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    Bush Intercontinental incident

    "A desperate act": Chilling details emerge about Houston airport shooter

    Tyler Rudick
    May 3, 2013 | 12:54 pm

    Investigators gathered at Houston Police Department headquarters Friday morning to share new details surrounding the tragic shooting and suicide that took place at Bush Intercontinental Airport on Thursday afternoon.

    According to HPD homicide detective Brian Harris, 29-year-old Carnell Moore of Beaumont pulled up to the Terminal B passenger pick-up area around noon on Thursday. After waiting in his truck for 15 minutes, security cameras record him removing a black suitcase and walking inside the terminal lobby.

    In the departure area near a United Airlines ticket counter and a Starbucks, Moore took a seat in a public airport chair until 1:30 p.m., when he fired two shots into the air with a Glock .40 semi-automatic pistol. A Homeland Security agent, who heard the noise and came out of a nearby office, shouted several warnings at the suspect before shooting him in the right shoulder. At roughly the same moment, Moore seemed to have taken his own life with a gunshot wound to the temple.

    "The monster within me was getting stronger and while I could not save myself, I could spare others. Peace is within sight."

    Officials are awaiting an autopsy before determining the cause of death.

    While Moore's suitcase contained a loaded but unfired AR-15 — a semi-automatic rifle with 20-round magazine — investigators analyzing the suspect's suicide note (also in the bag) believe he was not intending to harm any individuals other than himself. Detective Harris read an except of the signed note:

    Here in the last hour, I yield to mercy . . . Jehovah found a path to my heart that love would conquer anger. The monster within me was getting stronger and while I could not save myself, I could spare others. Peace is within sight. I ask that authorities handle my disposal."

    The message was written on hotel stationery, presumable from the Hotel Derek, where Moore spend his last two evenings. The suitcase also contained a hotel-room Gideon's Bible, which appears to have three passages marked from Genesis, Psalms and Revelations, all acknowledging what Harris called "the glory of God."

    Both weapons, one of which was purchased from a Beaumont pawn show, were bought legally and are currently under investigation. Moore had no prior criminal record.

    Unreported incident

    On Tuesday, Moore kidnapped a female co-worker at gunpoint from the Beaumont apartment complex where he lived and worked as a maintenance man. He professed his love to her and asked her to take him to Houston. The woman, who is currently engaged, talked him into releasing her unharmed.

    The incident allegedly went unreported until the following morning, when the woman claims she called area police.

    Driving himself, Moore arrived in Houston on Tuesday around 3 p.m. and checked into the Hotel Derek by himself. While investigators know little of what he did during the two days before the shooting, Moore posted three chilling Facebook messages suggesting that he was planning something.

    His final post at 9:30 a.m. on Thursday reads, "45 minutes and 59 seconds in God's Shadow and Time Stops."

    HPD homicide detective Millard Waters said that the suspect remained in contact with his brother, who described Moore as "smart," "secretive" and "quiet" while also noting that he had some "mental issues" in the past.

    "We know what this was and what it wasn't," Waters said. "It was a desperate act committed by a confused young man who has apparently lost all hope."

    Carnell Marcus Moore

    Carnell Marcus Moore IAH shooter head shot May 2013 RUN FLAT
    Photo courtesy of KHOU Houston Channel 11
    Carnell Marcus Moore
    unspecified
    news/city-life

    Will Houston get a shuttle?

    Debate continues over moving space shuttle from D.C. to Houston

    John Egan
    Oct 14, 2025 | 3:30 pm
    NASA Johnson Space Center
    Johnson Space Center/Facebook
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    Texas’ two U.S. senators, Republicans John Cornyn and Ted Cruz, have called for the Space Shuttle Discovery to be relocated from the National Air and Space Museum’s Steven F. Udvar-Hazy Center near Washington, D.C., to the visitors center at NASA’s Johnson Space Center in Houston. They say Houston is Discovery’s “rightful home” and note that provisions in the One Big Beautiful Bill Act call for the shuttle to be moved to Houston.

    Moving the shuttle to Houston would reverse a decision made in 2011, when NASA awarded shuttles to museums in California, Florida, and New York instead of Space Center Houston. At the time, Houston Mayor Annise Parker blamed "political calculations" for not including the home of the Johnson Space Center as a shuttle home, even though the astronauts who flew the shuttle lived and trained in Houston.

    But four Democratic U.S. senators — including U.S. Sen. Mark Kelly of Arizona, who is a retired NASA astronaut and a one-time Discovery commander — hope to block the shuttle’s relocation from Chantilly, Virginia, to Houston. They claim the move would waste taxpayer dollars and endanger the shuttle.

    The latest development in the Discovery debate came last week in a letter written by Cornyn and Cruz. In the letter, the senators accuse the Smithsonian Institution, which runs the National Air and Space Museum, of inflating the estimated cost of relocating the shuttle to Houston.

    The Smithsonian says the tab for relocating the shuttle could be $300 million to $400 million, with transportation alone totaling $50 million to $55 million. Legislation passed earlier this year allocates $85 million for the shuttle’s move.

    In their letter to leaders of the Senate Appropriations Committee, Cornyn and Cruz state that the Smithsonian’s and NASA’s cost estimates are 10 times higher than those obtained from private-sector logistics companies. Furthermore, they accuse the Smithsonian of falsely claiming the shuttle’s wings would need to be taken off ahead of the spacecraft’s trip to Houston.

    “This relocation honors both the intent of Congress and the legacy of America’s space program. It is time for the Space Shuttle Discovery [to] return to the community that helped make its missions possible,” wrote Cornyn and Cruz, referring to Johnson Space Center’s Mission Control operations and astronaut training program.

    In their own letter to the Senate Appropriations Committee, the Smithsonian and NASA say they believe the shuttle would need to “undergo significant disassembly to be moved. Discovery is the most intact shuttle orbiter of the NASA program, and we remain concerned that disassembling the vehicle will destroy its historical value.” A lengthy article in Scientific American cites academics who support The Smithsonian’s view that the costs are higher than a private firm might estimate, diving into the logistical challenges of moving the large, relatively fragile spacecraft across the country.

    In a letter dated September 26, Kelly — along with U.S. Sens. Mark Warner of Virginia, Tim Kaine of Virginia and Dick Durbin of Illinois — urge the Senate Appropriations Committee to block federal funding for Discovery’s relocation. They warn that the move would waste taxpayer dollars, risk permanent damage to Discovery, and lead to fewer people visiting the spacecraft.

    In their letter, the four lawmakers peg the cost of bringing Discovery to Houston at over $375 million. That number includes more than $50 million for the move itself, and another $325 million for planning, new facilities, and exhibit reconstruction.

    “Dedicating hundreds of millions of taxpayer dollars to move an artifact that is already housed, displayed, and preserved in a world-class facility is both inefficient and unjustifiable,” the four senators wrote.

    According to the Smithsonian, Discovery spent 365 days in space — the longest period of any NASA shuttle. Discovery entered service in 1984 and was retired in 2011. It’s been housed at the Smithsonian facility in Virginia since 2012.

    Space Center Houston, the Smithsonian affiliate that serves as the visitors center for the Johnson Space Center, would likely be the future home of Discovery.

    In a statement issued this summer, Space Center Houston said it had not commissioned independent estimates of relocation costs, according to Roll Call. Rather, Space Center Houston is merely focused on “planning a world-class home for Discovery.”

    “This opportunity aligns naturally with our long-term plans,” Keesha Bullock, a spokeswoman for Space Center Houston, told Roll Call.

    museumsspacespace center houstonnasa
    news/city-life

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