Texarkana Gazette

Embattled Texas AG drops case that set off staff revolt

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AUSTIN — Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton on Friday dropped an investigat­ion sought by a wealthy donor that set off an extraordin­ary revolt by the Republican's top deputies, who accused him of bribery and abuse of office, and fueled new calls for his resignatio­n.

The announceme­nt came hours after prosecutor­s in Austin expressed unease over why Paxton launched an investigat­ion sought by Nate Paul, an Austin developer and Paxton donor whose offices were raided by the FBI. State authoritie­s also confirmed Friday that they had referred criminal allegation­s made by Paxton's own staff against their boss to federal authoritie­s.

“The newly surfaced informatio­n raises serious concerns about the integrity of your investigat­ion and the propriety of your conducting it,” said Travis County District Attorney Margaret Moore, who instructed her office to sever contact with Paxton over the case.

Paul gave Paxton $25,000 in campaign contributi­ons in 2018. Federal authoritie­s have not disclosed why they searched Paul’s offices last year, but Paul later sought his own investigat­ion, alleging that his constituti­onal rights were violated.

Paxton, who this week vowed he will not resign, said in a statement he was dropping Paul's complaint since local prosecutor­s are now no longer involved. But Moore has disputed Paxton's claims of how the case began, saying it was him who first approached her about Paul this summer.

“Criminal investigat­ions are crucial to seek justice for families across the state, but it is a small part of the wide-ranging issues this office handles. We proudly stand by the good, hard work our office continues to conduct every day for all Texans,” Paxton said.

Paul’s attorney, Michael Wynne, did not respond to requests for comment Friday.

The end of the investigat­ion is unlikely to ease pressure on Paxton, who has spent nearly his entire five years in office under indictment over separate allegation­s of securities fraud. He has denied wrongdoing over the Paul complaint, and cast blame on “rogue employees and their false allegation­s.”

Republican Rep. Chip Roy, who used to work for Paxton, called for his resignatio­n this week. On Friday, another Republican lawmaker who chairs a committee with oversight of Paxton's office also expressed concerns.

“If there is any truth whatsoever to the factual and legal claims of your own senior staff, I believe you must voluntaril­y resign your position and urge you to do so,” Republican state Rep. Jeff Leach wrote in a letter.

Moore, a Democrat, distanced herself from the probe a week after Paxton’s top deputies accused him of bribery and abuse of office after he hired an outside lawyer to look into Paul’s allegation­s. Paxton has said Travis County prosecutor­s referred the case to his office, but Moore wrote Friday that

“should not be used as any indication of a need for investigat­ion.”

The outside lawyer Paxton hired was Brandon Cammack, who graduated from law school in 2015 and runs a modest criminal defense practice. He has no prosecutor­ial experience but d oes have ties to one of Paul’s defense attorneys. He has not responded to repeated requests for comment this week.

Keith Byers, an attorney and retired FBI agent who oversaw public corruption cases in Texas, suggested the attorney general's investigat­ion was “a cheap diversiona­ry tactic and nothing more than political theatre.”

Byers said the FBI is often wary of the motives of people who report crimes to them then promptly make the allegation­s public.

“I understand, however, a situation sometimes can become so unbearable that desperate people decide to jump kicking and screaming off the sinking Titanic in hopes someone will send help,” he said.

Paxton has said he brought in an outside lawyer because he knew Paul, and because the attorney general's employees were trying to block the investigat­ion. The full nature of Paul and Paxton’s relationsh­ip is unclear.

It’s also unclear what Paul has alleged against federal law enforcemen­t, but his claims came to light a year after the FBI searched his home and office. The FBI has declined to comment and Paul's lawyer has not answered questions about his claims.

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