leanderbuzz
Thursday, October 16, 2025
Contact Us
  • Home
  • News
  • Business
  • Austin
  • Texas
No Result
View All Result
LeanderBuzz
No Result
View All Result

Fort Bend County Elects First Black Sheriff Since Reconstruction

December 1, 2020
in Texas
2 min read
Fort Bend County Elects First Black Sheriff Since Reconstruction

Walter Moses Burton was 21 years old and living in slavery when he arrived to Texas in 1850. The wealthy white planter who enslaved Burton also taught him to read and write; after emancipation, he sold Burton several large plots of land in southeast Texas for a small sum, making him one of the wealthiest and most influential freedmen in Fort Bend County. In 1869, Burton successfully ran to be the state’s first Black sheriff and tax collector. Burton would go on to serve seven years in the Texas Senate, where he championed public education for newly freed Black citizens, and helped establish what is now Prairie View A&M University, one the state’s oldest historically Black institutions of higher learning.

More than 150 years would pass before Fort Bend County elected another Black sheriff. In November, voters elevated Eric Fagan, a longtime Houston police officer, to the post, making him the first Black sheriff in the county since Reconstruction.

Fagan, elected during a larger national reckoning on race and law enforcement, will lead an office that has been under fire for racial profiling. An investigation by the Houston Chronicle this summer revealed that a drug task force overseen by the Fort Bend County Sheriff’s Office overwhelmingly stopped and searched Latinx drivers, according to the paper’s analysis, in numbers that “defy statistical probability.” Fagan says he plans for more racial bias training for officers on the task force, as well as a citizens’ review board to oversee the office and flag concerns in the community. “Citizens shouldn’t fear being stopped and searched just because of the color of their skin,” Fagan says.

“Citizens shouldn’t fear being stopped and searched just because of the color of their skin.”

The Fort Bend County sheriff’s race was one of several in Texas and across the country that demonstrate the role of reform candidates in the growing movement to transform the criminal legal system. In Williamson County, north of Austin, voters elected Democrat Mike Gleason to replace Republican incumbent Robert Chody. Chody faces evidence tampering charges for allegedly destroying video showing the arrest and death of a Black man in his deputies’ custody. Fagan, a Democrat, replaces a far-right sheriff, Troy Nehls, who demonized Black Lives Matter protesters as “anti-law enforcement extremists” during his successful race for Congress in November. Nehls’ brother, Trevor, ran to fill the seat but lost to Fagan by 5 points.

Fagan, a career cop, says he doesn’t want to “defund” police, as his opponents claimed, but is open to reallocating funds to reduce incarceration and reliance on law enforcement. As for the historic nature of his election, Fagan says it’s another reflection of Fort Bend County becoming the most ethnically diverse county in the nation. Fagan’s election comes two years after Brian Middleton was elected as the county’s first Black district attorney on a platform that included bail reforms to lower the jail population. That year voters also elected KP George as Fort Bend’s first Asian American judge.

“Don’t let people say they only voted for us because we’re minorities,” Fagan says. “We’re qualified, we have qualified minorities here in Fort Bend County. It shouldn’t take another 151 years for a Black sheriff here.”

Read more from the Observer:

Credit: Source link

YOU MAY ALSO LIKE

A Night at the Screamo Bookstore

In Juárez, a Militarized Border Makes Drug Use More Deadly

ShareTweet
Previous Post

First COVID-19 vaccines in Austin could be given by end of December, APH director says

Next Post

2 dead after crash on FM 1826 near Hays County line

Related Posts

A Night at the Screamo Bookstore
Texas

A Night at the Screamo Bookstore

October 15, 2025
In Juárez, a Militarized Border Makes Drug Use More Deadly
Texas

In Juárez, a Militarized Border Makes Drug Use More Deadly

October 14, 2025
In Dallas, Organizers Mourn the Immigrant Victims of Recent ICE Shooting
Texas

In Dallas, Organizers Mourn the Immigrant Victims of Recent ICE Shooting

October 9, 2025
A Brazilian Carpenter’s 51-Day Detention Journey from Vermont to Texas
Texas

A Brazilian Carpenter’s 51-Day Detention Journey from Vermont to Texas

October 8, 2025

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Search

No Result
View All Result

Recent News

Key Longhorns lineman will miss Kentucky game

Key Longhorns lineman will miss Kentucky game

October 16, 2025
Multiple fire departments responding to grass fire in Burnet County

Multiple fire departments responding to grass fire in Burnet County

October 16, 2025
Austin ISD teacher detained by ICE, letter says

Austin ISD teacher detained by ICE, letter says

October 15, 2025
LeanderBuzz

LeanderBuzz.com is an online news portal which aims to share latest trendy news from USA especially northern Austin, Leander Texas Feel free to get in touch with us!

Recent News

  • Key Longhorns lineman will miss Kentucky game
  • Multiple fire departments responding to grass fire in Burnet County
  • Austin ISD teacher detained by ICE, letter says

Subscribe NOW

  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy

© 2019 LeanderBuzz.com - All rights reserved!

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
  • Business
  • Austin
  • Texas

© 2019 LeanderBuzz.com - All rights reserved!