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The Texas attorney general, Ken Paxton, appears at a pretrial hearing in his securities fraud case on Tuesday in Houston. Photograph: Yi-Chin Lee/Houston Chronicle via AP
The Texas attorney general, Ken Paxton, appears at a pretrial hearing in his securities fraud case on Tuesday in Houston. Photograph: Yi-Chin Lee/Houston Chronicle via AP

Texas attorney general reaches deal to dismiss securities fraud charges

This article is more than 1 month old

Ken Paxton must pay $300,000 to victims and complete 100 hours of community service as part of deal

Prosecutors on Tuesday announced an agreement with the Texas attorney general, Ken Paxton, that would ultimately dismiss securities fraud charges he has been facing for nearly a decade.

Under the 18-month, pre-trial agreement, the special prosecutors in the case would drop three felony counts against Paxton. As part of the deal, Paxton must pay full restitution to victims – roughly $300,000 – and must also complete 100 hours of community service as well as 15 hours of legal ethics education.

The resolution lets Paxton avoid a trial, which had been set to begin in less than three weeks on 15 April. Paxton was first indicted in 2015 after being accused of duping investors in a tech startup near Dallas before he was elected attorney general.

If he had been convicted at trial, Paxton could have been sentenced to life in prison.

The agreement with prosecutors, which lets Paxton remain in his elected position and doesn’t affect his law license, is another huge legal and political victory for one of the nation’s most visible Republican state attorneys general. The end of the case comes six months after Paxton was acquitted of corruption charges in an impeachment trial in the Texas senate.

The resolution of the securities fraud case furthers a dramatic reversal of political fortune for Paxton, who just a year ago appeared imperiled by both the criminal case and the threat of being removed from office after his top aides reported him to the FBI.

But Paxton has emerged emboldened. He waged war against dozens of Republican lawmakers who were part of the 2023 effort to impeach him, with his biggest target being state house speaker, Dade Phelan, who was forced into a 28 May runoff. Paxton’s revenge campaign also included helping defeat three Republican judges on the state court of criminal appeals because they were part of a majority that stripped his office of the power to prosecute election fraud without permission from local district attorneys.

He has not ruled out a primary challenge to the Republican US senator John Cornyn in 2026.

Paxton still faces legal troubles, however. A federal investigation has been probing some of the same charges presented in his impeachment.

He is additionally fighting efforts by former top aides to make him testify in a whistleblower civil lawsuit that also includes allegations central to the impeachment.

The securities fraud case has hung over Paxton nearly his entire time in statewide office. Yet Paxton, 61, has shown remarkable political resilience, maintaining and growing strong support among Republican activists on the state and national level, including from former president Donald Trump.

Paxton had been accused of defrauding investors in a Dallas-area tech company called Servergy by not disclosing that he was being paid by the company to recruit them. One of the people Paxton was accused of defrauding was the former state representative Byron Cook.

Paxton was charged with two counts of securities fraud and one count of not being registered as an investment adviser.

Paxton had also been charged in a federal civil complaint filed by the US securities and exchange commission (SEC) over his work with Servergy. But a federal judge in March 2017 dismissed the complaint against Paxton.

The person who recruited Paxton to work with Servergy, ex-company chief executive officer William Mapp, was found liable by a jury for misleading investors and ordered to pay a civil penalty of $22,500. Mapp lost his job with Servergy and later had to work as an Uber driver to make ends meet, according to court documents.

The securities fraud case against Paxton was delayed for years during pre-trial disputes over trial location in the Dallas-area or Houston – and over payment for the state’s special prosecutors. The prosecutors argued most of those delays were caused by Paxton.

An attempt by Paxton’s lawyers to throw out the charges against him because the years of delay had violated his right to a speedy trial was denied by a judge in February.

The fraud allegations were among the original 20 articles of impeachment. But that process was a political one. The criminal case posed a much more serious threat.

Paxton’s political opponents, most notably Republicans, had used the fraud charges against him in elections. But Paxton has twice been re-elected as attorney general since his indictment, most recently in 2022.

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