on Wednesday accepted the guilty plea from 24-year-old Raul Garza of Weslaco.
Garza pleaded guilty to capital murder of multiple persons in the May attack. The plea deal means Garza avoids a possible death penalty.
The victims were Veronica Serrano Rivera and her little sister, Elisa Rivera. The girl allegedly was raped during the deadly attack.
Deputies on May 6 found the bodies at Garza's home after his 5- and 6-year-old daughters were wandering nearby and one told a passer-by: "My mother is dead."
Authorities have said the argument that led to the killings was over Garza's cocaine abuse.
Copyright 2012 The Associated Press.
MCKINNEY, Texas (AP) — The mother of a North Texas fitness instructor found dead in a field says the victim's ex-boyfriend seemed obsessed with her.
Testimony began Monday in the McKinney trial of Terrance Deering Black. He's charged with capital murder in the slaying of Susan Loper of Frisco. Her beaten body was found April 20, 2011, in a Frisco field near a highway.
Catherine Miller was the first witness and she described to jurors how Black gave her daughter expensive gifts.
Prosecutors opened their case by saying Black had a fixation on Loper. The defense said police should have spent more time investigating other suspects, including the victim's most recent boyfriend.
Black was arrested in Arizona, several days after the victim's body was found, when he jumped into the Grand Canyon.
Copyright 2012 The Associated Press.
BISHOP, Texas (AP) — A South Texas man has been charged with killing two men and wounding another in an alleged dispute over child discipline.
Nueces County Jail records show 23-year-old Noe Salinas of Bishop was being held without bond Monday. Salinas is charged with capital murder of multiple persons and aggravated assault with a deadly weapon.
No attorney was listed for Salinas, who was arrested after Sunday's gunfire.
Bishop police Chief Larry Lawrence says Salinas and 22-year-old Juan Arnulfo Casso each apparently has a child with the same woman. Salinas allegedly disciplined the other man's daughter and Casso confronted him.
Casso and 32-year-old Mario Lee Briones were killed. A third man with them has non-life threatening injuries.
Investigators recovered a gun from a nearby roof.
Bishop is 30 miles southwest of Corpus Christi.
Copyright 2012 The Associated Press.
Alcohol suspected in fatal Magnolia area crash
Magnolia woman charged with embezzlement
Tomball clean up week deemed a success
Tomball Rails n Tails Mudbug festival draws record crowd
Organizations focus on how residents can survive emergencies
Students preparing for annual Tomball FFA show
Written on Tuesday 22 January 2013
Real prosperity starts at Tomball Chamber business seminar, Sept. 21
Written on Tuesday 4 September 2012
Local biker group BACA strives to prevent child abuse
Written on Friday 11 January 2013
Tomball Boy Scout earns rare scouting honor
Written on Tuesday 4 September 2012
I saw both Luca and…
Written by Mike Hoff
2012-08-07 18:28:45
AAR Pet of the Week for Aug. 6
(Community Briefs)
I don't get it. In…
Written by Mike Hoff
2012-08-07 18:20:30
Magnolia council looks at changing tax rate
(Top News)
that is awesome, You go…
Written by Lynn Wood
2012-08-06 21:17:18
Magnolia girl wins big at Pinto World Show
(Community Briefs)
We used to own property…
Written by Tiffany
2012-08-03 19:21:14
Waller County neighborhood battling developer
(Top News)
Its about time we see…
Written by Rob Carter
2012-08-02 22:33:59
Lacrosse is a booming sport in Magnolia
(Sports)
Alcohol suspected in fatal Magnolia area crash
Written on Tuesday 14 May 2013
Magnolia woman charged with embezzlement
Written on Tuesday 14 May 2013
Tomball clean up week deemed a success
Written on Tuesday 14 May 2013
Tomball Rails n Tails Mudbug festival draws record crowd
Written on Tuesday 14 May 2013