New information about ‘brutal’ prison attack. What inmate said after allegedly killing cellmate.

By Laura French

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    RICHMOND, Virginia (WTVR) — Nadia Ross remembers her younger brother Princeo Brooks as someone who was “always smiling.”

The 42-year-old loved his music, his family and above all, his 10-year-old son Kendrick.

“His only son, his world, like Kendrick, is his world to him,” Ross said. “All he looked forward to was doing his time and coming home, and all he kept talking about was reuniting with his son and getting on his feet so that he can get his son.”

Brooks was serving time at Greensville Correctional Center for assault and battery, grand larceny and shoplifting.

His family said he was scheduled to be released in 2026. Instead, he was just laid to rest after his 10-year-old son bid the final farewell.

Brooks was found unresponsive November 11 with his cellmate on top of him after an “apparent attack,” according to the Virginia Department of Corrections.

Sources exclusively told CBS 6 that cellmate was Nickolaus Brown, convicted in Southwest Virginia of attempted capital murder, attempted robbery and use of a firearm in those crimes. According to VADOC records Brown is now at Red Onion State Prison in Wise County.

Brown and Brooks were housed in the general population.

Sources said that after the alleged attack, Brown was talking to himself and stated that Brooks “didn’t know he deserved it.”

Sources described the attack as “brutal” and said it may have been prevented had the facility been properly staffed that evening.

According to a State Inspector General report conducted in July 2025, Greensville’s staffing has a vacancy rate of close to 50%.

At the time of Brooks’s death, sources said most security posts were left vacant in the evening because non-security staff were having to assist with rounds and checking on inmates during the day.

“It’s reasonable to understand that there may be situations that happen in prison, like fights or disagreements, that happens in life, that can happen even not in prison, but you don’t expect death,” Ross said through tears. “You don’t expect that.”

University of Virginia Professor Gerard Robinson is a professor of practice in public policy and law at the Frank Batten School of Leadership and Public Policy and School of Law. He teaches a course called “Inside US Prisons.” The former Secretary of Education under Governor Bob McDonnell said the understaffing problem extends beyond Virginia.

“The problem of understaffing in prisons is not endemic to just Virginia. It’s nationwide,” Robinson said. “The largest state agency in Virginia is the Department of Corrections, approximately 11,000 employees. And so for a public institution to have that many employees and the millions of dollars we invest on face value, you would think, well, we should have enough money to pay people.”

Robinson said correctional officers make less than they probably should for the work they do, but noted that money alone isn’t the only issue.

“The suicide rate for American correctional officers is higher than the suicide rate for American police, then we realize we have a correctional problem,” Robinson said. “Professional development, mental and social health and support for correctional officers is needed, because even though they leave prison, they bring that home to their families.”

Brooks’s passing brings the total number of Greensville inmate deaths in the last three years to 68. According to the Inspector General report, about half died at the facility and the other half at local hospitals. Thirty-five percent of those deaths happened last year alone, and in two-thirds of those cases, the cause is still pending.

“You would think that the prison has certain protocols in place to protect the people in there, and they failed him,” Ross said. “They failed him. My next step is making sure this doesn’t happen to another family.”

Robinson suggests focusing on implementing existing laws and regulations rather than creating new ones, talking to formerly incarcerated people about their experiences, and interviewing outgoing leaders who may now be more willing to discuss barriers they faced.

“People do make mistakes in life. I’m not taking away from that. He never took away from that,” Ross said. “However, when a loved one goes to prison and they’re sentenced to a certain amount of time, you expect to see them again. You expect, he was on his way home.”

Brooks’s family said the Virginia Department of Corrections notified them of his passing but would not answer any questions about how he died.

They said they found out it was an alleged attack through media reports.

I reached out to the Virginia Department of Corrections for comment and as of this publication CBS 6 has not received a statement.

The Virginia Department of Corrections provided the following statement on alleged staffing shortages November 12:

“The security of VADOC facilities and the safety of our corrections team and inmate population remains our agency’s top priority. Staffing is a concern not just for the VADOC. Correctional systems and jails across the United States are experiencing staffing shortages. The Department aggressively recruits security and non-security candidates and utilizes new corrections technologies to help ensure safety and security.”

Robinson said there are two things Governor Spanberger can do. The first he said is to signal human dignity in prisons.

“Why the term human dignity? It’s a term that’s used internationally to talk about how we should treat people who are incarcerated. So, she’s at least extending this to a broader national and international conversation. And the number two is to lead by example,” he said.

He said Governor McDonnell did this by visiting inmates in prison because he said he was their governor too.

This story was initially reported by a journalist and has been converted to this platform with the assistance of AI. WTVR verifies all reporting on all platforms for fairness and accuracy.

Please note: This story was provided to CNN Wire by an affiliate and does not contain original CNN reporting. This content carries a strict local market embargo. If you share the same market as the contributor of this article, you may not use it on any platform.

Teen’s idea leads to bill offering tax credits for braille shipping labels

By Cameron Thompson

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    RICHMOND, Virginia (WTVR) — The Virginia State Senate is moving forward with legislation aimed at improving the independence of Virginians with visual impairments.

The Senate Finance Committee approved a bill Tuesday to allow a tax credit of up to $50,000 for Virginia-based companies to create a program that could put braille lettering on packages they ship to customers.

18-year-old Tate Jordan proposed the idea to his legislator, Sen. Danica Roem (D-Prince William), last year. He created an example of what a package label looks like to him, and one with braille letters to show the challenges about 184,000 Virginians like him face.

“For many blind people, they can’t independently look at their mail or look at the packages they receive and tell independently what that text says, who it’s addressed to, the address,” Jordan said. “I’ve heard horror stories from blind people who have packages sent to giant shipping rooms in their apartments where they’ll spend hours looking for a package.”

“If you are blind, visually-impaired, you’re online, you can click a little box that says ‘Send the label in braille,’ and then they can print it off and go do that,” Roem said.

The legislation now moves to the full Senate for a vote.

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Women accused of stealing $8,000 worth of baby formula

By Emma Romano

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    STUART, Florida (WPTV) — Two Jacksonville women were arrested Tuesday night after authorities said they stole hundreds of cans of baby formula valued at around $8,000 during a multi-stop theft spree in Martin County.

Summer Bryant, 36, and Andrea Williams, 38, were taken into custody after detectives and road patrol deputies caught them leaving a Walgreens at Salerno Road and Kanner Highway with bags of stolen merchandise, according to the Martin County Sheriff’s Office.

The crime spree began in the City of Stuart, where Stuart Police received reports of two suspicious women who suddenly left a retail store without paying for items. That alert was passed along to Martin County deputies, who quickly began searching for the suspects’ vehicle.

Deputies located the car outside the Walgreens. When they approached, detectives spotted Bryant and Williams exiting the store with bags stuffed full of baby formula. A search of their vehicle revealed even more stolen formula, totaling about 160 cans.

Baby formula theft has become an increasingly common offense across Florida and the nation due to the product’s high resale value and strong demand, often leading thieves to target multiple stores across several jurisdictions in a short period of time.

Both Bryant and Williams were arrested, transported to the Martin County Jail, and charged with multiple offenses. Authorities say the investigation is ongoing to determine whether the suspects are tied to other similar thefts in the area.

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Man charged with murder after confessing to stabbing boyfriend, dumping body in park

By Travis Case

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    BALTIMORE (WMAR) — 30-year-old Eric Jones Jr. has been charged with first and second-degree assault of Dashond Johnson.

Jones is alleged to have also stabbed and killed Johnson.

On January 19, Baltimore Police arrived at 24 S. Bernice Street in response to a missing persons report.

Police spoke to Johnson’s sister, who said she had not seen or heard from him in over two weeks, as she was concerned for his safety, according to charging documents.

Officers also spoke to the roommate and resident at 24 S. Bernice Street, who said Johnson lived there with his boyfriend.

His roommate told authorities he had traveled out of town for the holidays and didn’t see Johnson at all since he got back.

Later, police facetimed Eric Jones Jr. Jones told them on the night of January 2, 2026, he got into a serious argument with Johnson; Johnson “stormed out” of the house.

Jones ended by saying he had not seen Johnson since the argument.

According to the Baltimore Police, the homicide unit was brought into the fold as the circumstances of the disappearance felt suspicious.

The preliminary investigation revealed a follow-up to a suspicious 911 call with a nearby resident.

Police say the resident stated that she heard a male outside screaming “Oh my God, Oh my God” multiple times.

Looking out the window, she saw a male stumble from 24 S. Bernice St., clutching his chest. The man then collapsed between two parked vehicles.

She said a second male would come out of the house at 24 S. Bernice St. and looked at the male who collapsed.

The second male retrieved a folding cart from the front yard and placed the unresponsive male in it.

The second male went back inside the house. Shortly after, he went back outside fully dressed and pushed the cart down the street towards an alley.

She says she saw the second male the following morning (Jan 3), scrubbing the front steps and sidewalk in front of 24 S. Bernice St.

Detectives later spoke with Johnson’s sister, who said her brother told her in recent conversations that his relationship with Jones had been on a downward spiral over the past year.

He told her their arguments at times had become physically violent. In addition, Johnson told his sister that if anything were to happen to him, Eric Jones Jr. would be responsible.

Detectives later obtained a search warrant for the house on S. Bernice St.

During their search, luminol was used to detect blood in the home.

The bedroom, living room, and front doorway yielded positive reactions consistent with the presence of blood and or cleaned bloodstain patterns.

Eric Jones Jr. was brought in by the homicide unit for questioning. Jones voluntarily waived his Miranda rights.

Jones confessed and admitted to getting into a physical altercation with Johnson and stabbing him multiple times, according to charging documents.

Police say he admitted to putting Johnson into a wagon, covering it with a suitcase, and taking his body to Leakin Park.

There, he said he covered Johnson’s body with stones.

Jones used Google Earth to show detectives where he dumped the body. Detectives with body-worn cameras, along with Jones, went to the said location.

Police recovered Johnson’s body. The scene was assessed by the Baltimore Police Crime Lab and the Chief Medical Examiner.

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Wife searches for husband after ICE detention following traffic stop

By Miyoshi Price

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    ARCADIA, Florida (WFTX) — Elizabeth Alejo has been desperately trying to find her husband for weeks after what started as a routine traffic stop turned into an immigration detention nightmare.

Mario Garcia-Falcon was pulled over on Dec. 17 near Hillsboro Avenue and Palm Drive in DeSoto County. She said he did not come to a complete stop at a stop sign. His wife told Price that he’s not a U.S. citizen but has been in the legal immigration process since 2022. Alejo did say that he had a few misdemeanors from his past out of Manatee County, but said it was years ago.

“They just took him,” Alejo said, standing at the corner where her husband was arrested.

Despite Alejo posting bond that Wednesday afternoon, ICE picked up Garcia-Falcon the next day and transported him to a detention facility.

Now, it’s been a confusing maze of transfers and communication breakdowns that highlight the challenges families face when trying to find loved ones in ICE custody.

According to the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement website, information in their Online Detainee Locator System may be up to eight hours old. ICE policy requires systems to be updated within eight hours of any release, removal or transfer of detainees, though the agency notes that “people planning to visit a detainee should call ahead to the detention facility to confirm the detainee is still at that location.”

For Alejo, this delay has created significant confusion. After three weeks at one facility, Garcia-Falcon was transferred again. For five days, she had no communication with him.

“I was so scared. I thought maybe he had been sent to Mexico, but I wanted to hear it from him,” Alejo said.

When Garcia-Falcon finally called on Jan. 11, Alejo said he was in tears, calling from Oklahoma. However, the ICE locator system showed him at South Texas Detention Center.

“He said that’s where he was supposed to go. But then they changed direction and took him to Oklahoma,” Alejo said.

The DeMine Immigration Law Firm in Fort Myers, which Alejo hired to represent her husband, reports seeing similar problems across multiple cases. The firm said they are experiencing an increase in families having difficulty finding loved ones in ICE custody.

“It is taking weeks to know exactly where they are,” the firm stated. “We currently have a client that is showing the locator to be in Texas, but the client is telling us they are actually somewhere else.”

The attorneys also report cases where individuals are being detained at routine ICE check-ins, including people with pending spousal petitions who entered the country legally and have clear pathways to lawful status with no criminal history.

“They are detaining people who clearly qualify for a bond and have an attorney,” the firm noted.

The ordeal has taken a severe toll on Alejo’s family. Garcia-Falcon ran their landscaping business, and his absence has created both financial strain and emotional hardship for their three-year-old son and Alejo’s two older daughters, whom Garcia-Falcon has helped raise since 2015.

“He is the man that you need an oil change. You need your brakes done. You need help with the kids. You need someone to cook. He is that man. He takes care of us very well, and we all miss him,” Alejo said.

The family has paid $6,000 for immigration attorney fees to file a bond motion, which was submitted Jan. 8. They are still waiting for a court hearing.

“Not everyone is able to pay six grand to an immigration lawyer. It’s expensive,” Alejo said. “Some families do not have means to do so.”

Garcia-Falcon came to the United States at 15-years-old for a better future for his family. He and Alejo met in 2016 and married in 2019. Alejo filed immigration paperwork for his residency around 2022, and they were told they had about a year left in the process.

Price searched court records in DeSoto and Manatee counties. In Manatee County, Garcia-Falcon was arrested for three misdemeanors, including DUI. He pleaded no contest for that charge.

In DeSoto County, the most recent case, he was arrested for not having a valid driver’s license.

For now, Alejo continues to wait for a court hearing while maintaining hope that her husband will be granted bond and allowed to return home while his immigration case proceeds.

“I would say to trust God, he’s the only one that will help you through these tough times, and always stay positive, no matter how hard the situation may be,” Alejo said. “You can’t really do nothing being depressed. You have to keep pushing forward for your family because they hurt.”

This story was reported on-air by a journalist and has been converted to this platform with the assistance of AI. WFTX verifies all reporting on all platforms for fairness and accuracy.

Please note: This story was provided to CNN Wire by an affiliate and does not contain original CNN reporting. This content carries a strict local market embargo. If you share the same market as the contributor of this article, you may not use it on any platform.

New charges added in investigation against nurse accused of assaulting patients

By Paula Wethington

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    WAYNE COUNTY, Michigan (WWJ) — A Michigan nurse who is already under investigation over reported sexual assaults, including two victims who were hospital patients, faces multiple charges in five new cases, Wayne County Prosecutor Kym Worthy said.

Wilfredo Figueroa-Berrios, 47, of Wayne, remains in jail on the pending cases.

“It is typical that additional and necessary information is requested from the police in these cases, so they take time to charge. Since the defendant remained in jail during the process WCPO was certain that no others were in danger as we continued to process the new cases,” the prosecutor’s office said.

The new cases involve the following circumstances:

Dec. 23, 2021 – Criminal sexual conduct-third degree and criminal sexual conduct-fourth degree in connection with the reported assault of a 34-year-old woman who was a patient at Community Outreach for Psychiatric Emergencies in Livonia. The arraignment on this charge is scheduled for Jan. 22 in 16th District Court.

Dec. 18, 2024 – Criminal sexual conduct-third degree and criminal sexual conduct-fourth degree in connection with the reported assault of a 22-year-old woman who was a patient at Sinai Grace Hospital in Detroit.

July 1, 2025 – Criminal sexual conduct-third degree and criminal sexual conduct-fourth degree in connection with the reported assault of a 35-year-old woman who was a patient at Sinai Grace Hospital.

July 28, 2025 – Two counts of sexual contact-misrepresentation of medical treatment and one count criminal sexual conduct-fourth degree in connection with the reported assault of a 24-year-old woman who was a patient at Sinai Grace Hospital.

Aug. 24, 2025 – Two counts of sexual contact-misrepresentation of medical treatment and one count of criminal sexual conduct-fourth degree in connection with the reported assault of a 26-year-old woman at Sinai Grace Hospital. An arraignment will be scheduled in 36th District Court.

The earlier cases include a report of a 31-year-old woman assaulted on Aug. 12, 2025, and a 37-year-old woman assaulted on Aug. 19, both while patient at Sinai Grace, the prosecutor’s office said. There were also charges filed in connection with a 41-year-old woman who is reported to have been assaulted on May 9 at a portable toilet in Detroit.

All three of the earlier criminal cases are pending in Third Circuit Court, the prosecutor’s office said.

A civil lawsuit was filed in early October involving his alleged behavior. Another civil lawsuit was filed about a week later.

Sinai Grace has, in the meantime, terminated his employment, the hospital said in October.

The prosecutor’s office said that anyone who has been sexually assaulted in a related case should make a report to the police department in the community where the incident happened. The Avalon Healing Center can also be contacted at 313-964-9701 for assistance.

“A doctor’s office, or an exam room, or any kind hospital setting should be the ultimate safe space for anyone seeking medical care. The allegations in this case are disturbing and should in no way reflect poorly on our many hardworking, caring health care professionals,” Worthy said

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Man, 5-year-old girl, both dead after falling through ice

By Paula Wethington

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    WESTPHALIA TOWNSHIP, Michigan (WWJ) — A child and an adult are dead after falling through the ice on a pond in Mid-Michigan, local deputies said.

The Clinton County Sheriff’s Office said it received the emergency call about 5:20 p.m. Wednesday along Clintonia Road in Westphalia Township. Deputies said that a utility task vehicle, ridden by the adult and child, broke through the ice on a private pond.

Both were pulled from the pond and taken to UM Health-Sparrow Hospital in Lansing, where deputies said they died as a result of their injuries.

The two were identified as a 5-year-old girl and a 50-year-old man, both from the Portland area.

Agencies that assisted on the call included Westphalia Township Fire Department, Portland Fire Department, Portland Police Department, Dewitt Township Police, Portland Ambulance, Michigan State Police, Clinton County and Capital area Dive Teams and Clinton County Central Dispatch.

The incident remains under investigation.

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Son of wrongly executed Dallas man finds peace after 70 years with father’s exoneration

By J.D. Miles

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    DALLAS, Texas (KTVT) — History in Dallas was made on Wednesday as county leaders officially acknowledged that a man convicted and sentenced to death for a murder 70 years ago was innocent.

Dallas County commissioners passed a symbolic resolution exonerating Tommy Lee Walker.

Two men whose lives were shaped by trauma more than 70 years ago met and embraced each other for the first time.

The son of Tommy Lee Walker and the son of Venice Parker were victims of what Dallas County has determined to be a travesty of justice.

“The Dallas County District Attorney’s office of today would not have pursued a criminal case against Tommy Lee Walker for the sexual assault and murder of Venice Parker,” said Dallas County District Attorney John Creuzot.

The District Attorney, along with freelance journalists and law professors, laid out more than a decade of research that found Walker was falsely accused of murder during a time of racial hysteria, discredited witness accounts and false confessions.

“While we did not find DNA in the Parker murder, we did discover a story that desperately needed to be told,” said journalist Mary Mapes.

“‘I didn’t intend to kill her, she ran into my knife,’ making clear that someone suggested to him, and maybe this wasn’t the horrible crime that actually was, but something else, and he could therefore expect leniency,” said Margaret Burnham, a Northeastern University professor of law.

“When I saw the video, what he said to the judge, I could just see that he was doing his best to explain, but nobody was going to listen. Having lived through segregation myself growing up in New Orleans,” says Creuzot. “I could read his mind, I can say, ‘They’re going to kill me, and I didn’t do this.'”

Walker’s son, Ted Smith, watched film footage of his father’s haunting stare, recorded on the day he was sentenced to death after pleading his innocence to a judge.

It was all too much for his son.

“I’m 72 years old, and I still miss my daddy,” said Smith.

He broke down talking about the father he barely remembers.

“They gave your father the electric chair for something he didn’t do… and it hurts every time I talk about it because I miss my father,” Smith said. “I miss him dearly.”

Even the son of the murder victim supported a proposed resolution to exonerate the man convicted of killing his mother.

“Society and the justice system seem to have a knack for taking the biggest court cases and screwing them up royally,” said Joe Parker, Venice Parker’s son.

The courtroom bench where Walker stood in judgment 70 years ago is still intact. His son was just across the hall from that very spot on Wednesday when he finally received the peace of mind that he’s waited his whole life for.

The resolution exonerating a man killed by the state at age 21 was mostly symbolic, but it allows Walker’s family to build a proud legacy in his name.

“We can move on with our lives because I don’t have to go looking over my shoulder,” Smith said. “‘Oh, that’s Tommy Lee Walker’s son, that man did that.’ I don’t have to do that. Of course, my daddy’s name is clear.”

“I’m grateful this injustice was acknowledged today, because Mr. Tommy Lee Walker deserved justice in his lifetime. Honoring the past means changing the policies that allow injustice to happen today, anything less is symbolism without accountability,” says Former Dallas District Judge and Democratic candidate for district attorney Amber Givens.

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Firefighters rescue 90-year-old woman from burning apartment

By Steven Rosenbaum

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    EULESS, Texas (KTVT) — A 90-year-old North Texas woman is in the hospital after a fire tore through her apartment building overnight.

The Euless Fire Department responded to a 911 call just after 1 a.m. at an apartment complex on El Camino Real just south of Pipeline Road.

It was initially dispatched as a 1-alarm fire. A drone sent ahead of the firefighters saw flames shooting through the roof, so more personnel were sent before the first crew even arrived, according to Euless fire chief Chanc Bennett.

When the firefighters arrived, someone in the yard said there was a person still inside who needed to be rescued. Firefighters went in through a window and pulled the woman out, Bennett said. She was taken to the hospital in good condition.

The apartment building contained four units, and the American Red Cross responded to help the residents. The cause of the fire is under investigation.

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Questions remain for Dallas nonprofit that built its legacy on meals for students

By Andrea Lucia, Kelsy Mittauer

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    DALLAS, Texas (KTVT) — For years, a Dallas nonprofit has built its name on making meals for Dallas Independent School District students. Volunteers would gather at Hunger Busters every school day, putting together sandwiches and sides for thousands of students who were experiencing food insecurity at home.

But a CBS News Texas investigation found those daily meals no longer being delivered to schools, despite the nonprofit’s claims to the contrary.

The 25-year-old charity has run largely on money raised through private donations and popular fundraisers.

In November 2025, Hunger Busters held its signature annual event, a black-tie gala held at the Hilton Anatole. Tickets to “Meet the Chefs,” which included a six-course meal, charity auction, gambling and swag bags, cost $400 each. While the nonprofit hasn’t shared how much the event brought in, in previous years, “Meet The Chef” has raised a $250,000 in just one night.

That event was one of several fundraisers held last year under the leadership of CEO Latame Phillips, who took over the leadership role in 2023 after several years with the organization. Dallas ISD internal records show a formal agreement to accept the meals was in place in early 2020, before COVID-19 shut down schools and disrupted operations.

Hunger Busters’ social media posts appear to show at least some deliveries resumed after the pandemic, with sandwiches being made until April 2024. Photos of volunteers since then, though, only show cookies and brownies. No sandwiches, and no brown bags.

The I-Team called every school Phillips listed in a 2024 grant application; none said they were receiving meals. Some said they used to get deliveries, but it had been years.

When we found Phillips at Hunger Busters in early January, he declined to be interviewed or answer most of our questions. We asked him directly: when did the daily meal deliveries stop? At first, he said, “about a year ago,” but when we asked for more specifics, he told us he wasn’t sure.

In an email, his only explanation was that the feeding model had changed to support after-school programs and churches, but he would not name any of them.

Another nonprofit is suing Hunger Busters, claiming Phillips misused grant money. The Tyler Street Foundation claims Phillips applied for two grants to help pay for an additional delivery van and the purchase of the Hunger Busters building at 3116 Sylvan Avenue.

According to the lawsuit, Phillips accepted more than $116,000 then submitted altered documents to make it appear as if the van and land had been bought.

In a court filing, Phillips contends the money was used for “programmatic services consistent with its general mission” and was not “diverted for personal use or gain.”

The I-Team reached out to all 23 board members previously listed on the Hunger Busters website. Only Dee Baker Amos, the board chair, agreed to interview.

She told CBS News Texas’ Andrea Lucia that she was not aware that the feeding model had changed.

ANDREA LUCIA: But you’re the board chair. How do you not know?

DEE BAKER AMOS: So, I think that that is a really good question, and I will tell you as board chair that I should know. And as the board chair, I should be privy to the details around the operation, I should be privy to the financials and the revenue, and the fact that I don’t know is a problem for me.

Amos pushed back against the idea that Hunger Busters is not serving food at all, but admitted that the board was focused more on fundraising and strategy and not the day-to-day operations.

ANDREA LUCIA: Where did the money go, if it wasn’t going to daily meals?

DEE BAKER AMOS: So, your comment from Latame about the food not being delivered for a whole year, this is the first time I’ve heard that. I’m not aware that we’ve not been feeding anybody for a full year. That doesn’t make sense to me.

Amos’ term as board chair was set to end at the end of 2025, but she said she’d agreed to stay on as Hunger Busters decides how to address the lawsuit and questions about its transparency.

According to Amos, the board is in talks right now about the current state of the nonprofit and where it goes from here. She says questions about Phillips’ future are “reasonable,” but also called him a “really smart guy” who worked hard for Hunger Busters.

“And I will tell you this,” Amos added, “I have not one time prior to this questioned whether or not the way he was leading and how he was leading was the right thing.”

The easiest way to learn more about how a nonprofit handles its money is through IRS filings. Nonprofits are required to turn over up to three years’ worth of forms to anyone who asks, but experts suggest taking it a step further and posting them online.

“Transparency, one, is a nonprofit’s best friend,” Dr. Elizabeth Dearing told the I-Team. Dearing, who is an associate professor at UT-Dallas, specializes in nonprofit management. While she did not comment on Hunger Busters specifically, she did talk about best practices in general.

“Make sure that you have your Form 990s online,” Dearing suggested. “If you’ve got audited financial statements [put them] online, make sure your board is online.”

A Form 990 is what small to mid-sized nonprofits file with the IRS each year. The most recent Hunger Busters filing posted online by the IRS is from 2021, before Phillips became CEO. The I-Team has made repeated requests to Phillips for the filings, which federal law requires he turn over to anyone who asks, but as of this report had not received them.

When it comes to a nonprofit’s board, Dearing says size matters. Very small organizations may have a working board: members who actually carry out the day-to-day tasks and mission of the group.

Other types of boards may focus only on advising or fundraising.

But regardless of size, Dearing says, every member should have basic knowledge of the organization.

“I think that the formal responsibilities are relatively set, in terms of being knowledgeable and being able to answer for the Form 990 of the organization.”

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