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Former local mail carrier accused of stealing credit cards By Landan Kuhlmann landan@theleadernews.com
A former U.S. Postal Service carrier who worked in Woodland Heights has been accused of stealing and fraudulently using local residents’ credit cards, according to the Harris County Precinct 1 Constable’s Office. Ashlee Humphrey Williams, 35, has been charged with credit card abuse involving an elderly person, a felony, after allegedly stealing credit cards from two people while delivering mail for
USPS - and then allegedly making fraudulent purchases with the cards while wearing her USPS uniform - according to Harris County court documents. The constable’s office said there is a warrant out for Williams’ arrest and that it is investigating multiple credit card abuse complaints in the Woodland Heights, with the first incident having occurred in 2020. Williams previously pleaded guilty to felony credit card abuse in 2011, according to court records.
Williams
Williams is no longer employed by USPS, according to David Wilsey, a spokesperson for the postal service’s Office of the Inspector General (OIG). “This type of alleged behavior within the Postal Service is not tolerated,” Wilsey said in an emailed statement. Court records show that a woman reported to police Feb. 14 that her Chase United Plus credit card had been stolen and used in 22 transactions totaling more than $2,400 in charges. Surveillance footage
Mad about mudbugs
from the woman’s home allegedly showed that Williams was her regular mail carrier and that Williams had allegedly removed a piece of mail from the woman’s mailbox that included the credit card, according to court documents. Surveillance footage from stores such as Sam’s Club and Academy Sports allegedly showed Williams making fraudulent purchases with the card while wearing her USPS uniform, court records show. See Credit Cards P. 4A
Heights resident departs HCFCD for private sector By Adam Zuvanich azuvanich@theleadernews.com
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INSIDE. Contributed photo Mudbugs are the main attraction at the annual Greater Heights Area Chamber of Commerce Crawfish Festival, which is returning March 5 after being canceled last year because of the COVID-19 pandemic.
Heights crawfish festival to be held at music hall By Adam Zuvanich azuvanich@theleadernews.com
Inspiring artists. Mitch Cohen writes about a recent art exhibition featuring inspiring young artists.
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Smokin’ hot home. A Garden Oaks Home with a built-in smoker is for sale.
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THE INDEX. Church....................................................... 4A Classifieds.............................................. 5A Coupons................................................... 3B Food/Drink............................................. 7A Opinion..................................................... 3A Public Information......................... 2A Puzzles...................................................... 3A Sports......................................................... 3B
Heaping mounds of mudbugs were not served last year by the Greater Heights Area Chamber of Commerce, which scrapped its annual crawfish festival because of the COVID-19 pandemic. The free community event is back this year and, considering its new setup, might make up for lost time. The Raven Tower at White Oak Music Hall, 310 North St., is hosting this year’s festival, scheduled for 11 a.m.-6 p.m. Saturday, March 5. And along with beer, including offerings from local craft brewery Eureka Heights Brew Co., mixed drinks will be sold. Liquor was not available at previous crawfish festivals, which typically were held on a closed-off street or in a parking lot. “We can’t wait to see everybody there,” chamber president James Montalbano said. “Everybody’s welcome.” The festival will feature live music as usual, with Lucid Illusions, a bluesy alternative rock band from Houston, performing this year. There also will be more than 75 vendors on hand as well as a “Kidz Zone.” Among the other attractions will be the finals of the
Contributed photo The Greater Heights Area Chamber of Commerce Crawfish Festival will be held March 5 at the Raven Tower at White Oak Music Hall. There will be live music like at previous crawfish festivals.
“Idol of the Heights” singing competition, with performers vying for a top prize of $1,500. Three preliminary rounds were held earlier this month at local bars.
During his six years with the Harris County Flood Control District, Matt Zeve built a reputation for being accessible, responsive, transparent, collaborative and helpful to fellow engineers, elected officials, members of the news media and Houston-area residents concerned about flooding. He also proved to be knowledgea ble, resourceful and effective in helping to initiate and complete drainage projects. As far as the longtime Heights Zeve resident is concerned, being accountable to the taxpaying public should be a key part of the job for anyone who works for a government agency. “The citizens of Harris County are our clients, right? So I feel like we have an obligation to be open and transparent,” Zeve said. “Their property taxes pay for flood control. I feel like I should be responsive to their questions and answer their questions, because I work for them. “Or I did work for them,” he added. Zeve, 45, resigned from his position as deputy executive director in late January. He had held that job since September 2018, after starting as the flood control district’s chief operations officer in November 2015 before being promoted to director of operations in September 2016. Zeve was the top-ranking official at the flood control after Russ Poppe resigned as executive director in June 2021, but he was not promoted to interim director by the Harris County Commissioners Court, which instead gave that title to Alan Black. Tina Petersen was named as the new executive director on Jan. 25, a few days before Zeve resigned. “I resigned because I sensed that the current administration was going to go in a different direction,” he said, “and I felt I was not part of their plan.” Zeve, who said he’ll start a new job in a leadership role with Gauge EngineerSee Zeve P. 4A
See Crawfish P. 5A
Study: City taxpayers subsidizing county services By Adam Zuvanich azuvanich@theleadernews.com
If you own property within the Houston city limits, you pay annual property taxes not to the city government but to Harris County. Are the people and businesses in Houston, where nearly half of the county’s population resides, getting a fair return on their investment? They are not, according
to a recent property tax equity study published by the Kinder Institute for Urban Research at Rice University. It estimated that during the fiscal years 2019 and 2020, Houston property owners contributed approximately $312 million more in tax revenue than they received in county services. According to the study, “This subsidy amounts to approximately 6 percent of the county’s total expendi-
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tures derived from property tax revenues.” The county collects and spends about $2 billion per year in property tax revenue, according to the institute, while the Harris County Hospital District collects and spends about $700 million per year. The study was commissioned through a city budget amendment made by Houston City Council member Abbie Kamin, who serves the Heights, Garden Oaks
and Oak Forest areas as part of District C. “The study speaks for itself in terms of the disproportionate investment outside of our city that Houston taxpayers are footing the bill on,” Kamin said. “I believed this to be the case, but felt it was important to actually capture it in numbers so that we have something to point to, something to go off of, See Taxpayers P. 5A
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