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    Legal Wrangling

    Michele Williams' confession to cleaning crime scene will be part of murder trial

    Claire St. Amant
    Aug 7, 2014 | 3:32 pm

    At her upcoming trial in September, accused murderer Michele Williams will have to explain why she previously confessed to wiping her dead husband's body with bleach. During an August 7 pretrial hearing, Judge George Gallagher denied the defense's motion to suppress Williams' 2011 admission to tampering with evidence.

    Michele Williams, 45, had once accepted a plea deal for the death of Greg Williams. After initially claiming an intruder killed her husband, Michele changed her story to say she cleaned the crime scene with bleach in an effort to hide what she alleged was Greg's suicide.

    The defense argued Michele Williams was not read her Miranda rights before police elicited a confession.

    In a dramatic bout of testimony at her sentencing hearing, Michele sabotaged her own plea deal and denied involvement in her husband's murder. Her trial is now slated for September 22 in Tarrant County.

    During the August 7 hearing, defense attorneys Clay Graham and Cody Cofer tried to argue that the six-hour interrogation that led to Michele' confession should be excluded from evidence because she was not initially read her Miranda rights, and multiple comments about an attorney were ignored.

    Detective John McGrew testified that he didn't first read Michele her rights or respond to her inquiries about an attorney because he viewed her as a witness to murder and a victim of a home invasion — not a suspect.

    McGrew drove Michele to the Keller Police Department shortly after arriving at the scene of her husband's murder. Michele, who did not have access to a car, cellphone or attorney, was questioned doggedly for more than six hours in a secure interview room. She left the station only after submitting a written statement confessing to cleaning the crime scene.

    "She actually became a suspect when she admitted to being involved in the scene," McGrew said under oath. The confession form includes a Miranda Rights warning.

    Michele, a high school dropout, is recorded as saying, "I obviously need a lawyer," during her interview with police. "At that point she was still a victim of an offense," McGrew said. "I explained to her I was just fact-finding."

    Michele Williams was indicted for murder three months after her husband's death. She has been in police custody since January 30, when it was revealed that she was not pregnant with twins as she'd alleged to authorities in a successful attempt to delay her sentencing. She is currently being held on an $850,000 bond.

    Michele and Greg Williams on their wedding day in 2008.

    Michele Williams and Greg Williams on their wedding day
    Photo courtesy of Keller Police Department
    Michele and Greg Williams on their wedding day in 2008.
    unspecified
    news/city-life

    Pestilence News

    New invasive pest in Texas is destroying grasses and pasture

    Teresa Gubbins
    Dec 12, 2025 | 10:14 am
    Mealyworm
    TAMU
    Mealyworm is small but damaging.

    Texas Agriculture Commissioner Sid Miller has issued an urgent alert to farmers to inspect their pastures for a newly detected and highly damaging pest: the pasture mealybug (Helicococcus summervillei).

    According to a release from the Department of Agriculture (TDA), this invasive species, never before reported in North America, has been confirmed in multiple Texas counties and is already causing significant damage to pasture acreage across the southeast portion of the state.

    The pasture mealybug causes “pasture dieback,” leaving expanding patches of yellowing, weakened, and ultimately dead turf.

    This pest was first detected in Australia in 1928; its first detection in the Western Hemisphere occurred in the Caribbean between 2019 and 2020.

    The TDA is working with Texas A&M AgriLife Extension and USDA’s Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service (APHIS) to coordinate a rapid response and protect Texas producers.

    Mealybug history
    Although the mealybug is just now being spotted, researchers suspect it may have been introduced before 2022.

    Since mid-April 2025, southern Texas pasture and hay producers have been reporting problems in their fields. These fields show grass patches becoming brown or necrotic, or patches that are completely dead. Originally, it was presumed that symptoms were caused by another mealybug called the Rhodes grass mealybug, which has been reported in the U.S. since 1942. However, further investigations confirm that it's this new pasture mealybug (Heliococcus summervillei).

    It has devastated millions of acres of grazing land in Australia and has since spread globally. Its rapid reproduction, hidden soil-level feeding, and broad host range make it a significant threat to pasture health and livestock operations.

    Mealybug MealybugTAMU

    Adult females are approximately 2-5 mm long, covered in a white, waxy coating. They are capable of producing nearly 100 offspring within 24 hours, resulting in several generations per season. While adult females can live for up to 100 days, most damage is inflicted by the youngest nymphs, which feed on plant sap and inject toxic saliva that causes grass to yellow, weaken, and die.

    “This is a completely new pest to our continent, and Texas is once again on the front lines,” Commissioner Miller says. “If the pasture mealybug spreads across Texas grazing lands like it has in eastern Australia, it could cost Texas agriculture dearly in lost productivity and reduced livestock capacity. TDA is working hand-in-hand with federal and university partners to respond swiftly and protect our producers from this unprecedented threat.”

    Houston has a problem
    The estimated impact area currently covers 20 counties, primarily in the Houston area, including: Cameron, Hidalgo, Willacy, Refugio, Calhoun, Victoria, Goliad, Dewitt, Lavaca, Fayette, Jackson, Matagorda, Brazoria, Galveston, Wharton, Colorado, Austin, Washington, Burleson, Brazos, and Robertson. AgriLife entomologists have submitted a formal Pest Incident Worksheet documenting significant damage to pastures and hayfields in Victoria County.

    Research trials are underway to determine the best integrated pest management options. Currently, there is no known effective labeled insecticide for pasture mealybug.

    Affected plants include: Bermudagrass, Bahia grass, Johnsongrass, hay grazer (sorghum–sudangrass), St. Augustine grass, various bluestem species, and other tropical or subtropical grasses. Damage can occur in leaves, stems, and roots.

    Symptoms:


    • Yellowing and discoloration of leaves within a week of infestation
    • Purpling or reddening of foliage
    • Stunted growth and drought stress despite rainfall
    • Poorly developed root systems
    • Dieback starting at leaf tips and progressing downward
    • Premature aging, making plants more vulnerable to pathogens
    How to spot it
    • Scout regularly for mealybugs on grass leaves, stems, soil surface, leaf litter, and under cow patties
    • Focus on unmanaged areas such as fence lines, ungrazed patches, and roadsides
    • Look for fluffy, white, waxy, or “fuzzy” insects on blades and stems
    • If plants appear unhealthy and insects match this description, investigate further

    “Early identification is critical, and we need every producer’s eyes on the ground,” Commissioner Miller added. “We are working diligently with our federal and state partners to determine how to best combat this novel threat and stop it in its tracks.”

    If you observe suspicious symptoms or insects matching the descriptions above, contact TDA at 1-800-TELL-TDA immediately.

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