
Dallas police respond to accident near elementary school
Dallas police are investigating an accident that occurred outside Felix G. Botello Elementary School in Oak Cliff.
The incident was reported just after 3:30 p.m. in the 200 block of Marsalis Avenue.
Authorities are currently on the scene.
Marsalis Avenue near the school has been closed.
This is a developing story. CBS News Texas will provide updates as more information becomes available.
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Associated Press
27 minutes ago
- Associated Press
Raids in Southern California rattle immigrant communities — including those in the US legally
LOS ANGELES (AP) — Jacob Vasquez began working at a clothing warehouse in Los Angeles soon after arriving from Mexico less than three years ago. He is among dozens of workers detained by federal immigration authorities in a series of raids in LA's fashion district and at Home Depot parking lots in Southern California. More than 100 people have been detained. The raids have triggered days of turbulent protests across the city and beyond and led President Donald Trump to deploy National Guard troops and Marines to the LA area, the latest development in the administration's immigration crackdown. Protests in the city's downtown have ranged from peaceful to raucous, with demonstrators blocking a major freeway and setting cars on fire over the weekend. Immigrant advocates say the workers who were detained do not have criminal histories and are being denied their due process rights. Vasquez has a three-month-old baby, according to his family who spoke to reporters outside the Ambiance Apparel warehouse, a clothing company founded in 1999, and where the young father worked. 'Jacob is a family man and the sole breadwinner of his household,' said his brother Gabriel, speaking in Spanish during a news conference Monday. He doesn't know if he's OK, he later said in an interview. 'We don't know where he is.' About 10% of LA County residents do not have legal immigration status Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass denounced the raids and the deployment of troops, saying Tuesday that the actions were aimed at intimidating the area's vast immigrant population, one of the country's largest. She said she has heard even immigrants with legal status are being swept up and that the raids may continue for months. An estimated 950,000 people in Los Angeles County do not have legal immigration status, according to the Migration Policy Institute. That is about a tenth of the county's population, and they include cooks, nannies, hotel employees, street vendors, gardeners, construction workers and garment workers. 'Families across the city are terrified,' Bass said. 'They don't know if they should go to work, they don't know if they should go to school.' She said many of those detained have had no contact with their loved ones or lawyers. The raids have only fueled unrest in the city, Bass said. 'They were going to go after violent felons, drug dealers, and I don't know how that matches with the scenes that we saw of people outside Home Depot running through the parking lot, because they were afraid that they were going to get arrested,' she said. Saraí Ortiz said her father, Jose, worked for Ambiance for 18 years. 'It was really painful to see him arrested on Friday with his co-workers,' she told the crowd in Spanish. A judge signed a search warrant that there was probable cause to conclude that Ambiance was using fake documents for some workers, said Ciaran McEvoy, a spokesperson for the U.S. attorney's office in Los Angeles. The U.S. Department of Homeland Security has not shared details about the arrests. 'Ambience Apparel has never created any fictitious documents for its workers,' Benjamin N. Gluck, an attorney representing the company, said in a statement. 'The company obeys, and continues to obey, all applicable laws. We support our workforce, many of whom have worked faithfully for the company for decades.' The Trump administration did not respond to emails from The Associated Press asking about whether any of the immigrants detained in the raids had criminal records. Day laborer makes sure to show his green card Los Angeles is one of the nation's largest garment-production hubs with more than 45,000 workers, mostly Latino and Asian immigrants, who cut, sew and finish the clothing, according to the Garment Worker Center. The raids are deepening fears far beyond LA and even among those who are in the country legally, immigrants said. Jot Condie, president and chief executive of the California Restaurant Association, said the fear is keeping away workers and hurting businesses. In LA County last year, food and drink services were a $30 billion industry. Outside a Home Depot in Santa Ana, California, about 30 miles (48 kilometers) southeast of Los Angeles, a handful of day laborers leaned against their cars waiting to be hired Tuesday, a day after armed Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers drove up and sent many of the workers running. Junior Ortega, 43, said he saw four people arrested by ICE, while others fled on foot or jumped into a car and peeled out of the parking lot before they were caught. 'They came out with guns, (saying) 'don't move,' '' Ortega said in Spanish. By then, the Honduran citizen who has lived nearly three decades in the U.S. said he had already taken out his green card to avoid making any sudden moves should agents approach him. One of the agents did, and while holding a gun, demanded to see his ID, Ortega said. After he showed it, he said the agent let him go. The day laborer said he recently started carrying not only his driver's license but his green card with him. While he is not directly affected by the immigration raids, Ortega said they still weigh on him and his children. 'Why don't they go and follow the gang members?' he said. 'They are coming for people who do things for the country, who pay taxes.' _____ Taxin reported from Santa Ana, California. Associated Press writer Julie Watson contributed to this report from San Diego, California.


New York Times
28 minutes ago
- New York Times
Armed National Guard Troops Aid Immigration Agents on Raids in Los Angeles
Armed National Guard troops mobilized by President Trump accompanied federal immigration enforcement officers on raids in Los Angeles on Tuesday, a move that the state of California has called unlawful and inflammatory. Tricia McLaughlin, a spokeswoman for the Department of Homeland Security, confirmed Tuesday evening that the National Guard was accompanying Immigration and Customs Enforcement officials on their operations. The Trump administration deployed nearly 5,000 National Guard troops and Marines to the Los Angeles area to stop protests. The deployment enraged officials in California, who filed lawsuits asking the court to intervene in what they called was illegal and provocative. Earlier in the evening, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth posted a photo of what appeared to be military personnel with rifles standing with ICE officers on social media. 'This We'll Defend,' he wrote. ICE also posted images on social media of officers detaining individuals while being surrounded by National Guard members who could be identified by the insignia on their uniforms. A federal judge in California set a hearing for Thursday afternoon on the state's request to restrict the federal government's use of military personnel in Los Angeles in law enforcement, limiting them only to protecting federal property. The state also demanded an emergency order by Tuesday afternoon declaring that the Marines and other troops could not accompany immigration agents on raids or perform other law enforcement activities, such as operating checkpoints. The judge, Charles S. Breyer, declined to meet the deadline.


CBS News
33 minutes ago
- CBS News
Families sue Millsap ISD over alleged abuse of special needs students
Three families have filed a federal lawsuit against Millsap Independent School District and several educators, alleging abuse of their children with special needs in a special education classroom. The lawsuit, filed Tuesday, names the district along with four individuals, including special education teacher Jennifer Dale, paraprofessional Paxton Bean, former superintendent Edie Martin, and elementary school principal Roxie Carter. Alleged abuse caught on camera Video provided to CBS News Texas The legal action stems from a February incident captured on video, which appears to show Dale striking 10-year-old Alex Cornelius, a student with autism. In the same footage, Bean is seen throwing an object at Alex and yelling at him. "That's the only way I can think of it — traumatizing," said Alex's mother, Carissa Cornelius. "I'm having nightmares. He's having nightmares. Just because I can't trust anybody." Arrests and resignations In March, Dale was arrested on a charge of official oppression. Bean and Martin were arrested on felony charges. Carter, who is Bean's mother, is not facing criminal charges but is named in the lawsuit. According to an email sent to parents, Carter has resigned as principal effective June 30. Pattern of abuse alleged Attorney Wesley Gould, who is representing the families, said the abuse extended beyond Alex. "What makes it so unique is that it didn't stop there," Gould said. "This went all the way up the food chain — to the superintendent, to the principal. The board was aware of it, and you have these people in a position to make changes and stop the abuse, but their hearts and minds weren't there." The lawsuit alleges that other children were subjected to similar treatment, including being locked in unlit closets for extended periods, physically assaulted, and verbally abused. A long road to healing Cornelius said her son has been slowly recovering, spending time in the pool and becoming more vocal. She hopes the lawsuit will provide resources for additional support — but emphasized that the case is about more than compensation. "It's about the change in activity or the change in attitude that needs to occur," said Alex's grandfather, Mark Allen. "I hope that he can heal from all of the trauma and learn to trust people again," Cornelius added. "And I hope that those teachers are never allowed around another child. Period." Mom: "My daughter deserves better" Victoria Garcia, a parent involved in the federal lawsuit, expressed deep disappointment and heartbreak over the alleged abuse of her daughter, who has cognitive disabilities. She described verbal threats and mistreatment by educators, emphasizing the district's failure to protect vulnerable students. She also condemned the alleged cover-up by school officials and called for accountability, compassion, and systemic change. She hopes the lawsuit will serve as a stand for justice and a message to the community that such behavior will not be tolerated. "To hear what these educators and administrators did to not only abuse our children, but go to such lengths to cover it up is an abomination," Garcia said. "My daughter deserves better." Legal proceedings ongoing The cases against Martin and Bean have not yet gone before a grand jury. The Parker County District Attorney's Office says it could take months for that to happen. CBS News Texas has reached out to Millsap ISD and the defendants named in the lawsuit for comment but has not received a response.