Tuesday, September 25, 2012

Kingwood police on high alert after gun incident at Kingwood middle school


KINGWOOD, Texas—School officials and parents were on high alert after a man with a gun allegedly fired toward students walking near a middle school in Kingwood last Tuesday.
Three students were walking away from Creekwood Middle School around 4:40 p.m. when a man fired two shots in their direction, according to Houston police.
Police believe it was an air soft gun that shoots plastic pellets.
The students were about 50 feet away and managed to run away. No one was injured.
Police have a digital picture that was reportedly taken by someone on the Greenbelt of the alleged gunman. At this point, they are not releasing it to the public.
The man is said to be in his early 30s, about 6 feet tall and was wearing blue jeans and a black shirt.
Nicole Vincent got the email from her daughter’s school.
"I tell my kids stay off the Greenbelt trails and just come straight to the car when it’s time for pickup," said Vincent. "We’re not playing in the front yard."
Anyone with information is urged to contact HPD at             281-913-4500      or Humble ISD police at             281-641-7900      .
Humble ISD police officers will be on and near the campus at arrival and dismissal time.

Monday, September 17, 2012

Kingwood woman set for double arm transplant

Doctors at Brigham and Women’s Hospital have approved Katy Hayes of Kingwood, Texas, for a double arm transplant. The 44-year-old mother of three would be the first person in the United States to receive a transplant of both arms above the elbow. A similar procedure was performed in Germany.

Hayes lost her arms and legs two years ago, when she was infected with a flesh-eating bacteria after giving birth.

“Two years ago, I walked on my own two feet into the emergency room and most of the doctors there said I would die,” Hayes said at a press conference at the hospital Wednesday morning.
Doctors were able to save enough nerve and muscle when her arms were removed at about mid-biceps to make the transplant possible. Brigham surgeons said a transplant could give Hayes the ability to bend her elbows, making it possible for her to lift herself out of a wheelchair. They said they were not sure, because so few of these transplants have been performed, how much hand sensitivity or fine motor skills she would gain.

“I have to be baby-sat, which is ridiculous. I’m 44 years old,” Hayes said. “I’m really looking forward to having my independence back.”

Hayes was a massage therapist and said the loss of her hands has been painful.
“I still feel like myself inside,” she said. “I don’t think of myself as different until I look in the mirror. It’s hard to look in the mirror. It’s hard.”

Hayes and her family moved to the area in anticipation of the transplant, which required her husband to leave his job as a middle school teacher. The Brigham is working with the New England Organ Bank to find a donor. Read more about Hayes’s story on their family blog.
Chelsea Conaboy can be reached at cconaboy@boston.com. Follow her on Twitter@cconaboy.

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