An effort to help neighbors report concerns about their drinking Water ended with a Texas mother being led away in handcuffs on a felony charge she says never should have been filed.

Jennifer Combs, a mother of four from Kearns, Texas, says she became involved after hearing from residents in nearby Trinidad who complained about discolored Water, sediment, odors, and possible health issues, per Fox News.

According to Combs, one resident’s struggle prompted her to act.

“I’m a firm, firm person on transparency,” Combs said. “I stand on it. I think if you’re going to be in government, there should be zero reasons for you not to be transparent with your people that elected you to be there.”

Using her Southern Belle Watch Facebook page, Combs began gathering reports from residents and forwarding information to state officials. She said many people wanted to remain anonymous because they feared retaliation.

“A lot of them wanted to be able to message me anonymously, because the retaliation in Trinidad is very, very real,” Combs said.

One Facebook post encouraged residents to submit information about water discoloration, odors, sediment, and health concerns. Combs said she intended to organize the reports and pass them along to state authorities.

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The post also referenced reports that some residents had allegedly been hospitalized due to bacteria in the Water, describing it as “a serious public health concern that deserves immediate attention.”

Combs said Facebook later removed the post after being reported by others in the community.

According to Combs, former Trinidad Police Chief Charles Gregory took a screenshot of the post and shared it on the department’s Facebook page, accusing her of making a false report.

“I never filed a report with the police department,” Combs said. “I only filed a report with the state of Texas with the Water.”

The situation escalated on April 6, when officers arrived at her home with a felony arrest warrant.

“I said, ‘Oh, what? What do you mean?'” Combs recalled. “And they said, ‘Yeah, you have a felony arrest warrant. We have to take you to Navarro County Jail.'”

She was handcuffed in her front yard and spent nearly a day behind bars.

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“To be handcuffed in my front yard and taken to jail and spend 23 hours in jail before I could get out was very traumatic,” Combs said. “It was insane.”

Combs said the charge accused her of making a false report related to public panic over the water system.

“I was just in disbelief, in absolute disbelief,” she said.

She also claimed residents who had originally submitted Complaints publicly defended her after the arrest.

“The people that had made the reports to me commented on there, and they never even interviewed them,” Combs said. “They never even talked to them. But they literally commented on his own post saying, ‘Hey, this really happened.'”

The case was eventually presented to a grand jury, which declined to indict her.

“The grand jury said no bill. Absolutely no part of this,” Combs said. “No bill, not enough evidence.”

Though the felony charge was dropped, Combs said the ordeal left lasting consequences, including legal expenses, bail costs, and public scrutiny.

Now, she says the controversy has grown beyond a dispute over a Facebook post and has become a broader debate over transparency, accountability, and residents’ ability to raise concerns about issues affecting their communities.

Watch the video below: