Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Investigat­ion of Texas AG shifts to D.C.

Public Integrity Section taking Paxton case; his attorneys approve of move

- JAKE BLEIBERG AND ERIC TUCKER

DALLAS — Justice Department officials in Washington have taken over the corruption investigat­ion into Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton, removing the case from the hands of the federal prosecutor­s in Texas who’d long been leading the probe.

The move was disclosed in a statement by state prosecutor­s handling their own case against Paxton. It’s the latest developmen­t in the federal investigat­ion into the attorney general, who came under FBI scrutiny in 2020 after his own top deputies accused him of bribery and abusing his office to help one of his campaign contributo­rs, who also employed a woman with whom Paxton acknowledg­ed having had an extramarit­al affair.

The investigat­ion of the three- term Republican is now being led by the Justice Department’s Public Integrity Section, which prosecutes allegation­s of official misconduct against elected leaders at the local, state and federal level. The U.S. attorney’s office in Texas was recently recused from the complex case after working on it for years — an abrupt change that came within days of Paxton agreeing to apologize and pay $3.3 million in taxpayer money to four of the former staffers who reported him to the FBI.

State prosecutor­s working on a separate securities fraud case against Paxton — Brian Wice and Kent Schaffer — said in a statement to The Associated Press on Thursday that they were notified of the move. They referred all questions to the Department of Justice, which declined to comment.

It’s not known whether Paxton will face charges, although federal investigat­ors in Texas who had worked the case believed there was sufficient evidence for an indictment, according to two people familiar with the matter who spoke to the AP on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to discuss the ongoing probe.

It was not immediatel­y clear what prompted top Justice Department officials to recuse the federal prosecutor­s in West Texas but the move was pushed for by Paxton’s attorneys. One of his defense lawyers, Dan Cogdell, said Thursday he’d previously appealed to agency officials to take the case out of the hands of the local U.S. attorney’s office because prosecutor­s there had “an obvious conflict.”

“It was the right thing to do,” said Cogdell. He said federal officials had not informed him of the move and declined to comment further.

Eight of Paxton’s senior staff accused him of crimes in 2020 after the attorney general hired an outside lawyer to look into an Austin real-estate developer’s claims of wrongdoing by FBI agents and federal prosecutor­s who were separately investigat­ing the developer. Those agents and lawyers are part of the same federal prosecutor­ial district as the ones who came to investigat­e Paxton.

Edward Loya Jr., a former prosecutor in the Public Integrity Section who now works as a defense lawyer, said in a text message to the AP that it was customary for the unit “to take over a high- profile investigat­ion concerning a state- wide elected official because those cases often involve actual or potential conflicts that make it impossible for a local U.S. Attorney’s Office to handle such investigat­ions.”

He said it was “totally normal” for the Washington-based section to assume responsibi­lity of a local case like the Paxton one.

The overlap was known to officials within the Justice Department and publicly reported on by the AP within weeks of Paxton’s staff going to the FBI. Nonetheles­s, the agency left the investigat­ion to be led by a career federal prosecutor based in San Antonio, who was previously best known for winning a money laundering and fraud case against a Democratic state senator.

The federal investigat­ion of Paxton expanded in the years since his former staff told the FBI he was committing crimes to help the developer, Nate Paul. It came to look at renovation­s made to Paxton’s million- dollar home, but was also drawn out as leadership of the U.S. attorney’s office for West Texas has repeatedly changed.

Paxton and Paul have broadly denied wrongdoing.

Over those years, Paxton has seen little political cost from the the federal investigat­ion and the separate 2015 securities fraud indictment for which he has yet to face trial. He easily defeated challenger George P. Bush in a contested GOP primary last spring, went on to decisively beat his Democratic opponent and secure a third term in November and has filed a steady stream of legal challenges to the administra­tion of Democratic President Joe Biden.

The Public Integrity Section has brought a series of high-profile prosecutio­ns in the last decades. One of its former chiefs, Jack Smith, is now serving as the Justice Department special counsel overseeing investigat­ions of former President Donald Trump’s retention of classified documents as well as efforts by Trump and his allies to undo the results of the 2020 election.

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