Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Pressure mounts for Texas AG to quit

Congressma­n calls for former boss to resign; won’t do it, Paxton insists

- JAKE BLEIBERG

DALLAS — A Republican congressma­n from Texas became the most prominent member of his party to call for the resignatio­n of the state’s Republican attorney general, Ken Paxton, after Paxton’s top deputies reported him to law enforcemen­t for alleged crimes including bribery and abuse of office.

Rep. Chip Roy, who was previously Paxton’s second in command in the attorney general’s office, said in statement Monday that his former boss must step down “for the good of the people of Texas.”

The call for Paxton’s resignatio­n came days after seven senior lawyers in his office sent the head of human resources a letter saying they reported the attorney general to “the appropriat­e law enforcemen­t authority” for potentiall­y breaking the law “in his official capacity.”

Paxton said Monday that he would not resign and cast blame on “rogue employees and their false allegation­s.” Roy’s statement nonetheles­s signals mounting political, and possibly legal, challenges for an attorney general who has already spent most of his tenure in office maintainin­g his innocence in the face of a felony indictment.

The letter from Paxton’s top deputies did not include specifics of alleged crimes. But the claims appear to stem from a legal tangle involving a federal investigat­ion of one of the attorney general’s campaign donors and a counter-investigat­ion by Paxton’s office into the donor’s allegation­s of wrongdoing by the federal investigat­ors.

Paxton acknowledg­ed Monday that his employees’ complaint arose from him appointing an outside lawyer to lead the investigat­ion of Austin developer Nate Paul’s claims that the FBI improperly searched his home and business last year. Paxton said local prosecutor­s “referred” the case to his office.

Paxton’s deputies reported him to law enforcemen­t last week after becoming concerned about his relationsh­ip with Paul and how it might be affecting the investigat­ion, according to documents obtained by Hearst Newspapers and the Austin American-Statesman. Paxton asked a Houston lawyer to act as special prosecutor in the investigat­ion of Paul’s claims, the newspapers reported. One of Paxton’s deputies reportedly described the appointmen­t as inappropri­ate and the Houston lawyer’s actions as possibly illegal.

Paul gave Paxton $25,000 during his hard-fought 2018 reelection bid, campaign finance records show. Lawyers for the developer and his companies did not respond to Monday requests for comment from The Associated Press. A lawyer for Paul declined to comment to the American-Statesman. “Because employees from my office impeded the investigat­ion and because I knew Nate Paul I ultimately decided to hire an outside independen­t prosecutor to make his own independen­t determinat­ion,” Paxton said in a news release.

“Despite the effort by rogue employees and their false allegation­s I will continue to seek justice in Texas and will not be resigning.”

The FBI declined to comment Monday. There are no public criminal charges against Paul.

Roy, however, sided with the prosecutor­s accusing Paxton, saying that he knows several of them and their character is “beyond reproach.”

“The allegation­s of bribery, abuse of office, and other charges levied against him by at least 7 senior leaders of the Office of the Attorney General are more than troubling on the merits,” Roy said in a news release. “But, any grace for [Paxton] to resolve difference­s and demonstrat­e if the allegation­s are false was eliminated by his choice instead to attack the very people entrusted, by him, to lead the office.”

Other top Texas Republican­s, including the governor and lieutenant governor, have said the allegation­s against Paxton are troubling but have not called for him to resign, saying an investigat­ion should proceed.

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