SAPD, Crime Stoppers ask for public’s help in solving 2009 slaying of teen

San Antonio police and Crime Stoppers are asking for the public’s help in solving the 2009 slaying of 17-year-old Paul Deleon.

Deleon was gunned down around 1:20 a.m. on Dec. 19, 2009, in the 1000 block of Fair Avenue, near New Braunfels Avenue.

A Crime Stoppers report states Deleon was sitting in the front passenger’s seat of a vehicle that pulled up to a white Nissan Frontier. Someone in the Frontier pointed a gun at the vehicle Deleon was in.

As the vehicles began to drive away from the intersection, someone in the Frontier opened fire, striking and killing Deleon.

Anyone with information about the shooting is urged to call Crime Stoppers at 210-224-STOP. Tips can also be texted to CRIMES (274637) or by visiting the Crime Stoppers website.

Crime Stoppers may pay up to $5,000 for information that leads to felony arrests.

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SAPD investigating shooting that erupted after argument on West Side

San Antonio police are looking for a man who they say shot another man during an argument on Tuesday night.

Officers were called around 9 p.m. to the scene in the 2400 block of Tampico Street, near San Carlos.

A man in his late 30s went to his son’s mother’s home to check on him, police said. The woman had her new boyfriend in the apartment, and an argument erupted.

The argument turned physical, and one of the men pulled out a gun, police said.

One of them was shot in the neck and taken to University Hospital in stable condition.

The shooter fled the scene.

It was unclear who pulled out the gun, police said. Officers spoke with witnesses on Tuesday night to determine who pulled the trigger.

This story will be updated as more information becomes available.

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San Antonio’s popular La Panadería named among best hot chocolate spots in US, Yelp says

Everyone — unless you’re the Grinch — loves a good cup of hot chocolate, but some people made it a point to highlight the restaurants with the best hot cocoa in the United States. One of those places is right here in San Antonio.

Yelp said La Panadería Bakery & Café was named the best place for hot chocolate in Texas and one of the best in the country.

It ranked as No. 6 on the list of top 20 places to get hot chocolate in the United States, and it was the only Texas restaurant to land on the list.

The list was made from Yelp data, including reviews that mentioned the words “hot chocolate” and ratings, according to the website.

La Panadería has four-and-a-half stars on Yelp.

Brothers José and David Cáceres opened La Panadería in 2014.

They have since expanded to three restaurants, at 8305 Broadway on the North Side, at 301 E. Houston St. downtown, and at 17030 Fiesta Texas Drive near La Cantera.

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Man, woman shot during attempted burglary at West Side apartment, police say

A man and a woman were injured overnight after someone barged into an apartment and opened fire, according to San Antonio police.

The shooting happened around 1:30 a.m. Wednesday in the 1800 block of Horal Street, near Marbach Road on the West Side.

A 19-year-old told police that he was woken up by someone who kicked down the front door and attempted to burglarize the apartment. The suspect then shot at the teen, police said.

A woman sleeping in a nearby room was also struck by stray bullets that went through the wall. She was hit in the leg, police said.

Both were transported to University Hospital in stable condition. Police said the gunman fled in an unknown direction.

Officers searched the area but they were not located.

The shooting is under investigation.

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Miniature horse joins therapy animal team at Methodist Hospital

What’s got four hooves, a long tail, a snazzy vest, and matching pink bows? Methodist Hospital’s newest employee, Bambi the miniature therapy horse!

“(Bambi) makes hospital visits to patients and just kind of gets their morals up and spirit since she’s at the hosp– they’re at the hospital,” said Alexa Farris, Bambi’s handler and ER manager for Methodist Hospital.

Bambi does her job well. From older patients to young kids, even the doctors and nurses in between, Bambi spreads joy.

She’s the first hospital-based therapy horse in our state and works alongside three full-time therapy dogs.

But we’re all asking the same question here — why a mini horse?

“This pandemic, it was very, very hard on everyone, including the health care workers, the patients coming into the hospital, the visitors coming into the hospital,” Farris said. “And we were just trying to see, ‘OK, what can we do to brighten up people’s spirits?’”

Seeing the unexpected has physical benefits as well, like lowering blood pressure and reducing physical pain.

Bambi has been working for two months now. Farris hopes she’ll pave the way for other animals to join their fleet.

“There can be pigs as therapy animals. There can be many other therapy animals out there. And I think she just shows that it doesn’t just have to be a dog that brings light into someone’s eyes,” Farris said.

Bambi is still young, only four-years-old, so she doesn’t have a set schedule yet. If you see her around, feel free to give her a pat.

Y’all…it’s the story we have all (maybe just me) been waiting for. @SAHealth210 has a miniature therapy horse named Bambi! She’s been hard at work for 2 months now, turning heads and making people smile. You’ll get to meet this ray of sunshine tonight on the #NightBeat @ksatnews pic.twitter.com/ybkMfMp2Xh

— Leigh Waldman (@LeighWaldman) December 21, 2021

No police union contract for Christmas

If you wanted a police union contract for Christmas, you’d better ask Santa, because the city and police union’s negotiating teams won’t be delivering one this year.

The City of San Antonio and San Antonio Police Officers Association (SAPOA) met Tuesday for the 28th time since their first sit-down on Feb. 12. The two sides say they’ve made progress toward hammering out a new contract, but details on discipline, pay, and other issues remain.

The union’s contract expired at the end of September, but an “evergreen” clause keeps its terms in effect for up to eight years. Officer pay, though, will remain frozen until a new deal takes effect.

With an increased focus on police accountability, the city’s priorities going into the negotiations were on officer discipline. Limiting a third-party arbitrator’s ability to overturn an officer’s firing, called an “indefinite suspension,” was at the top of the city’s list.

A KSAT Defenders investigation found that roughly two-thirds of fired officers who appealed their firing were reinstated, either by an arbitrator or the police chief.

The two sides came to a consensus on the arbitration front in November — only allowing an arbitrator to overturn a firing if the chief fails to establish a “substantial shortcoming.”

Among other issues, they’ve also agreed to keep increasing employee’s health care contributions at the same 10% rate that was included in the previous contract.

But there are some high-profile items on the table.

180-DAY RULE

The biggest debate at Tuesday’s negotiating session was over how to draw the line between “major” and “minor” misconduct — a new concept that would affect the punishment timelines for the infamous “180-day rule.”

Currently, the police chief and other administrators can only discipline an officer for a civil matter within 180 days of of it happening. For possible criminal acts, they have up to 180 days after first learning of the incident.

The rule was instrumental in Officer Matthew Luckhurst beating an indefinite suspension for giving a feces sandwich to a homeless man. An arbitrator reduced Luckhurst’s punishment to a 5-day suspension after his attorneys successfully argued the incident had taken place more than 180 days before the chief fired him.

A second indefinite suspension for a different, feces-related incident later stuck, though, and Luckhurst never returned to uniform.

The city and union have tentatively agreed on a new system that would separate non-criminal misconduct into “major” and “minor” tracks.

Officers would still have to be punished for minor misconduct within 180 days of it happening, but major misconduct would be punishable up to 180 days after the department learns about it.

Minor misconduct is defined as “slight variances to department policies, procedures, responsibilities, and expectations.” Missing court or paperwork violations would be examples of that, says the union’s lead negotiator, Sgt. Chris Lutton.

The current hangup, though, is how to define major misconduct, with the union team rejecting the city’s proposed language on Tuesday.

The union team argued that the city’s list of examples — like, discrimination, harassment involving a serious behavior infraction, or improper/unauthorized use of City property — was worded in such a way to define any infraction in those listed categories, as major misconduct, regardless of the severity.

Instead, the union wants language that qualifies those examples of infractions as major misconduct only “when these actions rise to the level of a significant variance.”

“You can have discrimination that is not a major misconduct,” said SAPOA attorney Ron DeLord. “You can. It could be very, very minor — improper pronoun. I mean, it could be any little thing that you could correct the behavior counseling, or things that go all the way up to dismissal.”

The city team, though, says they want a clear line in the sand of what constitutes major misconduct.

“I think for us, discrimination is a significant variance, and that’s our position,” the city’s lead negotiator, Deputy City Manager Maria Villagomez, told reporters after the meeting.

EVIDENCE PREVIEW

When an officer faces an internal affairs investigation for a non-criminal matter, the current contract allows them to have a 48-hour heads up before they’re questioned. Both the city and union have agreed on reducing that to 24 hours, but they still disagree on how much evidence the officer can review ahead of time.

The current contract allows for an officer to review, but not copy the following: video and audio recordings, complaints, affidavits, other written statements, GPS data, and photographs.

The union wants to keep the types of reviewable evidence roughly the same. The city wants to limit it to body cam video, GPS information, and any complaints — with the personal and contact information redacted.

The union’s proposal also makes the redaction of the personal information permissible, but not required.

WAGES

The city and union have very different proposals for officer pay scales.

The city’s proposal includes a series of four pay raises that would boost officer’s wages 8.2% over the course of the contract, in addition to several lump sum payments sprinkled throughout.

The union’s latest proposal does not include any lump sum payments, but it does have biannual raises that would boost officer’s pay 17.2% over the life of the contract.

The union’s proposal is larger than the plan it put forward at first — at least 12.5%, plus a match of non-uniformed employees’ raises in the first two years.

Asked if the union’s wage requests went up because they had bent on the arbitration issue, Lutton said “it’s also [that] we’re looking at [the] long-term.”

The union believes the department will need to have higher pay in order to attract good candidates, Lutton said, and it was planning ahead in anticipation of looming retirements.

Lutton said the city’s better financial outlook also played a part in the union increasing its request.

City policy is to keep public safety spending under 66 percent of the general fund budget.

NEGOTIATING NICELY

Although the city and police union are into their 16th extension of the negotiation time frame, neither side seems ready to break things off.

It’s a noticeable change from the acrimonious negotiations on the previous contract, when the city’s focus on driving down health care costs put it at odds with the police and fire unions.

The negotiations — and lack thereof — that took place between March 2014 and September 2016, involve a court case over the evergreen clause and mediation.

The city and union’s negotiating teams say things are much different this time around.

“I think…both sides have changed how we negotiate. We spend more time talking with each other rather than putting on a media blitz on things,” Lutton said.

Villagomez said the process has been professional and gave credit to the “new association.”

“We don’t agree on on everything, but I think we have had productive sessions compared to what we experienced in the last contract,” she said.

The city and union aren’t expected to return to the bargaining table until January. Once they strike a deal, it will still need to be ratified by the union membership and the city council.

Sober lounge aims to change drinking culture in San Antonio

There’s something about a cold beer with friends, even without a buzz. A South Side business is serving brews and cocktails, but there’s a catch. The drinks at Hash Vegan Eats don’t have alcohol. Hash is the first full nonalcoholic bar in San Antonio.

“There is a whole community of people who just don’t drink, whether because (they’re) around it all day (for work) or just kind of tired of it,” Michael Sánchez said. Sánchez and his brother Rogelio are the owners of Hash located off of South Flores and West Edmonds Street.

The Sánchez brothers want to change the drinking culture in San Antonio and help those struggling with alcohol abuse.

“I had a beer (at Hash) with a buddy of mine. I hadn’t had one in 10 years,” Ezequiel García said. García is sober and enjoys the business’ non alcoholic brews. García said the bar’s vibe takes the pressure off from having a traditional beer.

“Really, it’s other people that get offended when they offer you a beer, and you don’t take it,” García said. “But here, I mean, no. I was a big drinker. I quit drinking because I just don’t want to be in the system anymore with DWI’s.”

Testimonies like García’s are ones that reassure owners Rogelio and Michael that an alcohol-free bar concept is needed in San Antonio.

“We have a high level of domestic abuse, which is directly tied to alcoholism and drug abuse,” Rogelio said.

“It’s just kind of a given with the culture, with the Hispanic culture or the the culture in general,” Michael said. “You (are) just expected to drink.”

The Sánchez brothers have walked this path themselves. They are eight years sober and want to help educate the community that gathering and having fun doesn’t always involve alcohol, even during times of celebration.

“It used to be just O’Douls (beer), which was not a great beer, so it kind of steered people away,” Michael said. “But now, you can have everything from an IPA, to a porter, to a golden ale (beer) and craft cocktails.”

“(We have) phenomenal handcrafted cocktails,” Rogelio said. “You (can’t) tell the difference, except for the effect, obviously.

Their lounge is meant to offer a space of healing but also one that is socially engaging for those that choose to be sober and fear triggers.

“They don’t want to give up on the craft beers to be able to feel like there’s a place for them, a place that they can relate to and a place that they value in ethics and in environments and culture,” Rogelio said.

Customers can choose from the original or seasonal menu of handcrafted cocktails. Rogelio recommends the Blueberry Whiskey Sour for first-time visitors.

“I’m partial to (it) because I created it,” Rogelio said. “It has fresh muddled blueberries, Ritual Whiskey, which is a Zero-Proof (non-alcoholic) whiskey, fresh lime juice, agave nectar and topped off with some Topo Chico.”

The restaurant and lounge also offers vegan bites including the traditional Mexican soup or stew, pozole.

For more on the alcohol-free lounge, click here.

More details emerge about missing 3-year-old Lina Khil

As area police and the FBI fan out across San Antonio in search of missing 3-year-old Lina Khil, more details are emerging about the child.

Khil was reported missing by her mother on Monday evening at the Villas Del Cabo complex in the 9400 block of Fredericksburg Road, San Antonio Police Department Chief William McManus said.

Lina was wearing a black jacket, red dress and black shoes when she disappeared.

A flyer distributed by police says she is 4 feet tall, weighs 55 pounds and had her shoulder-length hair in a ponytail. Police believe the child may be in grave or immediate danger.

SAPD is “sparing no assets or resources” and searching every unit and car where Lina was last seen, McManus said at a Tuesday morning press conference.

Officers were still searching the Northwest Side complex at 5 p.m. Tuesday.

Lina’s family are refugees from Afghanistan

Margaret Constantino with the Center for Refugee Services told KSAT Tuesday that the child’s family is among the Afghanistan refugees in San Antonio.

At least 1,300 people from Afghanistan have come through the Center for Refugee Services for resettling here.

While she knows very little about the family, including when exactly they came to the United States, Constantino says any missing child is everyone’s missing child.

“And like any big family with lots and lots of little kids, all of these children are precious to us,” she said. “Knowing this community, they’re very close-knit. So people will be out there beating the bushes, looking for this child.”

Earlier Tuesday, an SAPD sergeant said there has been a bit of a language barrier between officers and the girl’s mother. They brought an interpreter to help with the communication.

Lina disappeared at a playground

Lina was at a playground at the apartment complex with her mother and other children between 5-6 p.m. when her mother left and returned to find her daughter missing, the chief said in a news conference Tuesday morning.

It is unclear exactly how long the mother was away, but McManus said she returned a “short time later.” McManus said the girl wasn’t left alone and there were other kids at the playground, which is open within the complex.

The family reported the child missing around 7:15 p.m., and an AMBER Alert was issued.

Officers searched the area by foot and air Monday but did not locate her. SAPD continued their search Tuesday morning and asked the FBI for assistance.

Officers were going door by door to each apartment — there are under 300 units in the complex — to search for Lina.

Officers are also searching for video, checking cars and dumpsters, and recording license plates due to the “suspicious nature of the disappearance,” he added.

“We have every available asset in the police department working on the case right now,” he said, adding that “we are sparing no assets or resources.”

So far, the mother and residents have been cooperative, McManus said.

“Nobody comes and goes without talking to a police officer,” he said.

Anyone with information about her disappearance is asked to call SAPD’s missing person unit at 210-207-7660.

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