State of Texas: Special Session 4 brings progress, division on Abbott’s priorities

AUSTIN (Nexstar) — Texas lawmakers started their fourth special session Tuesday and made quick progress on some of Governor Greg Abbott’s top priorities.

House lawmakers held a marathon hearing Thursday on a bill to put billions into public schools, while also establishing Abbott’s priority of education savings accounts. The proposal calls for education savings accounts (ESA) of $10,500 to go toward private school for some families.

The House Select Committee on Educational Opportunity and Enrichment invited six separate panels to testify, each representing various experts and advocates from public schools, charter schools and ESA advocates. 

Supporters of the legislation made the case that the ESA plan will help more Texas students succeed.

“They deserve more opportunities to have a high quality education,” Denisha Allen said outside the hearing room. She founded Black Minds Matter, a group that works toward developing school options for Black students.

“That’s not to say that public school options are bad. But it’s to say that we need more opportunities,” Allen added.

Opponents believe the ESA plan would hurt public schools. Under the state’s school funding system, if enrollment drops, public schools receive less funding. Several people who spoke at the hearing emphasized that public schools provide opportunities to all students.

Others at the hearing called on lawmakers and the Governor to support funding public schools and teacher pay raises without tying it to the ESA issue.

“Fund our public schools so that that teacher can help teach those second third graders and not to worry about it. And then let’s debate the the ESA issue on its own merits,” HD Chambers, president of the Texas School Alliance said.

“We’re using public school funding as a hostage,” Chambers said of putting school funding and the ESA plan in the same bill.

On Friday, committee members voted to send the bill to the full House for a vote. Democrats on the committee vowed to keep fighting to stop the ESA plan.

“This is our Alamo,” State Rep. James Talarico, D-Austin, said. “Sometimes compromise is not a good thing…their ultimate goal is to replace public education with private, Christian schooling.”

The Senate passed their version of the ESA bill late Thursday night. Senators gave short advance notice of their public hearing, and there was no public comment before the vote.

Senators that night also passed Senate Bill 4, which creates a state crime for crossing the border illegally. State Sen. Charles Perry, R-Lubbock authored the legislation. That’s a change from the last special session, when State Sen. Brian Birdwell, R-Granbury, carried the bill.

SB 4 is in direct response to Abbott’s calls for increased border security measures. It’s part of an ongoing effort by state leaders to secure the southern border independently of the federal government.

“Texans know the Biden Administration has perpetuated the crisis on our southern border, and Texas must take matters into our own hands to keep our state safe,” Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick wrote in a statement released after the vote. Patrick was not on the floor for the vote due to an illness.

“Creating a state crime for illegal border crossers will act as a strong deterrent and allow our law enforcement officers more authority to secure the border,” Patrick’s statement added.

Some of the biggest criticism of the legislation is that it would likely violate the supremacy clause in the U.S. Constitution since immigration enforcement is a power reserved solely for federal authorities. Federal courts have repeatedly held that arresting and deporting people is something that states cannot do.

Senate Democrats voted against the bill, amid concerns that it could lead to racial profiling and that it was unconstitutional. In a surprising move, Birdwell also voted no, and spoke about his own concerns about the bill being unconstitutional.

“We are setting a terrible precedent for the future by invalidating our obedience and faithfulness to our Constitution. President Biden’s failure to obey his oath does not compel us to violate ours,” said Birdwell, moments before the vote.

Perry acknowledged Birdwell’s concerns, but said passing the bill would help keep Texans safe.

“While I agree, we are testing and pushing envelopes, the state has every right to protect its citizens and this nation has every right to expect Texas to do that, when called to do it,” Perry said, before calling for a vote on the measure.

The bill now heads to the House for consideration.

Near crashes fuel push in Congress to improve air safety

The push to increase safety at airports across the nation is heating up. This comes after reported close calls and near misses between airplanes, and now the topic is front and center.

“Our nation is experiencing a aviation safety crisis,” said U.S. Senator Tammy Duckworth, D-Illinois.

On Thursday, the Subcommittee on Aviation Safety, Operations and Innovation, discussed close calls and how to improve aviation safety.

Lawmakers said a wave of retirements and buyouts drained valuable experience from the U.S. aviation system in recent years.

“Coupled with the surge in demand, created essentially a perfect storm that has eroded the systems safety margins down to dangerously thin levels,” Duckworth said.

Austin is no stranger to these safety concerns. Back in February a FedEx flight and Southwest flight nearly collided.

“We have had too many near misses including one that could have been a total catastrophe,” said U.S. Congressman Lloyd Doggett, D-Texas.

That same flight highlighted in Thursday’s Aviation Subcommittee Hearing on “Addressing Close Calls to Improve Aviation Safety”.


Timeline shared of near-miss between 2 planes at Austin’s airport

“These two aircraft came within 100 feet of another,” said Duckworth as she pointed to an animation of the close call.

Doggett has been very vocal about the issues and what needs to be done to address them.

“We need to have an adequate number of air traffic controllers, we need state of the art technology,” Doggett said.

In October, the FAA told KXAN that “The AUS Tower is authorized to staff 42 controllers. The current number of controllers at AUS Tower is 35. There are currently another eight Certified Professional Controllers in Training (CPC-IT) (not academy grads but controllers previously fully certified at another facility) at the facility.”

According to the FAA, entry-level applicants that want to become and air traffic controller must complete required training courses and spend several months at the FAA Academy in Oklahoma City, but Doggett said one way to combat the safety concerns is getting more people trained.

“The FAA continues to insist that all people go through their academy in Oklahoma City, yet there are a number of community colleges and other colleges around the country that have good programs that can train people,” Doggett said.

“One serious close call is one too many. The FAA and the aviation community are pursuing a goal of zero serious close calls, which is a commitment from the Safety Summit in March. The FAA maintains extremely conservative standards for keeping aircraft safely separated and multiple layers of safety protect the traveling public. Safety experts follow up on all events and evaluate them for risks, and we hold annual runway safety meetings at every airport with a control tower.”

Federal Aviation Administration

For more on FAA runway safety initiatives click here.

You can listen to the entire Aviation Subcommittee Hearing on Addressing Close Calls to Improve Aviation Safety here

Undercover sting targets emissions testing fraud

“Do you have one?”

Tucked in a back room at the Travis County Tax Office, Sgt. Jose Escribano walks over to a two-way window after getting a phone call.

“Nineteen,” he said, tapping on the window, pointing to a man who is talking to a teller. “Window 19! Right there!”

KXAN photojournalist Todd Bailey (left) captures Sgt. Jose Escribano (center) looking out of a two-way window during a recent undercover sting operation. (KXAN Photo/Matt Grant)

On a Monday morning in early October, KXAN was granted rare access to an undercover sting operation conducted by the Travis County Constable Precinct Three’s Clean Air Task Force. Scanning the waiting room, and their laptops, the small team of investigators are searching for bogus vehicle inspection reports.

“This is organized crime,” Escribano said. “There’s no question about it.”

Escribano and his team led the statewide fight to end the fraud tied to Texas’ paper license plates, which became a national concern. He’s now working to clean up what he calls the “invisible” problem of emissions testing fraud.

“Anybody can see the tags,” Escribano said. “This? Regular law enforcement is oblivious, as is the tax office. They can’t see it.”

Within the first 30 minutes, Escribano is already questioning someone suspected of bringing in a fraudulent inspection report. That person is escorted out, along with several others that day.

Sgt. Jose Escribano looks out a two-way window during a sting. (KXAN Photo/Matt Grant)Travis County Tax Assessor-Collector and Voter Registrar Bruce Elfant (right) waves to Sgt. Jose Escribano (left). (KXAN Photo/Todd Bailey)Sgt. Jose Escribano is seen, distorted, through a two-way window during an undercover sting operation. (KXAN Photo/Matt Grant)Sgt. Jose Escribano during a sting operation. (KXAN Photo/Matt Grant)Travis County Constable Pct. 1 Senior Deputy Paul Secrest is seen during the sting operation. (KXAN Photo/Matt Grant)Sgt. Jose Escribano (left) sits next to Senior Dep. Paul Secrest (right) during a sting operation. (KXAN Photo/Matt Grant)

“That’s a clean scan,” Escribano said to his team, after getting word a tax office employee spotted another questionable inspection before lunchtime.

A “clean scan” is when a vehicle is given a passing emissions inspection illegally. The test is required in 17 Texas counties annually in order to register, or reregister, your car. The scheme works when an inspector is paid a bribe to “pass” a vehicle that should fail, Escribano said. Typically, that occurs when a car isn’t performing to clean air standards set by the Environmental Protection Agency to reduce smog.

Emissions tests can be bypassed without the car even being present. The system can be cheated with a computer simulator, or by connecting an emissions analyzer to a different car that can pass. The fake results are registered as an official state record with the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality (TCEQ), which makes the fraud difficult to detect. When a tax office teller, for instance, goes to verify that an inspection was done through TCEQ’s website, mytxcar.org, a clean scanned vehicle shows up as being legitimately inspected — even though it wasn’t.

The video above explains how ‘clean scans’ work.

“We’re not going to be able to…completely stop and shut it down,” Precinct Three Constable Stacy Suits said. “But, we can damn sure figure out who the high volume people are marketing these things to the public.”

The high-volume sellers are coming from Dallas, Houston, and El Paso, he said.

Over two days at the Travis County Tax Office, Suits’ task force obtained at least five arrest warrants, with more pending, after fraudulent inspections originating from Dallas and Houston were confiscated.

“On average, there’s very little in the Travis County-Williamson County area because they know that we have a task force and we’re monitoring it,” Suits said. “We’re actively looking for it.”

“On top of everything else, our tax office employees have to be fraud investigators,” said Travis County Tax Assessor-Collector and Voter Registrar Bruce Elfant, who was elected in 2012, and requested the sting operations. “It’s very tedious. The better we get at identifying them, the better the bad guys get at falsifying them.”

The Travis County Tax Office is catching around 50 suspected fraudulent inspections a month, Elfant said, acknowledging the untold number of clean scans that are missed. The problem is so bad, his office quietly refused to accept vehicle inspection reports nearly eight months ago for cars, subject to emissions testing, from outside of Travis and Williamson counties, he revealed exclusively to KXAN.

Travis County Pct. 3 Constable Stacy Suits (left) sits next to Sgt. Jose Escribano (right) at the Travis County Tax Office. Both are part of the Clean Air Task Force. (KXAN Photo/Matt Grant)Travis County Tax Assessor-Collector and Voter Registrar Bruce Elfant (left) walks with KXAN investigative reporter Matt Grant. (KXAN Photo/Richie Bowes)Travis County Tax Assessor-Collector and Voter Registrar Bruce Elfant (KXAN Photo/Matt Grant)

“We have had to turn people away. I think certainly people are frustrated by it, but we’re dealing with fraud,” Elfant said. “Some day, when the state can get a handle on the statewide fraud, we’d be happy to go back accepting paperwork from around the state. But, until then, we’re just going to limit it to Travis and Williamson.”

Travis County Tax Office note to staff:

“Effective March 31, 2023, vehicle inspection reports (VIR) for vehicles subject to emissions testing will only be accepted from Travis County and Williamson County inspection stations.
Safety-only inspections will be accepted only from counties bordering Travis County: Williamson, Bastrop, Caldwell, Hays, Blanco, and Burnet.”

KXAN contacted tax offices in Dallas, Harris and El Paso counties to see how other large areas are tackling this fraud. Dallas, Houston and El Paso are also cities with the highest volume of clean scans taking place, according to Suits. All spoke briefly to their ability to detect counterfeit inspection reports, but didn’t specifically address clean scanning.

El Paso County Tax Assessor-Collector Ruben Gonzales said his office doesn’t have a detection program in place at the moment and “generally do[es] not reject inspections.”

Dallas County: “The Dallas County Tax Office has a Quality Assurance team that works with local and state law enforcement when fraudulent concerns arise to address the situation,” said Dallas County Tax Office Chief Deputy Peggy McCormick. “Employees of the Dallas County Tax Office are similarly trained to detect counterfeit VIRs and any irregularities with out of county inspections.”

El Paso County: “In response to your inquiry regarding fraudulent inspections on emissions, per se we do not have a detection/inspection program in place currently,” said Gonzalez. “However, we do see on occasion fraudulent VIR’s when owners attempt to renew their annual registration. These VIR inspection forms are picked up by my processing clerks and forwarded to our TAC Enforcement Division for further investigation. On certain occasions we forward these inspections/copies directly to our local DPS Enforcement Compliance Service for their investigation of the issuing inspection station. Many of the ‘red flags’ that we see are incorrect dates and times of inspection, fonts, vehicle descriptions, fees charged, etc. Due to being in Far West Texas, we generally do not reject inspections because of the 90 day window to inspect prior to registering a vehicle, however, we do require that an emissions test be provided to satisfy statute.”

Harris County: “The Harris County Tax Office has trained its staff to verify an inspection if the state’s RTS system [TxDOT Registration and Title System-Record] cannot find the information,” a Harris County Tax Office spokeswoman said. “Once our employees confirm the receipt of a fraudulent VIR, it is reported to the DPS. *The DMV conducts training on the methods to detect fraudulent inspections.”

Atop Elfant’s large wooden desk in his office is a quote made famous by President Harry Truman: “The Buck Stops Here!”

“We take it seriously,” he said, when asked why he requested the undercover operations. “We want to be out ahead of the fraud, rather than get run over by it.”

A legitimate safety and emissions inspection next to a counterfeit one. (KXAN Photo/Richie Bowes)A legitimate safety and emissions inspection should not cost more than $18.50. (KXAN Photo/Richie Bowes)”Sticker” in the Two Steps One Sticker website is misspelled in this counterfeit document. (KXAN Photo/Richie Bowes)A counterfeit vehicle inspection reports lists the Texas DMV headquarters as its address. (KXAN Photo/Richie Bowes)

The suspected fraud is also coming in as obvious counterfeits. One document, shown to KXAN, was detected because it contained an incorrect inspection cost of $50 for an emissions and safety inspection (it should be $18.50), a tax office official explained. Another counterfeit inspection report misspelled “sticker” in the “Two Steps One Sticker” website. It also listed the inspection station address as the Texas Department of Motor Vehicles headquarters in Austin.

TCEQ data obtained by KXAN through a public information request shows the agency is aware of more than 1.5 million likely clean scans, identified through missing or mismatched Vehicle Identification Numbers (VINs), between Jan. 1, 2022 and Oct. 5, 2023. That includes:

Austin-Round Rock: 21,983

El Paso County: 30,144

Houston-Galveston-Brazoria: 547,297

Dallas-Fort Worth: 934,543

To see how it’s supposed to work legally, KXAN went to FlashPoint Auto Inspection in Austin. Karina Pirul, a manager and vehicle inspector, showed KXAN how the emissions analyzer, which is attached by a thin cable to a computer, connects to the vehicle’s sensors through a port underneath the dashboard.

“We have to always match VIN, plate, and everything,” Pirul said. “Usually it tells us right here if it’s previously inspected, when it was last inspected, what it failed for.”

“So, it looks like it failed for the emissions,” she said, pointing to a red computer screen, showing the vehicle she’s inspecting previously didn’t pass.

Station inspectors must type their identification number into the computer, and enter a password, before any information — like the make, model, year, mileage, VIN — can be entered into the system. Once the test is finished, it’s sent to the Texas Information Management System (TIMS), a confidential third-party data system contracted by TCEQ, which contains records for more than 11 million vehicles’ annual inspections.

An average inspection should take around 10 minutes. However, Escribano and his team, and TCEQ’s own website, show some “inspections” are taking place in two minutes or less. KXAN looked up the VIN of one vehicle law enforcement said had been clean scanned. We found inspection times under two minutes. Some inspection stations around the state are cranking out hundreds a day with less than a minute in between, Escribano said.

Experts said that would be impossible.

Karina Pirul performing an emission and safety inspection at FlashPoint Auto (KXAN Photo/Matt Grant)Karina Pirul performing an emission and safety inspection at FlashPoint Auto (KXAN Photo/Matt Grant)Karina Pirul performing an emission and safety inspection at FlashPoint Auto (KXAN Photo/Matt Grant)Karina Pirul performing an emission and safety inspection at FlashPoint Auto (KXAN Photo/Matt Grant)Karina Pirul performing an emission and safety inspection at FlashPoint Auto (KXAN Photo/Matt Grant)

TCEQ denied KXAN’s public information request for a list of inspection stations that issued more than 150 vehicle inspection reports in a day — something that would not be possible, according to experts — since the beginning of the year. KXAN asked for the time the inspections started and ended in the Austin, Dallas, Houston and El Paso regions. TCEQ pointed to a previous attorney general’s office ruling, which determined the information is exempt because “records created during a motor vehicle emissions inspection” are considered confidential under the Government Code.

“The OAG confirmed that this information is confidential under Government Code Section 552.129, as it is information that relates to an individual inspection, and therefore an individual vehicle, even if no identifying information is being released,” a TCEQ official said.

FlashPoint owner Jose Carranza wants more done to stop the polluting problem. He said he turns down people “every day” who want him to give their old jalopy a pass.

“I’d say multiple times a day,” said Carranza. “Sometimes three, four times a day. Sometimes, more than I’d like to count. ‘I’ll toss you more money. I’ll give you a hundred bucks. Here’s some more money.’ I always say, ‘no, no thank you.'”

The illegal services are advertised openly online. A quick social media search turned up multiple ads promising “guaranteed” vehicle inspections where “EVERYONE” will “PASS” for a price.

Screenshots of social media ads promising vehicle inspections ‘guaranteed’ to pass for a price. (KXAN composite image/Matt Grant, Chris Nelson, Christina Saggs)

“All we need is your year make model, vin [sic] number, and exact mileage and your inspection will be delivered to your email or imessage [sic] within hours!,” one Instagram ad states, using Texas’ “Official Vehicle Inspection Station” logo.


Austin vehicle inspector charged with faking safety, emissions tests

“Obviously, if it’s an emission issue, it’s an environmental issue, pollution issue,” Carranza said. “We’re in a big city, a bunch of cars with check engine lights polluting the air, I’m sure it’ll affect us eventually, right?”

Drone video of fatal crash where 2-year-old was killed. Courtesy: Texas Department Public Safety

For law enforcement, it’s more than just air quality concerns.

In February, a 2-year-old girl was killed in a car accident in Travis County when a Jeep “failed to control speed” and crashed into the back of a Ford Fusion, according to the DPS accident report. The young girl was in a pink car seat in the back at the time.

The Jeep was clean scanned and never should have been allowed on the road, Escribano said. There are “no pending charges” against the driver, according to DPS.

Internal law enforcement records show the Jeep failed inspection in 2018 and appears to have been clean scanned in 2019, 2021, and 2022. TCEQ’s own website shows a 2022 emissions and safety inspection lasting a little over two minutes. A safety inspection in 2019 lasted just one minute and 13 seconds, and an emissions and safety inspection performed two months later took less than three minutes, a search of the Jeep’s VIN shows.

Each time, it “passed.”

A 2-year-old girl was killed in a car accident in Travis County when a Jeep “failed to control speed” and crashed into the back of a Ford Fusion, according to the DPS accident report. (Courtesy Travis County/Department of Public Safety)A 2-year-old girl was killed in a car accident in Travis County when a Jeep “failed to control speed” and crashed into the back of a Ford Fusion, according to the DPS accident report. (Courtesy Travis County/Department of Public Safety)A 2-year-old girl was killed in a car accident in Travis County when a Jeep “failed to control speed” and crashed into the back of a Ford Fusion, according to the DPS accident report. (Courtesy Travis County/Department of Public Safety)A 2-year-old girl was killed in a car accident in Travis County when a Jeep “failed to control speed” and crashed into the back of a Ford Fusion, according to the DPS accident report. (Courtesy Travis County/Department of Public Safety)A 2-year-old girl was killed in a car accident in Travis County when a Jeep “failed to control speed” and crashed into the back of a Ford Fusion, according to the DPS accident report. (Courtesy Travis County/Department of Public Safety)

We don’t know what, if any, mechanical or safety issues might have been missed if a safety inspection was bypassed. Vehicles are not typically checked for mechanical problems by officers responding to an accident, Escribano said.

Between 2021 and 2022, law enforcement records show at least 73 fatal accidents in Dallas and 104 in Houston involved a vehicle that was clean scanned.

None of those vehicles should have been allowed on the road, Escribano points out.


Texas passes bill eliminating mandatory vehicle inspections

A third-party audit done in June 2022 identified the “10 worst stations” for likely clean scans based on the percentage of inspections with mismatched VINs. TCEQ Chairman Jon Niermann admits this has been a “challenge that predates 2017.” That has Escribano asking: Why has TCEQ been slow to stop it?

“It takes the FBI helping us on all this stuff,” Escribano said. “This needs to be a statewide task force. Put it together and put an end to this. This is ridiculous.”

The governor’s office did not respond to multiple requests seeking comment about this fraud and the request for a statewide task force.

Texas Information Management System (TIMS) explained

Escribano points to TIMS, the third-party confidential data management system TCEQ pays a vendor to operate. It’s described as “the telecommunications network and centralized database system supporting the State of Texas Vehicle Inspection and Maintenance (I/M) program.” That system has a “clean scan” filter to pinpoint inspection stations that are likely performing illegal inspections, Escribano said. It’s a feature, however, only his agency, TCEQ and DPS are authorized to see.

He wants other law enforcement, and tax offices across the state, to have the same access and training to help ensure more inspection stations compromising the system are cut off and unable to commit fraud in the future.

No one from TCEQ or DPS would agree to an on-camera interview. In an email, Niermann disputed Escribano’s estimate of five million faked inspections calling it a “dramatic overstatement” and “not credible.” Escribano defends his numbers citing confidential parameters used by law enforcement beyond missing and mismatched VINs, which he said he can’t disclose and which TCEQ doesn’t consider.

There does appear to be some movement towards a potential solution.

In March, DPS began using a tool that “locks inspection stations out” of TIMS when data shows there are “certain indications of potential fraud,” Niermann wrote.

“Importantly, this feature is based on data logged from completed inspections—it cannot interrupt an inspection while it is in progress,” he cautioned. “This capability was deployed at DPS’s request.”

That same month, DPS continued “Operation Cinderblock,” which was launched last year in an effort to crack down on fraudulent vehicle inspection reports. The agency is focused on stopping fraud “without impacting and inconveniencing a significant number of innocent motorists,” a spokesperson said.

A few weeks ago, TCEQ and DPS jointly “agreed to the outlines of a proposed TIMS tool that we believe is technically and administratively workable” that would stop fraudulent inspections in real-time, Niermann said.

An excerpt of a statement TCEQ Chairman John Niermann sent KXAN. (KXAN Graphic Christina Staggs)An excerpt of a statement TCEQ Chairman John Niermann sent KXAN. (KXAN Graphic Christina Staggs)

“I personally discussed this matter with DPS Director [Steven] McCraw, including potential legal and administrative challenges to implementation,” wrote Niermann. “We also discussed anticipated limitations, for example, that some number of scans may be misidentified as fraudulent, inconveniencing innocent vehicle owners and inspectors.  At the same time, we cannot expect that this capability would eliminate all fraud.”


READ: Full statement from TCEQ Chairman Jon Niermann

The next step is to “vet the idea” with the TIMS vendor, Gordon-Darby, he said.

“We have not yet determined the project budget or source of funding, nor have we developed a project timeline,” he added.  

Niermann declined an interview, citing a “lack” of technical understanding. The agency would not provide anyone else to talk with us on camera about the fraud or the fix.

“TCEQ employs a media relations team to assist news organizations like yours in obtaining the information they deem important to the public. TCEQ also employs program staff who have worked closely with media relations to assemble information for KXAN,” Niermann wrote. “These are subject matter experts with deep understanding of the agency’s many programs, a level of understanding that I typically lack. On technical subjects such as the inspection program and TIMS, complete and accurate answers are necessarily a group effort within TCEQ.”


Hays County tax employee arrested for selling license plates, registrations

KXAN also requested to interview McCraw to discuss DPS’ role. The agency turned down our request. A spokesperson did not give a reason why but did provide a statement.

“DPS and TCEQ have worked diligently to find solutions to the various obstacles and challenges related to making substantial changes to the TCEQ system,” DPS spokesperson Ericka Miller said. “As you likely know, TCEQ owns the system that houses the data. DPS’ Regulatory Services Division is responsible for regulating the licensees and taking appropriate action for bad actors within the program.”

“TCEQ does not have legal authority to enforce the inspection and maintenance (I/M) program. The Texas Department of Public Safety (DPS) is responsible for enforcing the I/M program, which includes taking action against inspection stations suspected of fraud,” TCEQ spokesperson Laura Lopez said.

“TCEQ is aware of the data referenced by law enforcement,” Lopez added. “TCEQ and DPS are working together to evaluate various methods for improving I/M program enforcement. Stopping an inspection in real-time at an inspection station when data patterns indicate potential fraud presents a number of challenges that would need to be resolved by both agencies before such a software modification could be implemented. TCEQ won’t comment further on specific methods to identify potential fraud being considered at this time.”

This summer, state inspectors in Austin and Kyle were arrested, accused of selling fraudulent vehicle inspection reports. In June, the Hays County Tax Assessor-Collector’s office was audited after one of its now former employees was arrested, accused of illegally selling license plates and vehicle registrations for months.

At the time, Escribano warned this was just the “tip of the iceberg” when it comes to vehicle inspection fraud.

William Shepherd, a DPS program inspector, was arrested and charged with “organized criminal activity.” (Courtesy Texas Department of Public Safety)

Destini Spencer, a DPS program inspector, was arrested and charged with “organized criminal activity.” (Courtesy Texas Department of Public Safety)

Since then, we learned two DPS program inspectors, with the Regulatory Services Division in Dallas, were charged with “organized criminal activity” in August for helping to facilitate fraudulent emissions tests.

William Shepherd, 45, and Destini Spencer, 28, were arrested by the Texas Rangers and charged with third-degree felonies for their roles in the alleged scheme. Shepherd was responsible for “regulatory oversight of Motor Vehicle Inspection stations,” according to court records. He’s accused of being paid more than $110,000 from several inspection stations between 2019 and 2023 in exchange for tipping them off to undercover investigations, unlocking analyzers that were locked out, and helping allow clean scans to take place, according to the complaint, obtained from DPS.

Spencer is accused of accepting payments of at least $525 this year to allow clean scanning to take place, according to court records obtained from DPS. The two employees, both suspended in August pending the results of the investigation, “provided information in exchange for monetary compensation from stations suspected of criminal activity to help them avoid detection,” DPS said.

KXAN left voicemails for multiple phone numbers associated with Shepherd and Spencer. Dallas County court officials said Shepherd does not have an attorney listed but provided one for Spencer. We reached out seeking comment and will update this story if we hear back.

DPS told KXAN in November there is “no new information to provide at this time” when asked if they are still suspended and for an update to their cases.

Four non-DPS employees were also detained for their possible involvement, DPS said in its prior news release.

“DPS strives to maintain the highest level of integrity among its employees and will pursue prosecution for those engaging in any type of criminal activity,” the agency said in a statement. “This is an ongoing investigation and further arrests and/or charges are expected.”

Conducting a fraudulent emissions test is considered “tampering with a government record,” a state jail felony, according to law enforcement.

TCEQ said data collected through TIMS “cannot confirm whether a vehicle was fraudulently inspected or clean scanned.” Back at the Travis County Tax Office, Escribano said the “clean scan” filter built into TIMS is used to help his team find and investigate fraud. The names of suspected crooked inspection stations are passed along to tax office employees who don’t have access to that system.

During this recent undercover sting, Escribano learned about a new inspection station in Houston he believes is clean scanning vehicles. It’s overwhelming for an agency already stretched thin. Each new lead serves as a frustrating reminder that this problem isn’t going away.

“You’re going to sit here and tell me you can’t do anything about it or point the finger at somebody else?” Escribano said, in a remark aimed at TCEQ. “I’ll tell you right now, it’s unacceptable. You need to fix your system. Now!”

Texas will phase out vehicle safety inspections in 2025 after a bill to eliminate them passed the legislature this year. Emissions tests will still be required in 17 of the more populated counties to ensure federal air quality standards are met under the Clean Air Act.

Texas voters reject measure to raise mandatory retirement age for judges

Texas voters resoundingly rejected a constitutional amendment Tuesday that would have allowed state judges to stay on the bench for four years longer by extending the mandatory retirement age from 75 to 79.

Proposition 13 was the only amendment Texans voted against in the election.

When it was proposed during the regular legislative session, House Joint Resolution 107 cleared both the House and Senate with broad bipartisan support and faced little and sometimes no public opposition during committee hearings.

More than 60% of voters declined to increase the retirement age, according to election results.

The amendment’s failure means Texas’ highest-ranking judge will be forced to retire within the next year. Texas Supreme Court Chief Justice Nathan Hecht will turn 75 years old next year.

Brian Smith, a politics professor at St. Edwards University, suggested that the age of public figures is top of mind for voters as they sour on the ages of the two 2024 presidential frontrunners: President Joe Biden, who is 80 years old, and former President Donald Trump, who is 77.

“When we think about what goes into voters minds, I think a lot of it had to do with what’s going on at the federal level with elderly judges and all the blowback and anger over the federal judges, and that trickled down to the states,” he said. “Also, people looked and said, ‘Why are we even doing this?'”

According to data from the Texas State Bar Association, 33% of full-time judges in Texas who are registered as licensed attorneys are over the age of 65 years. The association’s data shows the median age for those judges is 60. This does not include Texas judges not members of the state bar.

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