A 21-year-old female Texas soldier was found dead this week in Fort Hood, the same army base where Vanessa Guillen was gruesomely murdered less than three years ago.
Vanessa Guillen, Adam Toledo, and the COVID-19 victims will be honored in a "Dia De Muertos" or Day of the Dead exhibit at the National Museum of Mexican Arts in Chicago.
The Congressional Hispanic Caucus (CHC) urged Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin to rename Fort Hood in Texas after Mexican American Gen. Richard E. Cavazos.
Texas woman, Cecily Aguilar, has been indicted on 11 counts by a federal grand jury for her involvement in Fort Hood Army Specialist Vanessa Guillen's death.
Army Specialist Vanessa Guillen told her mother that she was being sexually harassed and reported it to her superior, according to U.S. Army documents.
Spc. Vanessa Guillen's entire chain of command has been fired during the disciplinary action hearing that took place last month at Fort Hood, an army official said on Thursday.
Fourteen army leaders at Fort Hood, Texas were either relieved from duty or suspended following the disappearance and killing of Army Spc. Vanessa Guillen earlier this year.
Vanessa Guillen's family is scheduled to meet with President Donald Trump on Thursday over the new "#IAmVanessaGuillen" bill, a measure aiming to help sexual harassment victims.
Fort Hood has seen its fair share of deaths among soldiers in the past. This year gave the post a series of tragedies as one soldier after another turns up dead.
League of United Latin American Citizen (LULAC) president Domingo Garcia has issued a statement urging women, especially Latinas, not to join the military after the disappearance and death of female soldier Vanessa Guillen.