The first week of suspended Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton’s impeachment trial in the Senate ended with his former lead law enforcement officer testifying that an Austin developer — who is alleged to have bribed Paxton — constructed a “conspiracy theory” about federal officials altering a search warrant for his property, the Austin American-Statesman reported.
David Maxwell, the former AG official, said real-estate developer Nate Paul pushed Paxton to investigate federal lawenforcement agencies probing his business. Paul has since been indicted for inflating his assets on loan applications. Paxton aides looked into Paul’s allegations at Paxton’s request but concluded they were meritless.
“My feeling was Nate Paul was a criminal and we should not be associating with Nate Paul,” Maxwell testified.
Maxwell was ultimately fired by Paxton for insubordination after he resisted investigating Paul’s allegations.
Paxton blames the impeachment on his political opponents. He appeared on the first day of the trial but has not been in the Senate chamber since then.
Appeals court: Buoys can stay for now A federal appeals court last week stayed a federal district judge’s ruling that the floating barrier installed by the state in the Rio Grande to stem illegal entry by migrants violated federal law and treaties.
A three-judge panel of the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals temporarily halted U.S. District Judge David Ezra’s order that the 1,000-foot barrier near Eagle Pass be removed by Sept. 15, pending an as-yet unscheduled hearing.
The U.S. Department of Justice filed the lawsuit, saying the buoys violated an 1899 federal law that forbids unauthorized construction in navigable waterways, The Dallas Morning News reported. Gov. Greg Abbott argued the river is too shallow to be navigable and that an “invasion” of migrants and drug smugglers made it necessary for the state to defend itself.
“Texas has clear constitutional authority to defend its territory against the invasion that Gov. Abbott has declared,” the state told the lower court last week. Ezra rejected that argument, saying by that reasoning the state could declare an invasion and wage war at will.
Mexican authorities have lodged formal diplomatic complaints, and critics of the buoys in the United States called them inhumane.
ERCOT calls for power conservation; cooler weather predicted For the first time this summer, the Electric Reliability Council of Texas last week declared an emergency, introducing the possibility of rolling blackouts to stabilize the state’s
power grid.
A sudden drop in power reserves the night of Sept. 6 caused the system to lose more power than expected, prompting the first emergency alert since Winter Storm Uri in February 2021, according to kut.org.
Texans have experienced the second-hottest summer on record, the Texas Tribune reported, with an average temperature of 85.3 degrees between June and the end of August. That average is just behind the record set in 2011, when blistering heat and dry conditions pushed the average temperature to 86.8 degrees, and wildfires swept the state.
The good news is that the heat wave is expected to finally break this week, with rain expected and temperatures dropping.
Gary Borders is a veteran award-winning Texas journalist. He published a number of community newspapers in Texas during a 30-year span, including in Longview, Fort Stockton, Nacogdoches, Lufkin and Cedar Park. Email: gborders@ texaspress.com