2021 Runoff elections...

49ersfootball

Well-known member
Howdy from the Alamo City Sietch family. Here's the latest update on runoff elections for several seats on the Houston ISD School Board:
*District 1:
Elizabeth Santos (incumbent): 2210 (51%)
Janette Garza Lindner: 2169 (49%)

*District 5:
Sue Delgaard (incumbent): 8519 (64%)
Caroline Walter: 4834 (36%)

*District 6:
Kendall Baker: 2685 (51%)
Holly Flynn Vilaseca (incumbent): 2607 (49%)

*District 7:
Bridget Wade: 6668 (54%)
Anne Sung (incumbent): 5729 (46%)
 

The Whispering Monk

Well-known member
Osaul
SO there's this...

Texas Attorney General Cannot Independently Prosecute Election Cases, Court Rules
By Mimi Nguyen Ly

December 16, 2021 Updated: December 16, 2021

Texas’s highest court for criminal matters has ruled that the attorney general cannot independently prosecute election cases.
In an 8–1 decision Wednesday (pdf), the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals stated, “the Attorney General can prosecute [election cases] with the permission of the local prosecutor but cannot initiate prosecution unilaterally.”

At issue is a provision in section 273.021 of the Texas Election Code, which reads, in part, “The attorney general may prosecute a criminal offense prescribed by the election laws of this state.” The court said that the provision violates the separation of powers clause in the Texas Constitution.

The ruling was tied to a case involving a southeast Texas sheriff who faced campaign-finance violation charges. The Texas Rangers had found that Jefferson County Sheriff Zena Stephens, during her 2016 run for sheriff, allegedly accepted individual cash campaign contributions that exceeded $100, which is a violation of campaign finance law.

The Jefferson County District Attorney’s office declined to prosecute Stephens, after which Attorney General Ken Paxton brought the Texas Rangers’s investigation to a grand jury in neighboring Chambers County, and relied on a grant of prosecutorial authority provision in the Texas Election Code section 273.021 to do so. The grand jury later indicted Stephens on three criminal counts in April 2018: a felony count of tampering with a government record, as well as two counts of unlawfully accepting cash contributions.

Stephens appealed and argued that the provision in section 273.021 violates the separation of powers doctrine in the Texas Constitution. She also argued that the county and district attorneys are part of the judicial branch of government while the attorney general is in the executive branch.

The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals on Wednesday sent the case back to the Chambers County trial court and ordered the indictments against Stephens to be dismissed. Members of the panel wrote in the majority ruling, “Any attempt to overlap the Attorney General’s constitutional duties with county and district attorneys’ constitutional duties in the sense of a Venn diagram of sorts is unconstitutional.”

The court noted that Texas’s Constitution “expressly divides the powers of government into three distinct departments—legislative, executive, and judicial—and prohibits the exercise of any power ‘properly attached to either of the others,’ unless that power is grounded in a constitutional provision.”

The decision Wednesday overturns a previous ruling by a lower court, the First Court of Appeals, which had found that the provision in section 273.021 of the state’s election code “clearly and unambiguously gives the Attorney General power to prosecute criminal laws prescribed by election laws generally whether those laws are inside or outside the Code.”

Paxton issued a statement denouncing the ruling, writing on Twitter, “Now, thanks to the Texas Criminal Court of Appeals, Soros-funded district attorneys will have sole power to decide whether election fraud has occurred in Texas.”
He added, “This ruling could be devastating for future elections in Texas.”

Christian Menefee, the county attorney for Harris County, the largest county in Texas, praised the decision on Twitter. “NEW: it’s now the law that the TX AG *cannot* unilaterally prosecute folks for violating election laws. It’s up to local prosecutors. This is a big win for local government and Texans who are tired of state officials exaggerating voter fraud claims to undermine elections,” he wrote.

Mimi Nguyen Ly
REPORTER
Follow
Mimi Nguyen Ly is an assignment editor and world news reporter based in Australia. She has a background in optometry. Contact her at mimi.nl@epochtimes.com.

SOURCE
 

49ersfootball

Well-known member
SO there's this...

Texas Attorney General Cannot Independently Prosecute Election Cases, Court Rules
By Mimi Nguyen Ly

December 16, 2021 Updated: December 16, 2021

Texas’s highest court for criminal matters has ruled that the attorney general cannot independently prosecute election cases.
In an 8–1 decision Wednesday (pdf), the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals stated, “the Attorney General can prosecute [election cases] with the permission of the local prosecutor but cannot initiate prosecution unilaterally.”

At issue is a provision in section 273.021 of the Texas Election Code, which reads, in part, “The attorney general may prosecute a criminal offense prescribed by the election laws of this state.” The court said that the provision violates the separation of powers clause in the Texas Constitution.

The ruling was tied to a case involving a southeast Texas sheriff who faced campaign-finance violation charges. The Texas Rangers had found that Jefferson County Sheriff Zena Stephens, during her 2016 run for sheriff, allegedly accepted individual cash campaign contributions that exceeded $100, which is a violation of campaign finance law.

The Jefferson County District Attorney’s office declined to prosecute Stephens, after which Attorney General Ken Paxton brought the Texas Rangers’s investigation to a grand jury in neighboring Chambers County, and relied on a grant of prosecutorial authority provision in the Texas Election Code section 273.021 to do so. The grand jury later indicted Stephens on three criminal counts in April 2018: a felony count of tampering with a government record, as well as two counts of unlawfully accepting cash contributions.

Stephens appealed and argued that the provision in section 273.021 violates the separation of powers doctrine in the Texas Constitution. She also argued that the county and district attorneys are part of the judicial branch of government while the attorney general is in the executive branch.

The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals on Wednesday sent the case back to the Chambers County trial court and ordered the indictments against Stephens to be dismissed. Members of the panel wrote in the majority ruling, “Any attempt to overlap the Attorney General’s constitutional duties with county and district attorneys’ constitutional duties in the sense of a Venn diagram of sorts is unconstitutional.”

The court noted that Texas’s Constitution “expressly divides the powers of government into three distinct departments—legislative, executive, and judicial—and prohibits the exercise of any power ‘properly attached to either of the others,’ unless that power is grounded in a constitutional provision.”

The decision Wednesday overturns a previous ruling by a lower court, the First Court of Appeals, which had found that the provision in section 273.021 of the state’s election code “clearly and unambiguously gives the Attorney General power to prosecute criminal laws prescribed by election laws generally whether those laws are inside or outside the Code.”

Paxton issued a statement denouncing the ruling, writing on Twitter, “Now, thanks to the Texas Criminal Court of Appeals, Soros-funded district attorneys will have sole power to decide whether election fraud has occurred in Texas.”
He added, “This ruling could be devastating for future elections in Texas.”

Christian Menefee, the county attorney for Harris County, the largest county in Texas, praised the decision on Twitter. “NEW: it’s now the law that the TX AG *cannot* unilaterally prosecute folks for violating election laws. It’s up to local prosecutors. This is a big win for local government and Texans who are tired of state officials exaggerating voter fraud claims to undermine elections,” he wrote.

Mimi Nguyen Ly
REPORTER
Follow
Mimi Nguyen Ly is an assignment editor and world news reporter based in Australia. She has a background in optometry. Contact her at mimi.nl@epochtimes.com.

SOURCE
Paxton & Co., will aggressively appeal this you know.
 

Zachowon

The Army Life for me! The POG life for me!
Founder
Knowing someone who I work with on a daily basis whare on title 10 orders to support Actove duty.
This is going to fully prevent the officer I know from getting her retirement.
So yeah, this is gonna suck
 

f1onagher

Well-known member
What are some of the better cities in Texas, at least as far as cost of living and employment opportunities? Been considering a move with the girlfriend, so she can be closer to her family.
Lubbock, Abilene, Amarillo and maybe San Angelo. You'd need to check ahead of time to make sure a career you're interested in is available, especially in San Angelo and Abilene, but all of those cities are growing fast enough to have ample opportunities, but are small and west enough to have low costs of living.

If your girlfriend's family is in Dallas then Abilene or Wichita Falls are perfect. If they live somewhere in east Texas, then you'll need to get creative as that's were everyone is moving. I am not familiar enough with south Texas to give you advice there but Laredo is surprisingly nice for a town that takes collateral fire from cartel fights on a yearly basis.

There are also plenty of smaller cities and large towns like Baird or Pampa, but they tend to haver fewer opportunities.

And if you're crazy then the Petroplex (Odessa/Midland area) is growing like mad, but cost of living is growing with it and oil field workers have no sense of self-preservation.

I hope that gives you somewhere to start.
 

Zachowon

The Army Life for me! The POG life for me!
Founder
Lubbock, Abilene, Amarillo and maybe San Angelo. You'd need to check ahead of time to make sure a career you're interested in is available, especially in San Angelo and Abilene, but all of those cities are growing fast enough to have ample opportunities, but are small and west enough to have low costs of living.

If your girlfriend's family is in Dallas then Abilene or Wichita Falls are perfect. If they live somewhere in east Texas, then you'll need to get creative as that's were everyone is moving. I am not familiar enough with south Texas to give you advice there but Laredo is surprisingly nice for a town that takes collateral fire from cartel fights on a yearly basis.

There are also plenty of smaller cities and large towns like Baird or Pampa, but they tend to haver fewer opportunities.

And if you're crazy then the Petroplex (Odessa/Midland area) is growing like mad, but cost of living is growing with it and oil field workers have no sense of self-preservation.

I hope that gives you somewhere to start.
San Angelo only if you don't mind dealing eith US Military members occasionally doing dumb shit. Usually Marines or Army, even though Army has stricter rules.
 

49ersfootball

Well-known member
Lubbock, Abilene, Amarillo and maybe San Angelo. You'd need to check ahead of time to make sure a career you're interested in is available, especially in San Angelo and Abilene, but all of those cities are growing fast enough to have ample opportunities, but are small and west enough to have low costs of living.

If your girlfriend's family is in Dallas then Abilene or Wichita Falls are perfect. If they live somewhere in east Texas, then you'll need to get creative as that's were everyone is moving. I am not familiar enough with south Texas to give you advice there but Laredo is surprisingly nice for a town that takes collateral fire from cartel fights on a yearly basis.

There are also plenty of smaller cities and large towns like Baird or Pampa, but they tend to haver fewer opportunities.

And if you're crazy then the Petroplex (Odessa/Midland area) is growing like mad, but cost of living is growing with it and oil field workers have no sense of self-preservation.

I hope that gives you somewhere to start.
I should note South TX is trending more Red as we see more conservative Dems bolting to the GOP in droves.
 

The Whispering Monk

Well-known member
Osaul
What are some of the better cities in Texas, at least as far as cost of living and employment opportunities? Been considering a move with the girlfriend, so she can be closer to her family.
There's jobs everywhere right now. I'll definitely 2nd the idea that you research an area/city if y'all are looking for a career in a specific field.

San Angelo only if you don't mind dealing eith US Military members occasionally doing dumb shit. Usually Marines or Army, even though Army has stricter rules.
From my experiences in San Angelo, Goodfellow AFB is mostly Air Force, with dabs of all the other branches as they are a training base. Population in San Angelo does cater a bit to the base b/c it brings so much money in, but I consider San Angelo to be one of the biggest small towns in Texas. Pop is over 100k, but it's real spread out with a small town feel. San Angelo ISD isn't real great if that's a concern, but there are other districts around that do pretty well.

And if you're crazy then the Petroplex (Odessa/Midland area) is growing like mad, but cost of living is growing with it and oil field workers have no sense of self-preservation.
Don't go to Midland/Odessa if you can help it at all. Housing costs there are equal to if not higher than the metroplex's because the oil fields have inflated demand so much in those regions. In general, cost of living there is HIGH.
--------------
If climate is a concern, figure out what kind you want. Then look up where that is in Texas. We've got pretty much every kind. If you don't like it the moment you get there, wait 15 minutes. It'll change. 😎
 

Zachowon

The Army Life for me! The POG life for me!
Founder
There's jobs everywhere right now. I'll definitely 2nd the idea that you research an area/city if y'all are looking for a career in a specific field.


From my experiences in San Angelo, Goodfellow AFB is mostly Air Force, with dabs of all the other branches as they are a training base. Population in San Angelo does cater a bit to the base b/c it brings so much money in, but I consider San Angelo to be one of the biggest small towns in Texas. Pop is over 100k, but it's real spread out with a small town feel. San Angelo ISD isn't real great if that's a concern, but there are other districts around that do pretty well.


Don't go to Midland/Odessa if you can help it at all. Housing costs there are equal to if not higher than the metroplex's because the oil fields have inflated demand so much in those regions. In general, cost of living there is HIGH.
--------------
If climate is a concern, figure out what kind you want. Then look up where that is in Texas. We've got pretty much every kind. If you don't like it the moment you get there, wait 15 minutes. It'll change. 😎
I went to Goodfellow for AIT. The AF are the least of ones worries there i can assure you that
 

The Whispering Monk

Well-known member
Osaul
Yup. No vax.

Edit: I think my biggest problem is that we're tracking medical info on an individual basis.

No one needs to ask me my status, and they sure as he'll have no right to the answers. I dont have the right to ask or get an answer either.
 
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