Some observations about this case, and a theory. If anybody wants links to something that is mentioned, just ask.
There are a few problems with the investigation that are being reported in the media, beyond the 'one crooked cop' theory.
Some examples include the mysterious .357 that the homeoqner supposedly used to wound the cops and the 911 call that 'alerted' the police to the house. These and other things may indicate a wider problem.
The lawyer for Goines has used the phrase "set up" to indicate a context. Please ask for a link to that article or any other article mentioned if you can't find it.
A few years ago two Houston cops, Emerson Canizales and Michael Miceli, were caught providing protection to a drug smuggling operation. They faced up to 20 years, but strangely the prosection was mild, to put it politely. One of the two received 1 year in jail, the other got one year probation. Obviously a tiny fraction of the sentence noncops would have gotten, but possibly significant for another reason.
Another Houston police officer, Noe Juarez, in 2016 was caught supplying guns, body armor and police data to Zetas cartel traffickers.
Another, in 2017, Julissa Guzman Diaz, was caught trying to steal 8 kilos of cocaine in a careful set up by "internal affairs" type investigators. Other cases, involving other cops like Anthony Foster also involved large sums of money.
Last year Former Houston police Officer Clarence McNatt was convicted of hiring two people to kidnap and rape and torture his ex wife and a female friend of hers who was helping her leave the relationship. It appeared, and the prosecutor stated, that the goal was to kill the women, but the defense convinced the jury that the goal was "only" kidnapping, rape, torture etc. He got five years. It was a different police department that uncovered and investigated that plot.
Looking at these cases a person might notice an apparent disparity that appears to be based on race. That issue will be left out, but anybody can research these cases.
In the current case, involving Officer Goines, who is black, there appears to have been a lot of evidence, for a lot of years, that he was crooked.
So you could ask was there some motive in letting a crooked cop stay on the force?
Looking at the history of the Houston police department e.g.
https://texasobserver.org/horror-every-day-police-brutality-houston-goes-unpunished
Here is a quote from that 2013 article
"No matter the reason an officer gives for firing, it's always enough for internal affairs and the homicide division... In the past six years, HPD officers killed citizens in 109 shootings and killed animals in 225 incidents. In 112 shootings officers wounded citizens; in another 104 they wounded animals. Of the 550 shooting incidents with some kind of casualty, not one was found unjustified."
Interestingly, there is a pdf of part of a trial transcript that appears high on Google results and involves the officer suspended with Goines. It is a funny example of that officer trying to explain why Houston police do not use audio or video to substantiate drug crimes. He mentions that the drug seller might search him and find the hidden recorder. A few minutes later he mentions that he had a police radio at the time under his seat. The lawyer asks if he could have left the microphone open on the police radio, etc. Ultimately the lawyer moves on.
Long story short is that a) Houston police have a consistent history of targeting minorities, b) there was a high profile article a few years ago that mentioned the lack of accountability in police shootings, c) officer Goines appears to have been a crooked cop on a short leash held by other crooked cops.
The appearance is possibly of a 'new klux klan' operation to set up some black cops to take the heat for past corruption.
This travesty is being investigated by the FBI which of course featured prominently in an article about police accountability a few years ago. Theu, like the Houston police, had a very low level of accountability for their agents involved in shootings.
If somebody wants a link to that article or anything else mentioned just ask.