Longform

Nice Girls With Guns

Every inch of Kingwood -- the bedroom community that used to be 25 miles north of Houston before Houston reached up and swallowed it whole -- has been as carefully planned as if it were a city on the moon. Its 15,000 wooded acres have been carved into cunning little culs-de-sac. Its 21 "villages" are organized by price range. Along the main boulevard, the strip malls are shielded from view by discreet strips of trees. Old-fashioned street lamps dot "Main Street" in "Town Center," so named even though Kingwood is not now and has never been a town. A paved greenbelt, maps of which are available only to Kingwood residents, threads its shady way between backyards, connecting every park and school. There are churches and soccer fields, two Starbucks and one Steinmart. There is CiCi's, Domino's, Little Caesar's, Papa John's and Pizza Hut. The wide selection of pizza chains is Reason 45 of "59 Reasons Why It's Time to Move Up to Kingwood," a pamphlet distributed by the Kingwood Home Finding Center. The Starbucks are Reasons 13 and 14. The old-fashioned street lamps are Reason 43.

Kids say growing up in Kingwood is like growing up in a bubble, an emerald-green suburban bubble to whose perimeter sticks a residue of brownish urban scum: convenience stores, auto repair shops and the two bars that serve Kingwood's 58,000 residents, whose average income is $78,000 a year. To the north is Kingwood's country cousin, Porter, where no shoes, no shirt doesn't mean no service. To the south, along the back fences of the Kingwood Country Club, runs the long, nearly barren stretch of Hamblen Road, where kids go to have their keggers down by the river. In the story of Kingwood teenagers Katie Dunn, Krystal Maddox, Michelle Morneau and Lisa Warzeka, this perimeter -- where the bubble ends and an oil-stained world blessed with neither landscaping nor a master plan begins -- is where the action takes place.

On July 1, at about ten minutes to ten, Ruby Murphy was going into the Forest Cove Stop-n-Drive on Hamblen Road for her customary nighttime soda when she heard teenage voices bickering in the parking lot. It sounded, she says, like one trying to boss the others. Ruby and Cindy Woodard, the store clerk, were accustomed to each other, and when Ruby entered the store, Cindy turned off the outside lights, took the day's receipts out from under the cash drawer and started to count. That's when two people burst into the store and started yelling. One of them (according to the girls' confessions, police say, it was Lisa), pointed a pistol in Cindy's face, handed her a bag and made a harshly worded demand for money. The other (police say it was Katie) held the door open. According to Ruby and Cindy, she too had a gun.

As Cindy fumbled with the cash register, Katie spotted Ruby at the back of the store and warned her not to move.

Ruby felt like she was watching Crime Stoppers on television. Because the intruders were hooded, masked and gloved -- "You couldn't see one spot of skin" -- she knew they weren't planning to shoot anyone. So instead of not moving, she calmly picked up her fountain Pepsi. She could tell that the masked figure at the door, at least, was female. "They gave me the idea that they were new to this," she says.

Meanwhile Cindy, rattled by the gun aimed squarely, if a little tremulously, at her face, suffered a sudden case of butterfingers. "You have two seconds or I'll shoot, bitch!" the robber said, in a voice whose Hollywood-holdup toughness seemed to Ruby's ears rather strained.

"I couldn't do anything right to please the one in front of me," Cindy says. "The more I did, the more she threatened to shoot me. The more she threatened to shoot me, the more I messed up." After missing a couple of times, Cindy finally got the money in the bag. Then she began handing over cartons of cigarettes, but she picked the wrong kind. "Marlboros, bitch!" the triggerwoman screamed. "Marlboros!"

As the two girls, who had both just turned 17, ran out of the store, they dropped a carton of Marlboros at the door. Another carton skittered to the parking-lot asphalt as they hopped into their car, where police believe the other two girls were waiting, and sped off into the night with about $800, the largest take of the five robberies.

What struck Houston Police Detective Billy Stephens as most unique about the five holdups was not that the alleged perpetrators were female. Women rob stores all the time. It was not even so much the middle- to upper-middle-class backgrounds of the girls, the fact that they are thought to have used a 1999 gold metal-flake Pontiac Firebird as their getaway car, or that one was a varsity athlete and one a drill team member at preppy Kingwood High.

Shaila Dewan

Politicians Immigration

Does Mayor Whitmire's Pending Admonishment Hurt His Re-Election Chances? [UPDATED]

Image: Mayor Whitmire has had to answer questions about HPD's relationship to ICE. He says he's just following the law.
Mayor Whitmire has had to answer questions about HPD's relationship to ICE. He says he's just following the law. Photo by April Towery
A wave of disappointment in Houston Mayor John Whitmire’s performance is growing among Harris County Democrats, but it’s unclear whether their activism will be enough to defeat the mayor in a 2027 election.

Citing Whitmire’s appearance at a Republican fundraiser, perceived support of Trump-era immigration policies, and a city budget that slashed services while granting a historic police funding increase, Harris County Democrats say they don’t want to endorse the longtime politician for another term.

At a June 22 press conference, Democratic Party precinct chairs announced their intent to move forward with an admonishment, a symbolic act that essentially means they will no longer claim the mayor as a member of their party. The Houston mayor and City Council positions are nonpartisan, but Whitmire served as a Democrat in the Texas Legislature for 50 years.

An admonishment takes a long time. It has to go through the party’s resolutions committee and a steering committee before a vote is taken by the County Executive Committee. That won’t likely happen until late September, party officials said.

"It's an expression of disapproval," said Mike Doyle, chair of the Harris County Democratic Party. 
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Harris County Democratic Party staff holds a strategy meeting on Thursday afternoon.
Photo by April Towery

If it happens, it would be the first time the Harris County Democrats have admonished a Houston mayor. And although it’s just symbolic, it can be powerful. Harris County Dems say the party’s 2023 admonishment of former District Attorney Kim Ogg is likely what caused her to get trounced by Sean Teare in last year’s primary.

"I think there's no doubt that the attention paid to it, the discussions it caused, her statements about it, the brouhaha overall, in retrospect, was kind of anticipatory of where she's at right now," Doyle said. Ogg has stopped short of announcing she's switched parties but has said publicly she wants to weed the Democrats out of Harris County's public offices and is likely seeing a Trump appointment as a U.S. attorney.

Whitmire’s office did not respond to a request for comment.

Precinct Chair Cameron “Coach Cam” Campbell, a former University of Houston football standout, is among those leading the charge to remove Whitmire from the party.

“There’s one thing that athletics taught me: You don’t have to be friends to be teammates,” Campbell said. “What makes a teammate a teammate is sitting in the boat and rowing in the same direction. Anybody in the boat not rowing in the same direction is not a teammate, and that’s why we’re having this conversation.”
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Cameron "Coach Cam" Campbell speaks at a June 22 press conference calling for Harris County Democrats to admonish Mayor Whitmire.
Photo by April Towery

Whitmire won the mayor’s race in a 2023 runoff against Sheila Jackson Lee, who was endorsed by Whitmire’s predecessor, former Houston Mayor Sylvester Turner. Mayoral terms are four years, and Whimite has said publicly it will “take eight years to fix Houston,” signaling an intent to seek re-election. But if the Dems want him out in ‘27, who’s the alternative?

Houston Controller Chris Hollins’ name was suggested at the June 22 press conference. Hollins ran against Whitmire in 2023 but pulled out of the race when Jackson Lee announced her candidacy. Local government watchers have speculated that at least one current Houston City Council member, District J’s Edward Pollard, could make a run.

Pollard held a fundraiser earlier this month and has about $400,000 in his coffers. Campaign finance reports are due July 15 and may be an indicator of who is planning to make a bid for mayor. But it’s still early; Pollard could be preparing to run for something else. Whitmire raised at least $7 million during his 2023 mayoral campaign, according to reports.

Update: 9 p.m. Monday, June 30, 2025: Following publication of this story, a spokesman for Pollard's campaign clarified that Pollard has raised more than $1 million.

The fact that Whitmire defeated Jackson Lee, a champion for the Black community, and has frequently blamed Turner’s administration for the problems of today has caused a rift between the mayor and some Black voters, who refer to him as “White mire.”

“A lot of things he does are not transparent, like a thief in the night,” said Doris Brown, a co-director for the nonprofit disaster preparedness group West Street Recovery. “He came in and changed things. He’s a bully. He’s ‘walk away Whitmire.’ Sometimes when we come to talk [during a City Council public comment session], he gets up and leaves. It’s disrespectful.”
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Doris Brown and Alice Liu of West Street Recovery have criticized Whitmire's $7 billion budget.
Photo by April Towery

Houston, unlike Austin, Dallas and San Antonio, has a strong mayor form of government through which the mayor, rather than a city manager, proposes the budget and hires and fires department heads.

In his first 100 days in office, Whitmire appointed seven new department directors. As of last summer, at least 12 department heads and senior officials had resigned or left his administration. Critics say the new leaders, including Finance Director Melissa Dubowski, Airport Director Jim Szczesniak, Housing and Community Development Director Mike Nichols, Public Works Director Randy Macchi, and Chief of Staff Cynthia Wilson, are “yes men and women,” specifically tapped to do the mayor’s bidding.

But Mayor Whitmire has scored some big wins during his tenure at City Hall, said Nancy Sims, a political science lecturer at the University of Houston.

“Whitmire is a really popular mayor,” she said. “There are factions of the community that are upset with him about bike paths and traffic and METRO. There are certainly pockets of voters who are upset with him, but for the most part, I think the general attitude of the Houston voter is that he’s doing a good job. I don’t think the Democratic clubs passing these resolutions will have a significant impact on him.”

Sims refers to the mayor as “Mr. Fix It,” noting that he’s cleaned up messy police and fire contracts and lobbied the legislature for funding to build a $4.2 billion East Water Purification Plant.

“He wants to fix what’s wrong and get it done,” she said. “A lot of people are unhappy with the long-term financial ramifications of [the police and fire] contracts, but at the same time, he stopped both departments from bleeding personnel. He said public safety was his No. 1 priority and he got in there; the contract had been up in the air for 10 years with the firefighters, and he fixed it. Same with the police contract. He got in there and fixed it.

“Sure, it’s going to add to the city debt down the road, but in the meantime, you’ve got police salaries and fire department salaries that are competitive in the region and you’re not losing everybody you train within a year.”

Whitmire publicly addressed a couple of the key points raised by the Dems at a Tejano Democrats meeting in May. He attended the fundraiser for U.S. Rep. Dan Crenshaw, a Republican, because he wants to foster relationships with lawmakers on both sides of the aisle, some of whom chair important committees, because they can support federal funding for Houston projects, Whitmire said at the time.

“Nothing has changed in my values and who I am,” he said. “I have to work with people to get things done. It has nothing to do with agreeing with [Crenshaw] on much of his philosophy. It has to do with looking out for Houstonians. We’re underfunded, our infrastructure is broken, but more important is our water supply. It’s very fragile.”

The fundraiser appearance signaled that Whitmire was no longer a teammate, Campbell said.

“Let’s be crystal clear,” Campbell said. “The most important thing in politics is votes. The second most important thing in politics is money because you take that money to go engage with folks and get them to come out and vote. For every dollar that was raised for Dan Crenshaw, and Whitmire had a part in it, was a dollar against Democrats.”

The Houston Progressive Caucus also weighed in on the Crenshaw fundraiser. The Progressives’ mission is to “win elections, build working-class power, and steer the Democratic Party back toward the values of opportunity and justice for working-class Texans.”

“Whitmire’s fundraiser for Crenshaw is an endorsement of his policy priorities,” Houston Progressives said in an April statement. “There are over a million Houstonians on Medicaid, and Crenshaw has and is voting to defund it by over $880 billion. That, the tariffs, the DOGE cuts, and much more will devastate the city’s finances.”

Sims said Whitmire’s appearance at the Crenshaw fundraiser speaks to his “fix-it” mentality.

“I feel like he just walks around with his pliers in his pocket, like, how can I fix it?” Sims said. “It’s like, I need federal money to build my water plant. Let me go talk to the Republicans. How are you going to get it without talking to the Republicans?”
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Mayor John Whitmire talks to residents at a No Kings rally in June.
Photo by April Towery

As for whether the mayor is cooperating or collaborating with Immigration and Customs Enforcement to deport Houstonians, Whitmire has said he’s simply following the law. When a person interacts with Houston law enforcement and has an active warrant from ICE or another jurisdiction, officers are required to pass that information along to the agency that holds the warrant, officials have said.

“The City of Houston is not ICE or focused on immigration enforcement but will hold all violent offenders accountable regardless of their immigration status,” the mayor said in a May statement. “HPD enforces state laws and will hold violators of state law, ALL violent offenders, accountable regardless of immigration status.”

Carlos Alvriño, an American citizen and the son of Peruvian immigrants, spoke at the press conference about President Donald Trump’s aggressive immigration policies and how Whitmire appears to be supporting them. Again, the mayor has said that the Houston Police Department is following the law.

Reports of a woman being referred to ICE after calling HPD to report a domestic violence situation surfaced recently, prompting more fear in the immigrant community. Some have said undocumented people cannot report crimes, even if they weren’t directly involved, because they don’t want to be detained or deported.

On the matter of the $7 billion city budget, Whitmire said he’d voted on many budgets in his career and “it’s always easy to find fault.”

“There is no such thing as a perfect budget,” he said at a June 4 meeting. “It’s so easy to be against something, particularly when you don’t have to offer up any solutions. Anyone can be a critic and politicize a budget or any other actions we take.

“I’m proud of the budget. We were told we couldn’t do it, we couldn’t balance it, by political critics. We ignored and went forward. We have a lot of work to do. This is a giant step, but we need to now talk to Houstonians, going forward, about what type of city they want to live in.”

Neurologist Dr. Audrey Nath spoke at the press conference earlier this month, lamenting a planned $2 million cut to the Houston Health Department in the city budget.

“Normally the Houston Health Department receives about half of its funding from federal sources but these have already been slashed, so the Houston Health Department has already had to deal with layoffs and cut hours,” she said.

Because of the funding cuts in the Houston budget, the health department has to decrease services, including its mobile vaccination unit and HIV prevention and treatment, Nath said.
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Jake Ortiz speaks at a press conference about injuries he suffered as a result of changes to Houston bike lanes.
Photo by April Towery

Jake Ortiz, who was injured in a cycling accident after Whitmire made abrupt changes to Austin Street bike lanes, said the mayor’s policies have “real-life consequences for the people who are in the communities that [he] is supposed to serve and lead.”

Thus far, about 50 elected precinct chairs have backed a resolution for Whitmire’s admonishment. The party has about 591 precinct chairs who will ultimately vote on the matter in the fall, Doyle said. At that time, Whitmire and his supporters will have a chance to speak before the executive committee prior to a vote on the admonishment.

As the presiding officer of the Harris County Democratic Executive Committee, Doyle said he had to defer comment on Whitmire's admonishment, but said he personally finds it "incredibly disappointing" that the mayor attended Crenshaw's fundraiser.

"That's not something I would ever see in someone who is supporting Democratic values," Doyle said. "Helping raise money for people who support Trump's agenda, lockstep, is never a good look. I think that kind of stuff concerns people. There's a lot of public concern."
Staff writer April Towery covers news for the Houston Press. A native Texan, she attended Texas A&M University and has covered Texas news for more than 20 years.
Contact: April Towery

Sean Pendergast Sports

Four Thoughts on Jeremy Pena Choosing Scott Boras as His Agent

Image: Jeremy Pena begins to turn a double play on Opening Day at Minute Maid Park.
Jeremy Pena begins to turn a double play on Opening Day at Minute Maid Park. Photo by Jack Gorman
If you're a Houston Astros fan, you're used to the career arc of star-level, homegrown talent. They arrive in the big leagues, they contribute heavily to winning, and after six seasons, they move on in free agency. Put simply, if you've bought the jersey of a player not named "ALTUVE" in the last several years, there's a good chance that player is gone.

Counting chronologically backwards, it goes Bregman, Tucker (traded), Correa, Springer. The list is about to include Framer Valdez in six months. It's painful, but the team keeps winning, so that mitigates the pain. However, reminder during the season of this cycle bring unnecessary pain, and that's why it was rough seeing the news this week that shortstop Jeremy Pena has switched to super agent Scott Boras for his contractual representation.

For some context, Boras has a long history of representing Astros players. Sometimes, it's worked out fine (Jose Altuve). Most of the time, it ends in sadness and longing (Alex Bregman, most recently). That Pena is joining Hunter Brown, who flipped to Boras a year ago, as Astros who seek Boras' services in the midst of a breakout season, would indicate that they intend to follow Bregman's path, hitting free agency when the time comes.

In fact, Ari Alexander of KPRC reported on Wednesday that the Astros and Pena were fairly far down the road on a five-year, $105 million contract extension, before Pena decided to flip over to Boras for his representation. Yikes! So with Pena's future as an Astro hanging in the balance (sort of), here are a few thoughts on this very important matter:

Keep in mind, Boras works for Pena, so it's about what Pena wants
Most of the time, when Boras has represented a prominent Astro, it's ended in disappointment, but as I mentioned above, Jose Altuve is an exception to that rule. Altuve wanted to stay in Houston on a team friendly deal, and tasked Boras with getting that done on his behalf. Boras did. Lance McCullers is another Boras client who wanted to stay in Houston, so Boras made that happen. I only bring this up to remind Astro fans that this isn't a definite eventual one way ticket out for Pena. Boras clients have stayed before. I think the heavy favorite is Pena's leaving, but we shall see.

Pena still has two years of team control left after 2025
While this news hits home (in a bad way) right now, this isn't a pressing, burning issue that affects the Astros' 2025 season. Pena is putting up career numbers at the plate and is playing Gold Glove defense, so enjoy that! Pena is still under team control for two more seasons, as he will be eligible for salary arbitration after this season and after the 2026 season. As he ascends to All Star status, though, even those salary numbers in arbitration will be fairly large. It begs the question....

What if the Kyle Tucker trade is a trend?
...would the Astros trade Pena, like they did Kyle Tucker, with a year of team control still remaining? Prior to the 2025 season, Astros GM Dana Brown, knowing Kyle Tucker would command an 8 to 10 year deal in free agency after this season, decided to send Tucker to Chicago for Isaac Paredes, Cam Smith, and Hayden Wesneski. That trade has worked out well for the Astros, as Paredes should be an All Star at third base, and the rookie Smith has had a very stellar rookie season. More often than not, the Astros let their homegrown players stick around all the way up to their free agency walk year, but maybe Tucker begins a trend where the Astros look to reload their farm system with young studs and MLB roster with less expensive players.

What are the contract years of the Astros' key players?
In case you're wondering about when exactly we are going to need to worry about these types of things with other prominent Astro players, here are the timelines of the players that are part of the core nucleus:

Signed / under team control through 2025
SP Framer Valdez

Signed / under team control through 2026
SP Lance McCullers
RP Bryan Abreu

Signed / under team control through 2027
SS Jeremy Pena
SP Cristian Javier
1B Christian Walker
3B Isaac Paredes
CF Jake Meyers

Signed / under team control through 2028
DH/LF Yordan Alvarez
C Yainer Diaz
SP Hunter Brown
RP Josh Hader

Signed / under team control through 2029
2B/LF Jose Altuve

I don't know why I even list Altuve. I feel like, as long as he can walk, he will be a Houston Astro. I wish I could say the same thing about Pena.

Listen to Sean Pendergast on SportsRadio 610 from 6 a.m. to 10 a.m. weekdays. Also, follow him on Twitter at twitter.com/SeanTPendergast, on Instagram at instagram.com/sean.pendergast, and like him on Facebook at facebook.com/SeanTPendergast.
Sean Pendergast is a contributing freelance writer who covers Houston area sports daily in the News section, with periodic columns and features, as well. He also hosts the morning drive on SportsRadio 610, as well as the pre-game and post game shows for the Houston Texans.
Contact: Sean Pendergast