© 2025
In touch with the world ... at home on the High Plains
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations
Our translator station serving St. Francis and Cheyenne County at 96.3 FM is off the air due to an air conditioning breakdown at its leased transmitter site, making it too hot for HPPR's equipment to operate. We are currently working to fix the situation. We apologize for the loss of service and ask listeners to tune to KZNK at 90.1 FM or listen on line through the player above or HPPR's mobile app.

In Texas, Sexual Assaults by Police "Depressingly Common"

Sue Ogrocki
/
AP photo

Stories of police sexually assaulting women have become depressingly common in Texas, according to a new story in Texas Monthly.

In June, an Amarillo police officer was fired a day after he responded to a 911 call at the home of a woman. After the officer went to her house, the woman told police that he raped her. A rape kit conducted afterward proved her story. Though the officer was fired, he was not indicted.

Accusations like these have arisen all over The Lone Star State. Last month an officer in Pharr, Texas, was convicted of sexual assault of a child—a fifteen-year-old who was raped multiple times by the officer. Earlier this month, a Texas state trooper was fired after he stopped a woman for speeding and offered her $300 to have sex with him. And in Odessa this month, an officer was convicted on five counts of improper sexual activity after he groped five different women he pulled over for traffic stops. 

Texas Monthly says: “These stories aren’t rare, and they’re damaging to a lot of people.”