http://www.mysanantonio.com/sharedcontent/APStories/stories/D87F4ITO0.htmlTexas has not ensured that the hundreds of millions of dollars in homeland security grants it has distributed over the past several years is being spent to prevent terrorist attacks, according to a state audit.
One county bought 18 radios and other communication equipment from a company owned by one of its county commissioners, according to the report. The county also paid to install a radio in the commissioner's personal vehicle.
The audit's findings mirror some of the weaknesses identified in a September report by The Dallas Morning News. The newspaper found that
some cities used anti-terrorism funds to buy equipment for traffic stops, drug investigations and even community festivals. In another jurisdiction, an agency used
a trailer bought with grant funds to haul public education materials, according to the audit. Another hauled lawn mowers to "lawn mower drag races," the report says