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Impeachment of Ken Paxton, 2023

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Misconduct (2023-2024)

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On May 27, 2023, the Texas House of Representatives approved 20 articles of impeachment against Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton (R).[1] The Texas Tribune's Zach Despart and James Barragán wrote "Many of the articles of impeachment focused on allegations that Paxton had repeatedly abused his powers of office to help a political donor and friend, Austin real estate developer Nate Paul."[2] Click here to read about noteworthy events regarding Paxton's relationship to Paul that took place before the impeachment.

Following the House vote that impeached him, Paxton said, “The ugly spectacle in the Texas House today confirmed the outrageous impeachment plot against me was never meant to be fair or just. It was a politically motivated sham from the beginning. … What we witnessed today is not just about me. It is about the corrupt establishment's eagerness to overpower the millions of Texas voters who already made their voices heard when they overwhelmingly re-elected me.“[3]

Impeachment is the process by which the legislative branch has the authority to remove a sitting public official. The actual trial on those charges, and subsequent removal of an official on conviction on those charges, is separate from the act of impeachment itself.[4]

Paxton was the second statewide official, and the third overall, to be impeached in Texas history.[5]

As required by the Texas Constitution, Paxton was suspended from office during the impeachment process. Texas Gov. Greg Abbott (R) appointed John Scott as interim attorney general on May 31, 2023.[6] Abbott subsequently appointed Angela Colmenero to replace Scott as interim attorney general on July 10, 2023. [7] First Assistant Attorney General Brent Webster (R) initially assumed the role of acting attorney general following Paxton’s suspension. Click here for more information.

On September 16, 2023, the Texas Senate acquitted Paxton of the 16 articles of impeachment for which he was tried.[8] After the vote, Paxton issued a statement: "The sham impeachment coordinated by the Biden Administration with liberal House Speaker Dade Phelan and his kangaroo court has cost taxpayers millions of dollars, disrupted the work of the Office of Attorney General and left a dark and permanent stain on the Texas House. The weaponization of the impeachment process to settle political differences is not only wrong, it is immoral and corrupt."[9]

This page summarizes the impeachment process and the noteworthy events regarding Paxton's impeachment. Click here to read about gubernatorial impeachment procedures in all 50 states.

Timeline

  • September 16, 2023: The Texas Senate acquitted Paxton on all 16 impeachment articles for which he was tried.[8]
  • September 15, 2023: Both sides presented closing arguments in Paxton's impeachment trial.[10]
  • September 14, 2023: Paxton's defense team presented their case against the impeachment charges.[11]
  • September 13, 2023: The House impeachment managers rested their case against Paxton.[12]
  • September 5, 2023: The Texas Senate began the impeachment trial of Ken Paxton.[13] Paxton pleaded not guilty to all 16 counts.[14]
  • September 5, 2023: The Texas Senate—by a vote of 24-6—rejected a motion by Paxton's defense team to dismiss the 16 articles of impeachment that the Senate rules set as the focus of the trial.[14] Twelve Republicans and 12 Democrats voted against the motion to move forward with the trial.[14]
  • August 16, 2023: The House impeachment managers released a series of new allegations that Paxton used a burner phone, secret email account, and fake Uber name to try and conceal his relationship with Paul.[15]
  • June 21, 2023: The Texas State Senate approved a resolution establishing rules for Paxton's impeachment trial by a vote of 25-3.[16] Click here to read the approved rules. The resolution set the start date for the trial in the Senate for September 5, 2023.[17]
  • June 17, 2023: The State Republican Executive Committee voted 53 to 11 on a resolution condemning Paxton's impeachment.[18] Click here to read the full text of the resolution.[19]
  • May 30, 2023: The state Senate adopts resolution setting the date for Paxton’s trial in that chamber for no later than August 28, 2023.[20]
  • May 29, 2023:
    • The Texas Senate appoints a committee to develop proposed rules for Paxton's impeachment trial. The deadline for the committee to present those rules is June 20, 2023.[21]
    • The Texas House of Representatives appoints 12 impeachment managers to serve as prosecutors during Paxton's Senate trial.[21]
  • May 27, 2023: The Texas House of Representatives votes 121-23 to impeach Paxton. This action resulted in Paxton's suspension from office.[22]
  • May 25, 2023: The Texas House of Representatives General Investigating Committee unanimously recommends Paxton's impeachment.[23]
  • March 2023: The Texas House of Representatives General Investigating Committee begins an investigation of Paxton.[24]
  • February 10, 2023: Paxton and four former top aides reached a settlement in a lawsuit arguing that Paxton improperly fired them. According to James Barragán of The Texas Tribune, "The tentative agreement would pay $3.3 million to the four whistleblowers and is contingent on the approval of funding", which would be paid for by the state of Texas.[25]

Articles of impeachment

The 20 articles of impeachment were categorized as follows:

Disregard of official duty (7 articles)
False statements in official records (3)
Constitutional bribery (2)
Obstruction of justice (2)
Abuse of public trust
Conspiracy and attempted conspiracy
Dereliction of duty
Misapplication of public resources
Misappropriation of public resources
Unfitness for office[26]
  • Twelve articles of impeachment were related to events regarding the investigations of Paul and the members of Paxton's staff that left office during that time.[26] Click here to read more about those events.
  • Three articles related to Paxton's 2015 indictment for securities fraud.[26] Click here to read more about those events.
  • Five articles related to Paxton's overall conduct while in office.[26]

Click here for the full Texas House of Representatives resolution detailing the articles of impeachment against Paxton.

Results of impeachment trial

The Texas Senate acquitted Paxton on all 16 articles for which he was tried in September 2023. The following table displays the voting results for each article:[27]:

Texas Senate votes on Paxton impeachment articles
Article Votes to convict
(21 needed)
Article 1, Disregard of official duty
14
Article 2, Disregard of official duty
14
Article 3, Disregard of official duty
14
Article 4, Disregard of official duty
2
Article 5, Disregard of official duty
13
Article 6, Disregard of official duty
14
Article 7, Misapplication of public resources
14
Article 8, Disregard of official duty
8
Article 9, Constitutional bribery
12
Article 10, Constitutional bribery
14
Article 11, Disregard of official duty
14
Article 15, False statements in official records
14
Article 16, Conspiracy and attempted conspiracy
14
Article 17, Misappropriation of public resources
14
Article 18, Dereliction of duty
14
Article 19, Unfitness for office
14
Article 20, Abuse of public trust
14



The Senate also voted, 19-11, to dismiss the other four impeachment articles which had had been held in abeyance at the start of the trial.[28]

Impeachment trial

The impeachment trial before the state senate began on September 5, 2023.[14] Paxton pleaded not guilty to all 16 counts.[14]

The Texas Tribune's Chuck Lindell and James Barragán reported that when "the Senate adopted its rules for the trial, however, senators elected to hear evidence on 16 articles — holding four in abeyance that were largely related to 2015 criminal charges against Paxton for private business deals in 2011 and 2012. At the end of the trial, a majority of senators can vote to dismiss the four remaining articles, but if the motion to dismiss is rejected, the presiding officer will set a trial date on those four accusations.[29]

Article 15, Section 3 of the state constitution says, "When the Senate is sitting as a Court of Impeachment, the Senators shall be on oath, or affirmation impartially to try the party impeached, and no person shall be convicted without the concurrence of two-thirds of the Senators present."[30] The state Senate must decide whether to remove Paxton from office and whether he can hold office in the future.[30] Article 15, Section 4 of the constitution says,"Judgement in cases of impeachment shall extend only to removal from office, and disqualification from holding any office of honor, trust or profit under this State," and that those "convicted on impeachment shall also be subject to indictment trial and punishment according to law."[30]

Here are links to The Texas Tribune's daily coverage of the impeachment trial:

Rules for impeachment trial

On May 29, 2023, the Texas Senate appointed a committee to develop proposed rules for Paxton's impeachment trial.[21] The resolution detailing those rules appears below:




Texas Senate committee on impeachment rules members
Name Partisan affiliation
State Rep. Brian Birdwell Chair Republican Party Republican
State Sen. Juan Hinojosa Vice Chair Democratic Party Democratic
State Rep. Brandon Creighton Republican Party Republican
State Rep. Pete Flores Republican Party Republican
State Rep. Joan Huffman Republican Party Republican
State Rep. Phil King Republican Party Republican
State Rep. Royce West Democratic Party Democratic

House managers

On May 29, 2023, the Texas House of Representatives appointed 12 impeachment managers to serve as prosecutors during Paxton's Senate trial.[21]

Texas House of Representatives impeachment managers
Name Partisan affiliation
State Rep. Andrew Murr Chair Republican Party Republican[31]
State Sen. Ann Johnson Vice Chair Democratic Party Democratic[32]
State Rep. Charlie Geren Republican Party Republican[33]
State Rep. Oscar Longoria Democratic Party Democratic[34]
State Rep. David Spiller Republican Party Republican[35]
State Rep. Briscoe Cain Republican Party Republican
State Rep. Terry Canales Democratic Party Democratic
State Rep. Erin Gamez Democratic Party Democratic
State Rep. Jeff Leach Republican Party Republican
State Rep. Morgan Meyer Republican Party Republican
State Rep. Joe Moody Democratic Party Democratic
State Rep. Cody Vasut Republican Party Republican

Texas House votes to impeach

The Texas House of Representatives voted 121-23 to impeach Paxton on May 27, 2023.[36] All of the Texas House's 61 Democrats and 60 Republicans voted in favor of the articles of impeachment, and 23 Republicans voted against.[37][38]

The Texas House of Representatives General Investigating Committee unanimously recommended Paxton's impeachment on May 25, 2023, after beginning an investigation in March 2023.[39][40] The Texas Tribune reported that four investigators for the House committee said during a public forum that they believed Paxton "broke numerous state laws, misspent office funds and misused his power to benefit a friend and political donor."[41]

Following the House vote that impeached him, Paxton said, “The ugly spectacle in the Texas House today confirmed the outrageous impeachment plot against me was never meant to be fair or just. It was a politically motivated sham from the beginning. … What we witnessed today is not just about me. It is about the corrupt establishment's eagerness to overpower the millions of Texas voters who already made their voices heard when they overwhelmingly re-elected me.“[42] A senior lawyer in Paxton's office, Chris Hilton, stated that what the investigators said was "false," "misleading," and "full of errors big and small."[41]

Texas House of Representatives General Investigating Committee

The table below shows the members of the Texas House of Representatives General Investigating Committee that recommended Paxton's impeachment[43]:

Texas House of Representatives General Investigating Committee members
Name Partisan affiliation
State Rep. Andrew Murr Chair Republican Party Republican
State Sen. Ann Johnson Vice Chair Democratic Party Democratic
State Rep. Charlie Geren Republican Party Republican
State Rep. Oscar Longoria Democratic Party Democratic
State Rep. David Spiller Republican Party Republican


Click here for the House Investigating Committee's memo to the Texas House of Representatives summarizing the impeachment process.

Click here for a transcript of the House Investigating Committee's hearing investigating Paxton.

Appointment of interim attorneys general

On May 31, 2023, Texas Gov. Greg Abbott (R) appointed John Scott as interim attorney general.[44] After appointing Scott, Abbott issued a press release saying in part:[44]

“John Scott has the background and experience needed to step in as a short-term interim Attorney General during the time the Attorney General has been suspended from duty,” said Governor Abbott. “He served under me in the Texas Attorney General’s Office and knows how the Office of the Attorney General operates. Scott was the Deputy Attorney General for Civil Litigation and has handled cases at all levels of the justice system. His decades of experience and expertise in litigation will help guide him while serving as the state’s top law enforcement officer. I appoint John Scott for this role based on the Texas Constitution to serve for a temporary period during the Texas Senate’s resolution of the impeachment proceedings.”[44][45]
—Texas Gov. Greg Abbott

Click here to read the full press release.

On July 10, 2023, Abbott announced that Scott would no longer be interim attorney general and that Angela Colmenero would replace Scott, effective July 14, 2023.[46] After announcing Colmenero's appointment, Abbott issued a press release saying in part:[47]

“John Scott faithfully executed his duties as the interim Attorney General of Texas, and I thank him for his leadership in stepping up to serve his fellow Texans in this role," said Governor Abbott. "Today, under authorities granted by the Texas Constitution, I appoint Angela Colmenero to serve as interim Attorney General of Texas. In addition to her time in the Office of the Governor, Angela served under me in the Texas Attorney General’s Office and has firsthand experience on how the agency operates. Angela's record of experience in state government and expertise in litigation will help her oversee the Texas Attorney General's Office and serve as our state’s top law enforcement officer as the Texas Senate conducts impeachment proceedings.”[47][45]
—Texas Gov. Greg Abbott

Click here to read the full press release.

Commentary & reaction

After Senate voted to convict

"The sham impeachment coordinated by the Biden Administration with liberal House Speaker Dade Phelan and his kangaroo court has cost taxpayers millions of dollars, disrupted the work of the Office of Attorney General and left a dark and permanent stain on the Texas House. The weaponization of the impeachment process to settle political differences is not only wrong, it is immoral and corrupt."[48]
"Yes, it is true that my intervention through TRUTH SOCIAL saved Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton from going down at the hands of Democrats and some Republicans, headed by PAUL RINO (Ryan), Karl Rove, and others, almost all of whom came back to reason when confronted with the facts. Ken has been a great A.G., and now he can go back to work for the wonderful people of Texas. It was my honor to have helped correct this injustice!"[49]
"Over the last two weeks, the Texas House Board of Managers provided the Texas Senate and the people of Texas extensive evidence of Ken Paxton's corruption, deception and self- dealing. It is extremely unfortunate that after hearing and evaluating this evidence, the Texas Senate chose not to remove him from office...This impeachment was set in motion because Ken Paxton requested millions of taxpayer dollars to settle a lawsuit brought by conservative, senior employees who Paxton himself recruited to his office. These brave individuals were willing to sacrifice their reputations and careers to fight against the misconduct they witnessed, which included abuse of power, corruption, allegations of bribery, and allowing Nate Paul to act as the de facto Attorney General of Texas."[50]

After House voted to impeach

Below are excerpts of comments from selected officials and organizations regarding Paxton's impeachment:

"….I love Texas, won it twice in landslides, and watched as many other friends, including Ken Paxton, came along with me. Hopefully Republicans in the Texas House will agree that this is a very unfair process that should not be allowed to happen or proceed—I will fight you if it does. It is the Radical Left Democrats, RINOS, and Criminals that never stop. ELECTION INTERFERENCE! Free Ken Paxton, let them wait for the next election!"[51]
"It [the impeachment] comes to the Texas Senate, there will be a trial conducted. I’m not at liberty to say anything really beyond that because I will be presiding over that case and the senators – all 31 senators – will have a vote. We’ll set the rules for that trial as we go forward and we’ll see how that develops."[52]
  • State Rep. Ann Johnson (D), vice-chair, Texas House of Representatives General Investigating Committee:
"This gentleman is no longer fit for service or for office. Either this is going to be the beginning of the end of his criminal reign, or God help us with the harms that will come to all Texans if he's allowed to stay the top cop on the take, if millions of Texans can’t trust us to do the right thing, right here, right now."[53]
"I think what happened in the House was a travesty. In my view, these issues, the legal issues surrounding Ken Paxton, those are in the courts. We have a system in the court of law that can resolve those issues but every bit as importantly, these allegations were before the voters."[54]
"The fact that this has come this far with the Republicans controlling both the House and the Senate and a Republican attorney general tells you that this is serious enough that people are looking past party labels to try to see what we need to do to preserve the public trust and integrity of the institution."[55]
  • State Rep. David Spiller (R), member, Texas House of Representatives General Investigating Committee:
"Today is a very grim and difficult day for this House and for the state of Texas. We have a duty and an obligation to protect the citizens of Texas from elected officials who abuse their office and their powers for personal gain. As a body, we should not be complicit in allowing that behavior."[56]
  • Texas Republican Party (excerpt from June 2023 resolution that passed the State Republican Executive Committee, 53-11):
"the Republican Party of Texas CONDEMNS the politically motivated impeachment of Attorney General Paxton by the Texas House of Representatives and hereby IMPLORES Texas Lieutenant Governor Dan Patrick and members of the Texas Senate to uphold Constitutionally guaranteed due process, fairness, precedent, and the rule of law by rendering judgment as a matter of law in the Texas Senate on the grounds that the House of Representatives failed to satisfy due process, to comply with applicable Texas law, and to adhere to precedent; that the articles of impeachment be dismissed with prejudice; and that Ken Paxton be allowed to promptly resume his duties as the duly elected Attorney General."[57]
"Number one, I was surprised it happened so quickly and number two, I was surprised it took so long to happen quickly...There’s been two years, anyone who wasn’t deaf and blind in Austin knows that he had eight quality people, including a really valiant Texas Ranger saying ‘this guy is corrupt.'"[58]
"Ken Paxton is a liar, a fraud, and now, as nonpartisan and Republican-led investigations have found, a criminal caught red-handed multiple times during his tenure as Attorney General. This crook should have gone to jail years ago. Texans demand and deserve accountability. While we fully support the Texas House voting to impeach Ken Paxton – we think it would be better for all Texans if he saved legislators the trouble, and taxpayer money, and just resigned on his own accord."[59]

Impeachments in Texas

See also: Impeachments in Texas

Paxton was the second statewide official, and the third overall, to be impeached in Texas history.[5] Click here for more information about impeachments in Texas.

Noteworthy events before impeachment

Top aide resigns and accusations of bribery and abuse of office (2020)

On October 5, 2020, The Washington Post reported that Jeffrey Mateer, Paxton's first assistant, resigned. Mateer and six other aides submitted a letter to Human Resources Director Greg Simpson alleging that Paxton had been, "violating federal and/or state law, including prohibitions relating to improper influence, abuse of office, bribery, and other potential criminal offenses."[60] According to the Houston Chronicle, the aides accused Paxton of launching an investigation into the FBI and U.S. Department of Treasury agents who raided the home and business office of Nate Paul in 2019. Paul donated to Paxton's 2018 campaign.[61]

In a statement to the Austin American-Statesman, Paxton's office said, "The complaint filed against Attorney General Paxton was done to impede an ongoing investigation into criminal wrongdoing by public officials including employees of this office...Making false claims is a very serious matter and we plan to investigate this to the fullest extent of the law."[60]

On October 13, 2020, the Houston Chronicle reported that Mark Penley was put on leave and on November 2, 2020, The Texas Tribune reported that he was fired.[62][63] The Houston Chronicle also reported on October 22, 2020, that Paxton's office fired two top aides, Blake Brickman and Lacey Mase.[61] Penley, Brickman, and Mase were three of the seven aides to make accusations against Paxton. According to The Texas Tribune, Mase said, "It was not voluntary."[64] Ian Prior, a spokesperson for Paxton’s campaign, said, "Any suggestion that this has to do with the whistleblower claims is false and demonstrates an unfamiliarity with the facts...There are a number of reasons for these separations that we cannot discuss at this time."[65]

On October 25, 2020, Ryan Vassar was put on leave and Darren McCarty submitted his resignation, effective the first week of November 2020. Both were top aides who had made accusations against Paxton.[66]

Ryan Bangert, the seventh aide to accuse Paxton, resigned on October 28, 2020. The Marshall News Messenger reported that Bangert said, "It has been my honor and privilege to serve alongside the men and women of the Office of the Attorney General."[67]

On November 17, 2020, the Attorney General's Office fired Ryan Vassar.[68]

On February 10, 2023, Paxton and four former top aides reached a settlement in a lawsuit alleging that Paxton improperly fired them. The Texas Tribune's James Barragán wrote, "The tentative agreement would pay $3.3 million to the four whistleblowers and keep in place an appeals court ruling that allowed the case to move forward. The settlement, once finalized, also will include a statement from Paxton saying he “accepts that plaintiffs acted in a manner that they thought was right and apologizes for referring to them as ‘rogue employees.’”[25] Barragán also wrote that "The settlement...is contingent on the approval of funding", which the state of Texas pay for.[25]

Felony securities fraud indictment

Click here to read more on the securities fraud charges against Attorney General Ken Paxton.

State charges

A grand jury indicted Paxton for felony securities fraud on July 31, 2015. The charges included two counts of first-degree securities fraud in connection with the sale of more than $100,000 or more of Servergy Inc. stock to two investors, along with a lesser charge of not registering.[69] Paxton turned himself in on August 3, 2015, and was booked and released.[70] Paxton said the charges against him were politically motivated and appealed the judge's ruling.

At his first court appearance on the three securities fraud charges on August 27, 2015, Paxton formally pleaded not guilty. After Paxton entered his plea, District Judge George Gallagher granted a motion that Paxton's attorney, Joe Kendall, made to withdraw from the case.[71] On September 10, 2015, Paxton announced he had hired new legal counsel.[72] Paxton's defense team moved to have the charges dismissed on December 1, 2015. Prosecutors sought to amend the indictments. Judge Chris Oldner said he would issue written rulings on those motions.[73][74][75]

In July 2016, a state appeals court denied Paxton's motion to reconsider a previous ruling that upheld criminal charges against him.[76] In August 2016, Paxton appealed to the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals, the state's court of last resort for all criminal matters in the state.[77]

Following a prosecutor's motion, Judge Gallagher ordered the case moved to Harris County Court on April 12, 2017, setting a tentative trial date for September 12, 2017.[78] In turn, Paxton issued legal challenges seeking Judge Gallagher's removal from the case. The 5th Court of Appeals ruled on May 30, 2017, that in moving the case to Harris County, Judge Gallagher had also lost his authority to try the case since it was out of his jurisdiction. Although the court ordered Judge Gallagher to cancel all upcoming proceedings, including the September 12 trial, it did not directly remove him from the case.[79] As a result of the ruling, Judge Gallagher ordered the transfer of the case to Harris County on June 9, 2017.[80] On June 13, 2017, Judge Robert Johnson was randomly selected to preside over the case.[81] An initial trial on one of the three charges was scheduled for December 11, 2017, but was later delayed indefinitely.[82]

On October 4, 2017, Judge Johnson agreed to further delay the trial at the prosecutors' request, citing disruptions that Hurricane Harvey caused and the unresolved dispute over the prosecutors' pay.[83]

Paxton's trial remained delayed through 2018 and 2019. In July 2019, Paxton's attorneys requested to move the case back to Collin County from Harris County.[84] On June 25, Judge Robert Johnson granted the request, ruling that the trial would take place in Collin County.[85]

On May 27, 2021, a three-judge panel of the Texas First District Court of Appeals voted 2-1 to uphold Johnson's order, setting the stage for Paxton's trial to take place in Collin County.[86]

Federal securities charges dismissed

The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) filed civil securities fraud charges against Paxton in April 2016 in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Texas. [87]A U.S. district court judge dismissed these charges in March 2017.[87]

The March 2017 permanent dismissal of the charges followed from a conditional dismissal of the charges in October 2016.[88] Judge Amos Mazzant issued his conditional dismissal on Friday, October 7. Mazzant gave SEC prosecutors 14 days to amend their allegations.[89] On October 21, the SEC filed an amended complaint.[90]

The SEC alleged Paxton misled five investors in Servergy Inc. by not disclosing to them that he received compensation from sales in the form of shares of company stock. Paxton told the SEC that the shares were meant as a gift from the company's founder rather than as compensation.[91]

In his 29-page ruling conditionally dismissing the SEC's charges, federal Judge Amos Mazzant wrote, "This case is not about whether Paxton had a moral obligation to disclose his financial arrangement with Servergy to potential investors. This case is also not about whether Paxton had some general obligation to disclose his financial arrangement to his investor group. The only issue before the Court is to determine whether the facts as pleaded give rise to a plausible claim under federal securities laws."[88]

In Mazzant's final dismissal of the case in March 2017, he wrote, "This case has not changed since the Court conditionally dismissed the Commission’s Original Complaint. The primary deficiency was, and remains, that Paxton had no plausible legal duty to disclose his compensation arrangement with investors."[87]

After the federal court dismissed the SEC charges, Paxton said, "I have maintained all along this whole saga is a political witch hunt. Today’s ruling to dismiss the charges with prejudice confirms that these charges were baseless when the SEC initially brought them and they were without merit when the SEC re-filed them. Someone needs to hold the SEC accountable for this travesty."[87]

See also

External links

Footnotes

  1. Twitter, "Patrick Svitek on May 27, 2023," accessed May 27, 2023
  2. The Texas Tribune "Texas AG Ken Paxton impeached, suspended from duties; will face Senate trial," May 27, 2023
  3. Twitter, "@KenPaxtonTX," May 27, 2023
  4. US Senate, "Impeachment: An Overview of Constitutional Provisions, Procedure, and Practice" December 9, 2010
  5. 5.0 5.1 KHOU-11, "Has Texas impeached an elected official before?" May 25, 2023
  6. AP, "Texas governor appoints John Scott as interim attorney general after Paxton impeached," accessed May 31, 2023
  7. The Texas Tribune, "Gov. Greg Abbott taps longtime aide Angela Colmenero as interim attorney general," July 10, 2023
  8. 8.0 8.1 Texas Tribune, "Paxton trial updates: Prosecutors failed to convince 21 senators on any of the accusations," accessed Septrember 16, 2023
  9. The Texas Tribune, "Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton acquitted on all 16 articles of impeachment," accessed September 16, 2023
  10. The Texas Tribune, "Paxton trial updates: Defense urges senators to return Paxton to work," September 15, 2023
  11. The Texas Tribune, "Paxton trial updates: Paxton’s defense team calls its second witness," September 14, 2023
  12. The Texas Tribune, "The House has rested its case against Ken Paxton after a chaotic day for the prosecution," September 13, 2023
  13. The Texas Tribune, "Ken Paxton impeachment trial begins with sniping: “Slow creep of corruption” vs. “nothing of significance”," September 5, 2023
  14. 14.0 14.1 14.2 14.3 14.4 The Texas Tribune, "Paxton trial, Sept. 5: Suspended AG pleads not guilty to all impeachment articles, leaves before afternoon proceedings," September 5, 2023 Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; name "Sept5" defined multiple times with different content
  15. The Texas Tribune, "New accusations: Ken Paxton used burner phone, secret email account, fake Uber name to hide ties to Nate Paul," August 17, 2023
  16. Twitter, "Aarón Torres," June 21, 2023
  17. Texas Legislature Online, "SENATE RESOLUTION, S.R. No. 35," accessed June 22, 2023
  18. The Texan, "State Republican Board Overwhelmingly Condemns Ken Paxton’s Impeachment," June 19, 2023
  19. Republican Party of Texas, "Resolution Condemning the Impeachment of Attorney General Ken Paxton," June 20, 2023
  20. Texas Legislature Online, "S.R. No. 735," accessed May 31, 2023
  21. 21.0 21.1 21.2 21.3 The Texas Tribune, "Texas House names Ken Paxton impeachment managers; Senate trial will start by Aug. 28," May 29, 2023
  22. The Texas Tribune "Texas AG Ken Paxton impeached, suspended from duties; will face Senate trial," May 27, 2023
  23. Politico, "Texas lawmakers recommend impeaching AG Paxton after Republican investigation," May 25, 2023
  24. Texas House of Representatives, "Memorandum for Members of the House of Representatives Re: Impeachment Process," May 26, 2023
  25. 25.0 25.1 25.2 The Texas Tribune, "Attorney General Ken Paxton agrees to apologize and pay $3.3 million to whistleblowers in settlement," February 10, 2023
  26. 26.0 26.1 26.2 26.3 The Texas Tribune, "Here are the 20 articles of impeachment filed against Ken Paxton," May 25, 2023
  27. The Texas Tribune, "Ken Paxton was acquitted. See how each Senator voted." September 16, 2023
  28. The Texas Tribune, "Ken Paxton was acquitted. See how each Senator voted." September 16, 2023
  29. The Texas Tribune, "Here are the 16 articles of impeachment Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton is facing," September 1, 2023
  30. 30.0 30.1 30.2 Texas Constitution and Statutes, "The Texas Constitution," accessed May 31, 2023
  31. Member of House General Investigating Committee
  32. Member of House General Investigating Committee
  33. Member of House General Investigating Committee
  34. Member of House General Investigating Committee
  35. Member of House General Investigating Committee
  36. Twitter, "Patrick Svitek on May 27, 2023," accessed May 27, 2023
  37. The Texas Tribune, "Ken Paxton was impeached by the Texas House. See how each representative voted." May 27, 2023
  38. One member of each member were present in the chamber but did not vote, and two Democrats and one Republican was absent.
  39. Politico, "Texas lawmakers recommend impeaching AG Paxton after Republican investigation," May 25, 2023
  40. Texas house of Representatives, "Memorandum for Members of the House of Representatives Re: Impeachment Process," May 26, 2023
  41. 41.0 41.1 Texas Tribune, "Investigators detail years of alleged misconduct by Texas AG Ken Paxton in stunning House committee hearing," May 24, 2023
  42. Twitter, "@KenPaxtonTX," May 27, 2023
  43. Texas House of Representatives General Investigating Committee, Committee Members," May 30, 2023
  44. 44.0 44.1 44.2 Office of the Texas Governor, "Governor Abbott Appoints John Scott As Interim Attorney General Of Texas," May 31, 2023
  45. 45.0 45.1 Note: This text is quoted verbatim from the original source. Any inconsistencies are attributable to the original source.
  46. The Texas Tribune, "Gov. Greg Abbott taps longtime aide Angela Colmenero as interim attorney general," July 10, 2023
  47. 47.0 47.1 Office of the Texas Governor, "Governor Abbott Appoints Angela Colmenero As Interim Attorney General Of Texas," July 10, 2023
  48. The Texas Tribune, "Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton acquitted on all 16 articles of impeachment," accessed September 16, 2023
  49. The Texas Tribune, "Donald Trump claims credit for saving Ken Paxton," September 18, 2023
  50. X, "Dade Phelan," September 16, 2023
  51. Truth Social, "Donald J. Trump," May 27, 2023
  52. WFAA, "Texas Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick makes first comments on potential Ken Paxton impeachment trial," May 25, 2023
  53. The Texas Tribune, "Texas AG Ken Paxton impeached, suspended from duties; will face Senate trial," May 27, 2023
  54. KTSM, "Ted Cruz talks Paxton impeachment, debt ceiling vote during visit to Tyler," June 8, 2023
  55. The Texas Tribune, "Donald Trump, Ted Cruz denounce effort to impeach Attorney General Ken Paxton," May 27, 2023
  56. The Texas Tribune, "Texas AG Ken Paxton impeached, suspended from duties; will face Senate trial," May 27, 2023
  57. Republican Party of Texas, "Resolution Condemning the Impeachment of Attorney General Ken Paxton," June 20, 2023
  58. KETK, "‘I was surprised it took so long’: Louie Gohmert weighs in on Ken Paxton impeachment," June 2, 2023
  59. Texas Democrats, "Chairman Hinojosa Releases Statement on Paxton Impeachment Vote," May 25, 2023
  60. 60.0 60.1 The Washington Post, "Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton accused of bribery and abusing his office by 7 top aides," October 5, 2020
  61. 61.0 61.1 Houston Chronicle, "Second whistleblower who accused Texas AG Ken Paxton of corruption has been fired," October 22, 2020
  62. Houston Chronicle, "Texas AG Ken Paxton says he’s now investigating two of his top staffers," October 13, 2020
  63. The Texas Tribune, "Two more senior aides fired from Texas attorney general’s office in wake of criminal accusations against Ken Paxton," November 2, 2020
  64. The Texas Tribune, "Top aide in Texas attorney general's office terminated after accusing Ken Paxton of bribery," October 20, 2020
  65. The Panola Watchman, "The attorney general's office has sidelined four of the seven whistleblowers who reported Ken Paxton to law enforcement," October 25, 2020
  66. CBS Dallas/Fort Worth, "Another Top Deputy Resigns After Accusing Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton Of Crimes," October 26, 2020
  67. The Marshall News Messenger, "All seven of Texas AG Ken Paxton's whistleblowers have resigned, been fired or put on leave," November 1, 2020
  68. The Texas Tribune, "Last whistleblower fired from Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton's office days after suing for retaliation," November 24, 2020
  69. Tanya Eiserer, Jason Whitely, Jim Douglas and Marie Saavedra, WFAA, Sources: Grand jury indicts Attorney General Ken Paxton," August 2, 2015
  70. Chuck Lindell, American-Statesman, "Ken Paxton arrested, booked; indictment released," August 3, 2015
  71. WFAA 8, "Paxton pleads not guilty; has until Sept. 3 to hire lawyer," August 27, 2015
  72. Houston Chronicle, "Paxton enlists help of top Houston defense attorney, former Dallas ADA," September 10, 2015
  73. Tanya Eiserer, WFAA.com, “Motions filed to amend Paxton indictments,” November 30, 2015
  74. Chuck Lindell, Austin American-Statesman, “Ken Paxton to push for dismissal of charges as lawyers spar,” November 30, 2015
  75. Chuck Lindell and Jazmine Ulloa, Austin American-Statesman, "Lawyers for Ken Paxton, prosecutors clash at hearing," December 1, 2015
  76. Austin American-Statesman, "Ken Paxton loses another round in criminal case," July 5, 2016
  77. Lauren McGaughy, Dallas Morning News, "Texas AG Ken Paxton appeals fraud case again in final attempt to quash felony indictments," August 2, 2016
  78. Dallas News, "Dates set for Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton's trials in Harris County," April 12, 2017
  79. Texas Tribune, "Texas appeals court: Ken Paxton judge must rescind recent orders," May 30, 2017
  80. Houston Chronicle, "New Paxton case judge to be picked at random in Harris County," June 9, 2017
  81. U.S. News, "New Judge Named in Texas Attorney General's Criminal Case," June 13, 2017
  82. Texas Tribune, "Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton's criminal trial set for Dec. 11," July 27, 2017
  83. The Dallas Morning News, "Judge delays Texas AG Ken Paxton's criminal trials as lawyers snipe at one another," October 5, 2017
  84. Texas Tribune, "Ken Paxton’s criminal trial has been pending for nearly four years. Here’s a timeline of his legal drama," June 19, 2019
  85. Texas Tribune, "Criminal case against Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton will return to his native Collin County, judge rules," June 25, 2020
  86. The Texas Tribune, "Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton's criminal case to be heard in Collin County, appeals court rules," May 27, 2021
  87. 87.0 87.1 87.2 87.3 Texas Tribune, "Judge again dismisses SEC case against Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton", March 2, 2017
  88. 88.0 88.1 Dallas Morning News, "Federal judge dismisses civil fraud charges against Attorney General Ken Paxton," October 8, 2016
  89. Texas Tribune, "Judge Dismisses SEC Case Against Ken Paxton", October 7, 2016
  90. Courthouse News, "Texas AG Paxton Faces New SEC Fraud Suit", October 24, 2016
  91. The Texas Tribune, "SEC Charges Ken Paxton With Securities Fraud," April 11, 2016