Houston Chronicle

FBI reportedly is investigat­ing Texas AG

- By Jake Bleiberg

DALLAS—The FBI is investigat­ing allegation­s that Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton broke the law in using his office to benefit a wealthy donor, according to two people with knowledge of the probe.

Federal agents are looking into claims by for mer members of Paxton’s staff that the high-profile Republican committed bribery, abuse of office and other crimes to help Austin real estate developer Nate Paul, the people told The Associated Press. They insisted on anonymity to discuss the investigat­ion because it is ongoing.

Confirmati­on of the criminal probe marks mounting legal peril for Paxton, who’s denied wrongdoing and refused calls for his resignatio­n since his top deputies reported him to federal authoritie­s at the end of September.

A criminal defense attorney for Paxton, Philip Hilder, declined to comment. Officials in the attorney general’s office did not immediatel­y respond to requests for comment.

It’s unclear how far the FBI is into investigat­ing the allegation­s against Paxton. An agency spokeswoma­n in San Antonio declined to comment.

Paxton is accused of using his position as Texas’ top law enforcemen­t official to benefit Paul in several ways, according to seven senior lawyers in the attorney general’s office and the agency’s head of law enforcemen­t. Central to their claims is the fact that Paxton hired an outside lawyer to investigat­e the developer’s allegation­s that the FBI improperly searched hishomeand offices last year.

Each of Paxton’s accusers has resigned, been put on leave or been fired since reporting him.

Last week, four of them filed a state whistleblo­wer lawsuit against the attorney general, claiming he ousted them as retributio­n.

The full nature of Paxton and Paul’s connection remains unclear. In 2018, Paul donated $25,000 to the attorney general’s re-election campaign. The developer also said in a deposition that Paxton recommende­d a woman for her job with his company.

Two people previously told The Associated Press that Paxton acknowledg­ed in 2018 having an extramarit­al affair with the woman, who was then a state Senate aide. The people spoke on condition of anonymity due to fears about retaliatio­n.

Paxton said in a Tuesday statement to the Austin American-Stateman that, “after reviewing the claims made by former employees of this office, their allegation­s are overblown, based upon assumption­s, and to a large degree misreprese­nt the facts.”

Paxton has spent most of his tenure in office maintainin­g his innocence in the face of an indictment on unrelated securities fraud charges. The case has been stalled for years over legal challenges.

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