-
The letter from nine members of the state's congressional delegation comes as the state fights a nearly 13-year-old federal class action suit over alleged failures to ensure the wellbeing of children in foster care.
-
The father of a man killed last year while police chased another vehicle has filed a lawsuit against the city of Fort Worth.
-
The case contesting Deputy Constable John Wright’s eligibility for Precinct 8 constable will continue to trial March 1, after 48th District Court Judge Chris Taylor denied a request to throw it out.
-
David Seibolt of Johnson County, Kansas, was giving a presentation in a second floor conference room of the Sandman Signature Hotel in downtown Fort Worth when the Jan. 8 explosion occurred, giving him "serious injuries to his head and body in general."
-
While fleeing the scene, Christopher Medearis “tripped, fell, and as a result suffered personal bodily injury," according to the suit.
-
The former Dallas Cowboys wide receiver said he was falsely accused of sexual misconduct last year after an interaction with an employee at a Marriott hotel in Phoenix and has since sued the hotel chain and his accuser.
-
That was the key question before 48th District Court Judge Chris Taylor, after an incumbent Tarrant County constable accused his primary opponent of lying about where he lived on campaign forms. Precinct 8 Constable Michael Campbell filed a lawsuit against challenger John Wright, alleging Wright lives outside of the precinct and is thus ineligible to run for the seat.
-
The high court justices heard arguments Wednesday in what is now the city’s second appeal of a whistleblower lawsuit it lost in a 2020 trial.
-
More than 33,000 migrants have arrived from Texas since August 2022. The city wants bus companies to pay more than $700 million.
-
Lawyers for Johnson's family sent a pre-suit letter to Baylor Scott and White Institute for Rehabilitation Thursday alleging nurses failed to quickly respond when Johnson asked for help, leaving her to lie in her own feces and urine and allegedly leading to an infection tied to her death.
-
Grissel Velasco chose not to get an abortion after the surprise pregnancy, but the El Paso woman's lawsuit could determine how a person in a post-Roe v. Wade Texas can be compensated for an unwanted pregnancy caused by medical negligence.
-
Both sides finished their arguments Wednesday after days of testimony over accusations that Texas agencies don't protect foster children.