Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Texas AG repeatedly broke law, House hearing told

- PAUL J. WEBER AND JAKE BLEIBERG

AUSTIN, Texas — A Republican-led investigat­ion on Wednesday accused Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton of committing multiple crimes in office — including felonies — during an extraordin­ary public airing of scandal and alleged lawbreakin­g that plunged one of the GOP’s conservati­ve stars into new political and legal risk.

For more than three hours, investigat­ors presented findings alleging Paxton sought to hide an affair, misused his office to help a donor, skirted protocols “grossly outside” norms and built a culture of fear and retaliatio­n in his office. Investigat­ors told the GOP-led House General Investigat­ing Committee that there was evidence that Paxton repeatedly broke the law over the years, including by misusing official informatio­n, abusing his official capacity and retaliatio­n.

The dramatic turn of events in the Texas Capitol unleashed a new test of Paxton’s durability in a way he has not previously confronted despite a felony indictment in 2015 and an ongoing FBI investigat­ion. The House committee’s investigat­ion has been quietly going on for months and did not come to light until Tuesday.

The committee ended Wednesday’s hearing without acting on the findings. The panel is led by Republican state Rep. Andrew Murr, who afterward declined to discuss next steps or whether a recommenda­tion to impeach or censure Paxton was possible.

The legislativ­e session ends Monday and any action against Paxton would have to be taken by then, unless GOP Gov. Greg Abbott calls a special session. In Texas, unlike in the U.S. government, an official who’s impeached by the House is suspended from office pending the outcome of a Senate trial. The governor can appoint an interim to fill the vacant post.

Wednesday’s hearing amounted to a rebuke from Republican­s in a building where Paxton has long maintained defenders and allies, including Abbott, who lauded Paxton while swearing him in to a third term in January.

Paxton called the hours of testimony by investigat­ors “false,” accused the committee of misleading the public and attacked Republican House Speaker Dade Phelan as a “liberal.” Paxton also has claimed repeatedly since Tuesday that Phelan has been drunk on the job, something Phelan’s office has brushed off as an attempt by Paxton to “save face.”

“It is not surprising that a committee appointed by liberal Speaker Dade Phelan would seek to disenfranc­hise Texas voters and sabotage my work as Attorney General,” Paxton said in a written statement.

The hearing came as Paxton is seeking legislativ­e approval for more than $3 million in taxpayer money to a settle a whistleblo­wer lawsuit with top aides who accused him of corruption. The whistleblo­wers’ lawyers on Wednesday thanked the committee for recognizin­g that their clients “suffered real harm in retaliatio­n” for accusing Paxton and called on lawmakers to fund the deal.

Accusation­s laid out by investigat­ors surround actions by Paxton that previously have been uncovered by reporters or disclosed in court records. Despite the cloud that has hung over Paxton, he has remained popular with GOP voters in Texas and elevated his profile nationally through lawsuits against President Joe Biden’s administra­tion and through his defense of former President Donald Trump.

Paxton’s former staff members reported him to the FBI in 2020 on accusation­s of breaking the law to help a campaign contributo­r. The donor, Austin real estate developer Nate Paul, employed a woman with whom Paxton acknowledg­ed having had an extramarit­al affair. In February, the Justice Department’s Washington-based Public Integrity Section took over the federal criminal investigat­ion of Paxton.

Since April, the House committee has issued at least 12 subpoenas for testimony and informatio­n to people and entities as part of its probe, according to meeting minutes that note the parties were left anonymous to “prevent reprisal and retaliatio­n.”

During Wednesday’s hearing, state Rep. Ann Johnson, a Houston Democrat and vice chair of the committee, asked whether “it was fair to say” that the attorney general’s office “was effectivel­y hijacked for an investigat­ion by Nate Paul through the attorney general.”

“That would be my opinion,” replied attorney Erin Epley, one of the investigat­ors.

Lawyers for Paul did not immediatel­y respond to requests for comment.

 ?? (AP/Austin American-Statesman/Jay Janner) ?? Texas state Republican Rep. Andrew Murr leads a House General Investigat­ing Committee hearing about Attorney General Ken Paxton on Wednesday at the Capitol in Austin.
(AP/Austin American-Statesman/Jay Janner) Texas state Republican Rep. Andrew Murr leads a House General Investigat­ing Committee hearing about Attorney General Ken Paxton on Wednesday at the Capitol in Austin.
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