Archive for August, 2009

Swine flu cases prompt Friday BHS volleyball game cancellations

Friday, August 21st, 2009

Bastrop, Tx–Two members of the Bastrop High School varsity volleyball team have been diagnosed as suffering from the H1N1 influenza strain, prompting school officials to call off matches scheduled today.

The viral strain was confirmed in two athletes this afternoon after four team members and a coach reported flu-like symptoms over the past week, following a team trip to a Fort Worth tournament. According to Bastrop County Emergency Management Coordinator Mike Fisher, all nine team members and their two coaches, along with their families and other “close contacts,” are being treated as if they have either a seasonal flu strain or the so-called swine flu which spread from Mexico to the US and around the world earlier this year. The medical treatment is the same in either case.

Fisher said he spent much of the day Friday in meetings with Bastrop school officials, Bastrop County Health Officer Dr. Desmar Walkes, state health service officials and other officials to map out systems to monitor and respond to local developments, which should become apparent within about 48 hours, he said Friday evening.

With classes set to begin Monday in Bastrop schools, officials are urging students with flu-like symptoms to stay home, cover their mouths when they cough and to wash their hands frequently.

Those most affected by the H1N1 flu outbreak this year have been children between the ages of eight and 18. Some reports have suggested that those of Hispanic or African descent have also been disproportionately affected.

Fisher said he has been impressed with the response of Bastrop school officials to the reported outbreak. “They’ve done a good job of addressing it,” he said.

Chestnut Street improvements to cost $897,000

Friday, August 21st, 2009

Bastrop, Tx–Tuesday the Bastrop City Council is expected to endorse a plan by the Bastrop Economic Development Corp. board to spend $897,000 on improving the part of Chestnut Street (Loop 150) between Water Street and the Union Pacific Railroad.

In a special meeting at 7:30 a.m. Friday the BEDC board formally accepted the base bid by Smith Contracting Co. of Austin for the work along with two alternative items, one of which is designed to protect large trees along the project route. The other addition calls for designing, casting and installing more than 40 bronze medallions highlighting events from Bastrop’s colorful history in new sidewalks which are included in the work plan.

The board could not act on the contract at its regular session Monday because it was not adequately listed on the meeting agenda.

A tree specialist will oversee the tree protection work, and a local bronze foundry will design, produce and install the medallions, an addition urged by Bastrop Main Street Program officials.

Smith Contracting has done at least four previous projects for Bastrop, most visibly the utility, drainage and street reconstruction of Pecan Street between Chestnut and Texas 71. Engineering estimates for the Chestnut Street work initially put the cost at $1.4 million.

Work is expected to begin later this year.

Bastrop man, 60, jailed for armed robbery

Friday, August 21st, 2009

Bastrop, Tx–An alleged armed robbery July 9 in Bastrop has landed Oliver Clayborn Tanksley, 60, in the Bastrop County Jail under $100,000 bail.

Tanksley was arrested by Austin police and returned to Bastrop on Aug. 18, according to jail records and Bastrop Police Chief David Board.

The complaining witness told police that Tanksley came to his home on North Pecan Street about 10:40 p.m. July 9, revealed a pistol and made off with the 78-year-old man’s trousers containing some $1,000 in cash, according to Board.

Jury: 55 years for 2004 rape in Bastrop

Thursday, August 20th, 2009

Bastrop, Tx–A jury in 423rd State District Court today sentenced Kenneth Ray Henry to 55 years in prison after finding him guilty of rape Wednesday in a 2004 assault in Bastrop.

At the time of the attack in April 2004 the victim, 51 at the time, was unable to identify her assailant or offer police significant clues to pursue the case. Investigators, however, collected medical evidence and sent it for analysis by the Texas Department of Public Safety in Austin.

Henry, 28, was linked to the crime only after he submitted a DNA sample to authorities while serving a term in state prison in 2007 for an unrelated offense. A computer data base of DNA profiles pointed to Henry as a suspect, said officials.

Tuesday, August 18th, 2009

Bastrop, Tx–An 18-year-old from Smithville and his 14-year-old McDade girlfriend were charged Monday with the murder, possibly on Aug. 14, of the juvenile’s 42-year-old mother at their McDade home.

Joseph Dwayne Douglas is being held in the Bastrop County Jail under $500,000 bail, said Bastrop County Sheriff Terry Pickering at a news briefing Tuesday afternoon. Following a detention hearing Monday, the 14-year-old was sent to a juvenile detention facility in Seguin, authorities said.

The case unfolded beginning Friday after a sister called the sheriff’s department to report that Tracy Lynn Bellard had gone missing because she failed to show up for work that day at the family restaurant, Mimi G’s, on FM 1441 north of Bastrop. Evidently Bellard’s vehicle was also missing.

The investigation moved quickly, according to court records and law enforcement reports, after Bastrop County patrol deputies located Bellard’s vehicle late Sunday or early Monday on the property on Lakeview Drive near Smithville where Douglas lived with his grandparents. Investigators said Douglas and the 14-year-old were also at the property, and both were taken for questioning about the disappearance of Bellard.

Douglas declined to talk to investigators and asked for an attorney, said officials. But Bellard’s daughter told investigators she had seen Douglas shoot and kill her mother Friday at the McDade residence, according to court records.

A 13-year-old brother of Douglas also told investigators he had brought a 22-caliber rifle to McDade and witnessed the shooting of Bellard, court documents assert.

Pickering said investigators executed a search warrant at the Lakeview Drive property Monday evening and about 9 p.m. located “charred human remains” on the five-acre site. The remains were near what the sheriff described as “a burnt brush pile.”

The sheriff said investigators believe the remains are likely those of Bellard, but positive identification is pending further examination by the Travis County Medical Examinr’s office in Austin. Results could take “weeks–or months,” said Pickering.

McKinney Roughs wins recognition

Tuesday, August 18th, 2009

Bastrop, Tx–The Lower Colorado River Authority’s McKinney Roughs nature and environmental learning center west of Bastrop has been listed by the National Wildlife Federation as a certified wildlife habitat.

Established in 1997, McKinney Roughs covers some 1,100 acres on the Colorado River where four distinct ecosystems come together along with hundreds of plant and animal species, including the westernmost stand of the Lost Pines for which the Bastrop area is famous.

At McKinney Roughs, LCRA operates a variety of educational programs through the year and allows visitors to enjoy its 18 miles of hiking and horseback trails and access to the river for canoes, kyaks and similar craft.

New technology sends cold Bastrop rape case to trial

Monday, August 17th, 2009

Bastrop, Tx–Jury selection began today in a 2004 Bastrop sexual assault case which lay dormant until DNA test results and a new computer criminal data base pointed to a suspect who was in prison on an unrelated charge.

Kenneth Ray Henry Jr., 28, faces up to 99 years or life in prison if convicted of sexual assault in Bastrop on April 22, 2004. The alleged victim was unable to provide a description or other clues to the identity of her assailant, making the case a rare example of “stranger on stranger” assault, according to prosecutors.

But police investigators collected medical evidence at the time and submitted it for analysis by the Department of Public Safety crime lab in Austin. That analysis yielded a DNA portrait of the attacker–but without a name or face attached, said District Attorney Bryan Goertz.

State prison authorities now routinely take DNA samples from felony convicts, and when Henry was tested as part of the program, a state data base linked him to the old Bastrop case, said Goertz.

Judge Chris Duggan is presiding over the trial in 423rd District Court in Bastrop. Testimony in the case may last no more than one day, said officials.

Jail escapee back behind bars in Bastrop

Monday, August 17th, 2009

Bastrop, Tx–After a five-day search, a Bastrop County jail inmate who escaped from a road work detail Aug. 10 was returned to the local jail early Saturday, Aug. 15.

Ross Brandon Brekhus, 24, was arrested Friday afternoon by Bastrop authorities in Texarkana where he has family, according to a statement issued today by the Bastrop County Sheriff’s Department. By 12:30 a.m. Saturday Brekhus was back in the Bastrop jail.

The inmate escaped while being held on a charge of auto theft. He apparently vanished near the intersection of FM 535 and Jeddo Road in the Rosanky area. Before midnight that evening, investigators also believe he stole a pickup in the area and fled to other parts of the state.

Today’s press announcement said Brekhus now faces a seccond charge of unauthorized use of a motor vehicle plus escape from confinement, a third degree felony offense. Bail on the new charges is set at $60,000.

Swift verdict in capital murder case: guilty

Friday, August 14th, 2009

Bastrop, Tx–After less than an hour of deliberation Friday, a jury of nine women and three men found a 31-year-old Paige man guilty of capital murder in the June 2007 death of a 26-pound child who was approaching his third birthday.

As some relatives sobbed quietly in the courtroom, 335th District Judge Reva Towslee Corbett sentenced Christopher Lee Murray to life in prison without parole, the only punishment available under state law since prosecutors declined to seek the death penalty.

After prosecution and defense lawyers made their final arguments and appeals to jurors, the judge sent them to deliberate at 2:29 p.m. Friday. By 3:25 p.m. they told the court they had reached a verdict. It was a stunningly swift decision, given that the jury panel had eight days of witness testimony and related evidence to consider, including sometimes tearful testimony Thursday from the defendant.

Prosecutors argued that the pattern and extent of injuries revealed by an autopsy on the body of Robert “Robbie” Faske revealed an intentional assault on the child by Murray which resulted in death.

Evidence in the trial indicated that Murray was alone with the child from about 9:30 a.m. until after 1:30 p.m. on June 11, 2007. Murray testified that Faske apparently was injured by a fall from a “computer chair” in their residence on Old Pin Oak Road during the morning but appeared to be “fine” for some time afterward. Murray said more serious injuries perhaps resulted later when he was carrying the child outdoors and fell on him while descending a steep set of stairs leading to the ground from the residence where they lived.

Murray did not seek emergency medical help for Faske until after his mother, grandmother and other relatives returned to the Paige residence from a shopping trip to Austin.

Autopsy results revealed that Faske sustained a broken bone in his neck, five broken ribs, a skull fracture which resulted in bleeding into the brain cavity, bruising to the spleen and tears to the liver and small intestine. The autopsy also identified some 120 bruises to the child’s body, most of which–according to other testimony–had not been apparent before the incidents of the fatal day.

Rain storms, new well okay cheer city officials

Friday, August 14th, 2009

Bastrop, Tx–The city and its immediate area received welcome rainfall beginning Wednesday afternoon with additional showers late Thursday which dropped an inch or more of welcome water. The rain immediately lowered demand on the city’s water supply system, which had been running at near capacity for weeks during a period of extended drought and near-record high summer temperatures for more than a month, according to Bastrop City Manager Mike Talbot.

During a Thursday interview with Bastrop-News.com Talbot also reported that on Aug. 10 the city received formal approval of plans to connect a new water source in Bob Bryant park to Bastrop’s distribution system. Approval by the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality had not been expected until the end of August.

Talbot said he pushed the state agency for quick approval. “I’ve been calling them (frequently),” he said.

The new groundwater source is expected to add about 500 gallons per minute to current city production capacity of just over 2 million gallons a day. After a torrid summer in 2008, city officials have been eager to boost the water supply available to meet growing demand.

Talbot said work will be pushed forward urgently to connect the new wells to the city system. A contractor has been engaged and most construction materials are already on hand, he said.