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Day: November 12, 2025

McCathern, Shokouhi, Evans expands its Dallas footprint with the addition of Kevin Koudelka and his law firm, strengthening the firm’s capabilities in construction litigation, catastrophic personal injury, product liability, commercial disputes, aviation, and more.

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Standing on Their Shoulders: Black Legal Pioneers and Our Responsibility Today

February 18, 2026

Author: Attorney Chelsey L. Watts Black History Month is more than reflection; it is recognition of the legal architects who reshaped our Constitution, our courts, and our profession. For Black attorneys in particular, the law has represented more than a career, it has been a vehicle for structural change, civic participation, and the pursuit of equality under the Constitution. I still remember the first time I walked into a courtroom as a young attorney. I paused for a moment before taking my seat at the counsel table. I thought about how, not long ago, someone who looked like me would not have been permitted in that room, except perhaps as a defendant. That realization was both humbling and motivating. Among the most influential was Thurgood Marshall, whose litigation strategy dismantled legalized segregation and culminated in his appointment as the first Black Justice of the United States Supreme Court. His work, including his role in Brown v. Board of Education, reshaped constitutional law and redefined equal protection for generations. As a graduate of the law school named for Thurgood Marshall, I felt a profound sense of history, and the weight of that legacy was never lost on me. Each time I entered the law library to study, I was reminded that I was walking in the footsteps of a jurist whose work reshaped the Constitution. Before Marshall, trailblazers like Charlotte E. Ray broke both racial and gender barriers when she became the first Black woman admitted to the bar in the United States in 1872. Equally foundational was Charles Hamilton Houston, often referred to as “The Man Who Killed Jim Crow.” As a legal strategist and educator, Houston trained a generation of civil rights lawyers and engineered the constitutional framework that would later dismantle segregation. His belief that the law could be used as an instrument of social engineering continues to influence modern advocacy. Before becoming the 44th President of the United States, President Barack Obama was a constitutional law scholar and civil rights attorney. His legal training deeply influenced his approach to governance, policy, and judicial appointments. The career of Vice President Kamala Harris, a former prosecutor and state attorney general, reflects the expanding presence of Black women in positions historically closed to them within the legal and executive branches. For me, entering the legal profession was driven by a belief that the law is one of the most powerful tools for shaping opportunity. I was drawn to the discipline not only because of its intellectual rigor, but because of its capacity to shape outcomes that affect families, businesses, and communities. Over the course of my career, I have worked to build not only a record of professional accomplishment but also a platform for leadership and mentorship beyond the firm. My commitment to leadership is not about individual advancement, but about stewardship. This belief in stewardship extends to my work with the JL Turner Legal Association, a historical organization dedicated to advancing Black attorneys and strengthening professional development across the Dallas metroplex. The JL Turner Legal Association serves as both a professional network and a platform for service. Through continuing legal education initiatives, mentorship programming, and community outreach efforts, the organization seeks to strengthen the pipeline of diverse legal talent while supporting attorneys at every stage of their careers. As the current President-Elect of this Association, I am reminded that institutional progress requires both vision and action. The gains secured by Marshall, Ray, and Houston were not abstract ideals; they were the result of strategic litigation, disciplined scholarship, and courageous leadership. Our work today builds upon that same foundation. To honor the legacy of Black legal pioneers is to pursue excellence in our craft. It is to mentor intentionally. It is to advocate ethically. It is to lead with integrity. And it is to ensure that the profession continues to evolve toward greater inclusion and equity. Standing on the shoulders of those who came before us, we are called not only to remember but to build. When I stood in that courtroom years ago, I felt the weight of history. Today, I feel the responsibility of leadership. Black History Month reminds us that representation in law is not symbolic, it is structural. It shapes who is mentored, who is heard, and how justice is delivered. The pioneers opened the doors. It is our responsibility to keep them open, and to widen them for those coming behind us.

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PROSPER ISD PARENTS QUESTION DISTRICT RESPONSE TO BUS DRIVER ACCUSED OF SEXUALLY ASSAULTING STUDENTS

December 15, 2025

Author: Rebecca Lopez with WFAA Watch the interview here. PROSPER, Texas — Parents of two young girls who say they were repeatedly sexually assaulted by a Prosper ISD school bus driver are speaking out about what they describe as serious failures by the district — including delayed notification to families and promised safety changes they say were never fully implemented. The parents asked that they not be identified to protect their children, who were just elementary school age at the time of the abuse. In a lawsuit filed in 2023, the girls — identified only as Jane Doe 1 and Jane Doe 2 — allege former bus driver Frank Paniagua assaulted them repeatedly during the 2021–2022 school year. According to the lawsuit, Paniagua would wait until other students exited the bus, then assault the girls, sometimes holding one child back so he could take her to the rear of the bus. Attorneys say the abuse occurred over several months and was captured on bus surveillance video. How the abuse was discovered The girls’ mother said the abuse came to light after their grandmother noticed troubling comments about gift cards offered by the bus driver. When the mother later questioned the girls again, they disclosed what had been happening. Prosper ISD police reviewed surveillance video from the bus in May 2022. Paniagua was arrested two days later and charged with aggravated sexual assault of a child, continuous sexual abuse of a child under 14, and indecency with a child. Paniagua later died after jumping from the second floor of the Collin County Jail while awaiting trial. Concerns about delayed notifications Attorneys for the family say more than 100 days passed after Paniagua’s arrest before Prosper ISD publicly acknowledged the allegations — a delay parents say may have prevented other potential victims from being identified. At a packed school board meeting, Prosper ISD parent Morgan Grahovec, a child psychologist whose daughter attended the same school as the victims, told trustees that delays in notifying parents can have serious consequences. “Children who are victims of abuse need to be identified and interviewed as soon as possible because memory fades over time,” Grahovec said. “The longer you wait, it’s harder to get a child to report abuse accurately.” Parents at those meetings called for Superintendent Holly Ferguson’s resignation, arguing district leaders should have acted sooner and communicated more transparently. Ferguson did not step down, instead promising changes to safety protocols. District response and former statement In an earlier written statement to WFAA, Prosper ISD said it took appropriate action once allegations surfaced: “We are horrified that an employee violated the trust of our families and students, as Prosper ISD’s foremost priority is to protect our students’ safety and well-being at all times. We strongly condemn the actions of any adult who would cause mental or physical harm to a child, and we do not tolerate such behavior.” The district has declined additional comment, citing pending litigation. Disputed claims about safety changes Prosper ISD previously told parents it would implement additional safeguards, including increased supervision during bus drop-offs, a volunteer “bus buddy” program, and improved monitoring of bus surveillance video. But the parents and their attorneys say those changes were not consistently put in place. Attorney Levi McCathern says the district does not regularly review bus surveillance footage — even though video captured the alleged abuse in this case. “You would think the first thing you would do after this happens is change your monitoring program,” McCathern said. “They don’t monitor them at all.” McCathern and co-counsel Kristin Hecker say the lawsuit is aimed at forcing policy changes rather than seeking financial gain. Questions about oversight and leadership The case has also raised broader concerns about district leadership and oversight. Prosper ISD’s school board president later resigned in an unrelated child abuse case, further shaking confidence among some parents. Families have also questioned the independence of the district’s internal review, noting that the law firm hired to investigate the district’s response is also defending Prosper ISD in the lawsuit. “All we want is an independent investigation,” McCathern said. Parents push for accountability and change The parents say their children remain enrolled in Prosper ISD, but they continue to press for reforms they believe could prevent similar abuse. “We want justice for our kids,” the girls’ mother said. “But we also want changes to happen at the district so that this doesn’t happen to other children.”  

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