Welcome to the new ‘DO IT YOURSELF LAW ENFORCEMENT’ phase of McLennan County. This is where Jake Burson, Par and Fatass Char sit around and bitch about ME and others being “the problem”, investigating WHO is talking to Harry. Yep, Jake jumped on that one already too. Ha.
Well, who isn’t talking to Harry OR taking pics with their phone or filming deputies giving tickets IN TOWN and stopping people for “busted tail light” when it isn’t. Yep, welcome to protecting yourself from the fattest, most stupid, lazy examples of law enforcement ever.
Wake up.
H


BZ Watchdog
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MCLENNAN COUNTY — WHAT EXACTLY IS GOING ON HERE? ![]()
A concerned citizen sent me these images from Baylor Cancer Center on May 20, 2026, sometime between 9:00 AM and 9:30 AM.
According to the citizen, this was a McLennan County Sheriff’s Office transport unit, reportedly Unit #937, and the deputy appeared to be passed out or asleep while sitting beside an inmate who was cuffed in front at a doctor’s office.
Now let me ask the obvious question:
Is this jail transport security — or nap time on taxpayer money?
Because from what I can see, there is an inmate sitting in public, outside the jail, in a medical facility, and the deputy who is supposed to be responsible for that inmate’s safety, custody, and the safety of everyone around them appears to be asleep.
But remember, these are the same agencies that constantly tell the public everything is about “officer safety.”
Officer safety when they want to bark orders.
Officer safety when they want to control a scene.
Officer safety when they want to justify cuffing, searching, detaining, or escalating.
But when an inmate is sitting in a public doctor’s office, cuffed in front, around citizens, patients, staff, and medical workers — suddenly officer safety looks more like a paid nap in uniform.
Let’s be clear:
When McLennan County takes custody of an inmate, the Sheriff’s Office is responsible for that person’s care, custody, control, and transportation. They are also responsible for protecting the public while that inmate is outside the facility.
So if this deputy was asleep, passed out, inattentive, or unable to properly supervise that inmate, then this needs to be investigated immediately.
Not swept under the rug.
Not excused.
Not “we looked into it internally and found no issue.”
This should be reviewed by:
McLennan County Sheriff’s Office Internal Affairs
Texas Rangers
Texas Commission on Jail Standards
Any agency responsible for inmate transport policies, supervision, and public safety
Because if a citizen had fallen asleep while responsible for someone in custody, the government would have no problem calling it negligence.
So why should a deputy get special treatment?
And before anyone starts making excuses — no, the citizen who sent this could not identify the deputy by name. That is exactly why McLennan County needs to identify who was assigned to Unit #937 and who was transporting this inmate at Baylor Cancer Center on May 20, 2026, between 9:00 and 9:30 AM.
The public deserves answers:
Who was the deputy?
Was he asleep?
Was he medically impaired?
Was he disciplined?
Was this reported?
Was the inmate properly supervised?
Was the public placed at risk?
And most importantly — how often does this happen when nobody is watching?
Because this sure looks like another case of “rules for the public, excuses for the badge.”
McLennan County Sheriff’s Office needs to answer for this.
Sunlight is the best disinfectant.
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