Paxton trial updates: Nate Paul benefited from AG’s foreclosure opinion, credit union CEO says
By Texas Tribune Staff, The Texas Tribune
“Paxton trial updates: Nate Paul benefited from AG’s foreclosure opinion, credit union CEO says” was first published by The Texas Tribune, a nonprofit, nonpartisan media organization that informs Texans — and engages with them — about public policy, politics, government and statewide issues.
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The historic impeachment trial of suspended Attorney General Ken Paxton is underway in the Texas Senate. He faces 16 articles of impeachment that accuse him of misusing the powers of the attorney general’s office to help his friend and donor Nate Paul, an Austin real estate investor who was under federal investigation. Paxton pleaded not guilty to all impeachment articles on the trial’s first day. His defense attorneys have vowed to disprove the accusations and said they will present evidence showing they are based on assumptions, not facts.
Former U.S. attorney had concerns about conflicts of interest
House impeachment managers called as their next witness Joe Brown, the former U.S. attorney for the Eastern District of Texas.
Brown interviewed for the job to investigate Nate Paul’s claims in 2020. He said he quickly became concerned about potential conflicts of interest, given that Paxton had previously been fined by the Texas State Securities Board, which was listed in Paul’s complaint.
“Red flags are going off,” he said. “So, eventually I say my preference is I would write a report and evaluate these conflicts before I would commit to any level of prosecution.”
Brown said he voiced some of those concerns to Paxton’s deputies, but said he was still “willing to do the job.” After that, he said, there was a standstill in talks with the attorney general’s office, which opted to hire the younger, less experienced Cammack at the same rate.
Brown also said that during the interview process, he spoke to Paxton who complained that he “could not get the people in his office to do anything about” Nate Paul’s claims.
Brown asked why Paxton didn’t fire them.
Brown said that Paxton responded: “It’s complicated.”
Cammack says Paxton misled and then stiffed him
Brandon Cammack, the Houston attorney that Ken Paxton hired to investigate Nate Paul’s adversaries, testified that Paul’s lawyer provided him with a list of people to subpoena and that, after he received two cease and desist letters, he was told by the Attorney General’s Office that he’d have to “eat” a $14,000 invoice for his work.
Cammack’s testimony outlined the direct role that Paul’s lawyer, Michael Wynne, played in the attempts to investigate Paul’s adversaries in September 2020. Wynne, Cammack said, insisted that he be with Cammack as he issued subpoenas for phone and other records to some of Paul’s adversaries.
At one point, Cammack said he spoke with the spouse of a deceased clerk for the court that issued the search warrants for Paul’s businesses. He said Wynne and Paul suggested that the clerk had potentially died from “foul play” — insinuating that she was the victim of the same cabal that they claimed was targeting Paul.
Cammack said he became increasingly concerned that he was being misled about why he had been hired after he was visited by U.S. marshals, and felt like he’d “gotten the rug pulled out from me.”
He was asked to drive at the last minute from Houston to Austin for a meeting at Paul’s home. Paxton was there wearing running shorts, but spent most of the time talking on the phone outside. Cammack said he received little new information about what was expected of him, why U.S. marshals had contacted him or why he hadn’t been paid yet.
Later, Cammack said he was again called from Houston to Austin for a meeting with Paxton and Brent Webster, who played a direct role in firing whistleblowers who reported Paxton to the FBI. The two took him to a Starbucks for a 15-minute meeting during which Cammack said Paxton barely spoke. He said Webster told him that his contract was “not any good,” that he would need to “eat” the $14,000 in work he’d done and that the two almost left him without giving him a ride back to his car.
“It was offensive,” he said.
Cammack also lamented Paxton’s decision to involve him in the Paul matter, saying his name was dragged through the mud, that it hurt him professionally and that the only thing he received in return were two cease and desist letters.
“I had a whole entire life before all of this,” he said.
– Robert Downen
Hardin: “Are you saying [Paxton and Webster]… terminated your contract, told you you weren’t going to get paid and then drove off and if you hadn’t said ‘wait, wait I’ve got [to get] my car,’ they would have left you in the street?”
Cammack: “That’s what it looked like.” pic.twitter.com/yGimkuDerP
— Texas Tribune (@TexasTribune) September 12, 2023
Lawyer hired to investigate Nate Paul’s claims says he reported directly to Paxton
Brandon Cammack, the Houston attorney hired to investigate Nate Paul’s claims after they were debunked by top deputies in the attorney general’s office, testified Tuesday that he reported directly to Ken Paxton and communicated with him by encrypted messaging services.
“The only person I reported to was Mr. Paxton, at his direction,” Cammack said.
Cammack’s testimony sheds new light on the direct involvement that Paxton played in the September 2020 investigation into Paul’s claims that he was the victim of two separate conspiracies. By the time he was hired, top deputies had already met repeatedly with Paul, debunked his claims and repeatedly urged Paxton to “back away” from Paul.
“I did everything at his supervision and kept him informed of everything,” Cammack said, referring to Paxton.
Cammack said that Paxton personally reached out to have him investigate Paul’s claims, and said the case lacked support from his top deputies.
“His own staff would not work on what he wanted them to work on,” Cammack recalled Paxton saying. “He just wanted to find out the truth of what happened.”
Cammack said he expected to have meetings with top agency deputies such as Mark Penley, the former deputy attorney general for criminal justice who testified Monday that he thought Paul was dishonest. Cammack said he asked Paxton when he could meet with Penley, but was always told that Penley was on vacation and the case file was on his desk.
Cammack also said that Paxton asked him to communicate with him through encrypted communications services such as Signal and ProtonMail, and that the first time he saw Paxton’s official email address, it was when he received a cease-and-desist letter from top agency deputies.
Paxton — who House impeachment managers have accused of using burner phones — also called from two cell phone numbers, Cammack said.
As impeachment testimony continues, both sides running out of allotted time
The clock is quite literally running down on the impeachment trial of suspended Attorney General Ken Paxton. Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick told the Texas Senate on Monday morning that the historic trial could wrap up by the end of this week, despite earlier predictions that the proceedings could last several weeks.
The prosecution and the defense were each given 24 hours to present their case and cross examine witnesses. As of Monday night — the end of the fifth day of the trial — lawyers for the House impeachment managers who are prosecuting the case against Paxton had about nine hours and 19 minutes left. Paxton’s defense lawyers had around 12 hours and 14 minutes left.
Throughout Monday, the prosecution picked up the pace — calling four more witnesses. Paxton’s lawyers have yet to call their own witness, and have used their time on cross examination. But it’s appearing unlikely either side will make a significant dent in their list of nearly 150 witnesses subpoenaed, according to a witness list.
Former district attorney found Paxton donor’s claims about a conspiracy “ridiculous”
Margaret Moore, who served as Travis County district attorney from 2017 to 2020, testified Monday that she had her office look into real estate investor Nate Paul’s claims that he was the victim of a wide-ranging conspiracy among several law enforcement agencies. Staffers in her office found his claims “ridiculous,” she said.
“I expected it to be a dead issue,” she said.
Moore later found out that the attorney general’s office had hired Brandon Cammack, an outside attorney from Houston, to investigate the claims made by Paul, a friend and political donor to suspended Attorney General Ken Paxton.
On cross-examination, Paxton’s attorney Tony Buzbee suggested Moore was too dismissive of Paul’s allegations against the FBI in particular. Buzbee is defending Paxton against 16 articles of impeachment that accuse him of misusing the powers of the attorney general’s office to help Paul, who was under federal investigation.
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This article originally appeared in The Texas Tribune at https://www.texastribune.org/2023/09/12/ken-paxton-impeachment-trial-live-updates/.
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