A Facebook post exposing the awful quality of drinking water in Trinidad, Texas, landed a woman in jail as police alleged her post was “false information.” Jennifer Combs was arrested after she claimed that the water in the city’s supply had put people in hospital.
Images shared online showed brownish-yellow colored water running out of a sink tap; the water also left dark residue in the sink after being drained. Almost anyone with common sense would be able to tell you that the water looks unsafe to drink or even bathe in from the pictures alone.
When Combs made a post to Facebook claiming that the water had led to residents falling ill things kicked off. She made the post on her “Southern Belle Watch” Facebook account and in it she also claimed that residents had been hospitalized due to the poor quality water, something which the local authorities disputed.
The police intervene
On May 8th, officers located and arrested Combs over the post and charged her with felony false alarm or report as per Fox4News. In a social media post made by the Trinidad Police Department the rumors of people being sent to hospital were denied. “We have not received any confirmed reports from hospitals, medical providers, or any official health agency indicating that citizens have been hospitalized due to bacteria in the water system,” the statement reads.
The police accused Combs of spreading “false information that creates fear, panic, or unnecessary emergency response within a community.” with Police Chief Charles Gregory later doubling down on the decision to make the arrest stating that the claims made on Facebook “simply false.”
Jennifer Combs responds
Speaking of her arrest and experience in jail Combs said, “It was probably one of the most humiliating things I’ve ever gone through in my entire life.” The response from authorities certainly seems a little heavy-handed as she told Fox 4 that she had never even received a speeding ticket before. Combs went on to claim the reasoning behind it was “an extreme stretch.”
According to her, people “can’t cook with the water, they can’t bathe with it, they can’t do laundry,” and a lot of residents “feel hushed, and like they don’t have a voice.” People have also supposedly posted on the Trinidad PD Facebook page claiming they have been hospitalized by the water.
Trinidad officials have not denied that there is an issue with the water supply with mayor Dennis Haws stating “the city’s water situation is a struggle, without question.” A notice was also shared advising residents to boil water before using it which proves there are certainly major issues.
Combs has since filed a lawsuit against the Trinidad Police Department calling her arrest “an act of deliberate political retaliation.” An attorney representing her claimed that the arrest was an abuse of power.
Published: May 22, 2026 09:10 am