Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton acquitted on 14 impeachment articles

AUSTIN (Nexstar) — The Texas Senate on Saturday acquitted Attorney General Ken Paxton on 14 accusations ranging from bribery, abuse of office, and conspiracy.


COMPLETE COVERAGE: Paxton impeachment trial

Senators voted to find Paxton guilty on none of 16 impeachment charges, so far.

Paxton was present in the Senate chamber Friday for the first time since he pleaded not guilty to all 16 charges he faced.


Here’s how each Texas senator voted in the impeachment trial of Ken Paxton

Closing arguments Friday

“We discovered unprecedented abuse in the Texas Attorney General’s Office by Attorney General Paxton,” House impeachment manager Andrew Murr, R-Junction, said during closing arguments Friday. “Mr. Paxton put the risk of the citizens of Texas, of the business of Texas, and the lives of law enforcement at stake. As the state’s top cop, his conduct is inexcusable.”

Paxton’s defense attorneys argued the prosecution had not proven their case beyond a reasonable doubt, the highest standard of proof in a court of law.


READ: Closing arguments end in Ken Paxton impeachment trial

“In any criminal trial, this case would be dismissed,” lead defense attorney Tony Buzbee said. “Some of the best lawyers in Texas couldn’t prove that these things happened beyond reasonable doubt… the evidence simply isn’t there.”

Buzbee appealed to the outside influences of Paxton’s conservative base of support and impugned other conservatives for attempting to remove Paxton from office.

“The Bush era in Texas ends today,” Buzbee said in an oblique reference to Paxton’s 2022 primary opponent George P. Bush. “This is a political witch hunt.”

The verdict comes after nearly two weeks of arguments that pitted all-star Texas lawyers against each other in a political trial unprecedented in modern times.

History of prior impeachment in Texas

There have only been two statewide officials that have been impeached in Texas History: Governor James “Pa” Ferguson and O.P. Carrillo, a district judge.

Ferguson faced impeachment in 1917 after accusations of embezzlement and other charges. He is the only governor and statewide elected official to be impeached on the state’s history books, according to the Texas State Historical Association. However, Ferguson resigned after senators voted to convict him — before he could be formally removed from office.

Carrillo became the second official to be impeached in 1976. Carrillo was removed from office for evading the payment of income taxes.

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