Claims: in vehicle placards

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02 Jul 2021
The placard on the vehicle is a standard designation for state-owned emergency management vehicles and does not indicate suspicious activity.

So at the end there, Alex zooms in on a placard that's in this vehicle, this van's back window, and it says, Emergency Response Team State Asset EMS Support Vehicle. I checked the Texas Transportation Code, and this could mean a number of things, and none of them are suspicious. For instance, a vehicle could have this placard if it were a, quote, vehicle used for law enforcement purposes that is owned or leased by a federal government entity, or if it was, quote, a county-owned or county-leased emergency management vehicle that's been designated or authorized by the commissioner's court. It just gives the vehicle certain rights, like the ability to park places and not get tickets. Or if there's an actual emergency, they can exceed the speed limit or turn left in no left-turn intersections. The vehicle is likely owned and operated by the state of Texas, and the Catholic Charity in question, as well as the Heartland Volunteers, are helping with the process because we don't allocate enough funds to keep refugees safe from people like Alex. This isn't a big mystery, and the only thing suspicious in this equation is Alex and his behavior.