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Former Houston police officer gets probation for exposing himself to 2 women in Humble​

William Logan McCoy

William Logan McCoy (Houston Police Department)

HOUSTON – A former Houston police officer who exposed himself to two women in Humble has avoided jail time after taking a plea agreement.
William Logan McCoy pled guilty to two misdemeanor indecent exposure charges. He had also been charged with felony indecency with a child, but the charge was dismissed.
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The incidents happened in Aug. 2023. According to court documents, a man approached a woman’s vehicle in the parking lot of a store off U.S. 59 in Humble on Aug. 24. The documents said the man exposed himself to the woman before walking back to his vehicle and leaving.
On Aug. 25, a similar incident happened in the parking lot of a business in Deerbrook Mall. The documents said the second incident happened very near to where the first incident happened.
The woman said she was standing near her open passenger side door letting her dog use the restroom, when a white or silver Honda passenger car approached. She said she heard a male voice inside the vehicle ask if she was having car trouble. The woman approached the vehicle and knelt down to eye level with the man to respond. When she did this, she noticed the man’s pants were down and his private parts were exposed. She also noticed a young child in a car seat in the back seat. The child was estimated to be about 18 months old. After a few seconds, the man drove off.
Humble police viewed security camera footage of the incident and were able to match the license plate number to that which was given to them by one of the victims. Police determined the vehicle belonged to McCoy as well as compared McCoy’s driver’s license photo to the description given by the victims of the suspect.
Detectives were able to speak to McCoy over the phone who admitted that both incidents occurred. McCoy also admitted that his 2-year-old son was in the backseat of his vehicle during one of the incidents. McCoy said the incidents happened during his off days.
As part of the agreement, McCoy was sentenced to two years of probation and also surrendered his TCOLE license, which means he cannot be a law enforcement officer in the State of Texas.
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North Carolina residents sue to have Confederate monument to ‘faithful slaves’ removed

Jaelyn Miller, an attorney for the plaintiffs, told CNN she feels county commissioners have a responsibility to ensure that racist messages are not being displayed to the Black community.

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“This is sort of the only monument in the country on public land that textually endorses slavery,” Miller said.

Ian Mance, another attorney for the plaintiffs, said the historical record is clear that the monument was meant to send a message.

“It was put up in the front yard of what was soon to be the Tyrrell County Courthouse, which opened a few months later, to communicate to people that members of the Black community could not expect to get justice inside of that courthouse,” he said.

The lawsuit alleges the construction of the monument and the county’s continued maintenance “communicates, on behalf of local government, the idea that Tyrrell’s institutions regard Black people’s rightful place as one of subservience and obedience” and that “Black people who were enslaved in Tyrrell County preferred their slavery to freedom.”
 




 

American who carried ammunition in Turks and Caicos gets suspended sentence and heads home. Fate of others charged is unclear​


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But four other Americans still await their fate. In recent months, all were arrested and accused of bringing in various amounts of ammunition to the 40-island chain southeast of the Bahamas. In the Turks and Caicos, possession of firearms or ammunition carries a minimum 12-year sentence, though the law allows reduced sentences under “exceptional circumstances,” the local governor said.

Bryan Hagerich of Pennsylvania had pleaded guilty to the charge, the Turks and Caicos government said.

On Friday, he got a 52-week sentence that was suspended for one year, meaning he would not face immediate incarceration, Hagerich’s attorney Oliver Smith, King’s Counsel, told CNN.

 
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