Houston Chronicle

HPD stops use of Whataburge­r order numbers

- By Keri Blakinger

Even before the Houston Police Department’s occasional use of the orange tents at crime scenes drew national attention, HPD brass had already put a stop to the practice.

That most Texas of crime scene spottings — the Whataburge­r evidence marker — is officially a thing of the past.

Even before the Houston Police Department’s occasional use of the kitschy orange tents at crime scenes drew national attention, HPD brass had already put the kibosh on the practice, the Houston Chronicle learned Monday.

“We got a lot of concerns as to whether Whataburge­r was endorsing us or whether we were endorsing Whataburge­r and whether they were a sponsor of the police department,” HPD spokeswoma­n Jodi Silva said.

Sadly, the beloved fast food establishm­ent is not a sponsor of Houston police, so no free fries with that speeding ticket.

Although at least one older image of Whataburge­r numbers at a Houston-area crime scene is circulatin­g online, the one that sparked concerns

was a March homicide on West Little York. Essence Derouen, a young mother friends described as the “life of the party,” was shot to death in her car on the way home from a club — and police needed to mark the evidence.

Typically, Silva said, police would wait for Crime Scene Units with the Houston Forensic Center to come put out evidence markers. But sometimes, officers want to make sure nothing gets kicked or ignored or drenched in rain, so they improvise with whatever’s handy.

And in the case of the West Little York shooting, there was a Whataburge­r nearby.

‘Well-intentione­d’

“We became aware when it first happened because people called and asked if Whataburge­r was sponsoring us now, and we took action immediatel­y to let the people on the scene know not to do that again,” Silva said.

Patrol captains sent out a directive to officers ordering them not to use marked items with visible brand names. Thus no Starbucks cups or Wendy’s bags — but also no Whataburge­r tents.

“I think somebody was very well-intentione­d when they did it,” Silva said, adding that it seemed to be a one-time thing.

But aside from the branding snafu, using the tiny tents posed another slight problem: In Texas, it’s virtually a crime to waste Whataburge­r. And the Houston Police Department is mindful of that.

“Obviously, we don’t want to waste their resources,” Silva said.

Even though the directive brought an end to the era of Whataburge­r evidence markers, it didn’t nix all crime scene creativity.

Footage of a Midtown crime scene over the weekend appeared to show clear plastic cups and possibly a take-out container in use as evidence markers.

No shortage of markers

That might seem like a surefire sign of an evidence-marker shortage, but Silva said that’s not the case.

Houston police don’t carry the markers because it’s not their job to mark and process evidence. That task falls to the Houston Forensic Center’s appropriat­ely trained Crime Scene Units.

But typically, it’s patrol officers who are first at the scene. Then, they call in homicide investigat­ors and eventually CSU. In the meantime, police may mark certain evidence that seems likely to get kicked or use cups to protect evidence likely to get rained on.

Whataburge­r did not offer comment Monday on the use of its tents at crime scenes, and police couldn’t offer clarificat­ion as to what happens after the tents are used to mark evidence.

Are they returned to use? Do police keep them? It wasn’t immediatel­y clear.

But nabbing Whataburge­r tents is such a popular activity that it sparked coverage in the Wall Street Journal last month.

So did police steal the orange tents used in the March crime scene?

“No,” Silva said, with a laugh. “I don’t believe we did.”

 ?? Houston Chronicle file ?? Houston police used Whataburge­r order number tents to mark evidence at a crime scene before the forensics unit arrived.
Houston Chronicle file Houston police used Whataburge­r order number tents to mark evidence at a crime scene before the forensics unit arrived.
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