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In 1962, he began working for the Houston Chronicle, where he was responsible for covering the Kennedy and Johnson administrations. Griffin was assistant director of Public Affairs for the U.S. Department of Transportation in Washington, D.C. (1969-1974.) After coming back to Texas, he founded Griffin Well Service, an oil company in El Campo. [2]
Houston Chronicle headquarters in Downtown Houston before its demolition. The Houston Chronicle building [citation needed] in Downtown Houston was the headquarters of the Houston Chronicle. [38] The facility included a loading dock, office space, a press room, and production areas. It had ten stories above ground and three stories below ground.
On July 9, 2014, a mass shooting occurred in a home located in northern Harris County, Texas, near the Spring census-designated place, a suburban area of the Greater Houston area, leaving six family members dead, four children, and a lone survivor. Ronald Lee Haskell, 34, was apprehended after a standoff that lasted several hours.
Brett Coomer/Houston Chronicle via Getty. Firefighters protect a neighborhood from a fire in a pipeline carrying liquified natural gas burns near Spencer Highway and Summerton on Monday, Sept. 16 ...
It was just after 3 a.m. in the warm Houston summer of 2019, when first responders arrived at Renard and Patricia Spivey 's home and found 52-year-old Patricia dead in the closet from multiple ...
A six-hour manhunt ensued resulting in a police shootout in south Houston in a commercial area off of Stella Link Road. The perpetrator was found hiding in a Dumpster by U.S. Marshal K-9 Rocky.
The Houston Chronicle editorial board criticized HPD, stating that it lost the trust of Houstonians. [ 32 ] In light of the shooting, Texas House of Representatives member Gene Wu and Texas Senate member Borris Miles proposed a bill that would make no-knock warrants unlawful in Texas.
From May to July 1999, four teenage girls from the Kingwood region of Houston, Texas, robbed four grocery stores and a bakery. [1] These stores were in Harris and Montgomery counties. The girls called themselves the "Queens of Armed Robbery", [2] and bought recreational drugs and body piercings with their money. [3]