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Texas AG Ken Paxton leans into controversy, brushes off scandals as he vies for reelection

AUSTIN — Ken Paxton settled in across from two Austin police officers and asked them not to turn on their recorder. The attorney general didn’t want the public to hear what he was about to say.

Over the next hour, Paxton fretted that a campaign donor was threatening to kill him. That this person had tried to hack his car’s GPS system. That Google, which he had sued that day, may track him through his phone.

Paxton insisted he wasn’t imagining the danger.

“I don’t need them tracking me and knowing what I’m doing,” Paxton said about the tech giant in the interview, which he eventually agreed to be recorded, at the special investigations unit of the Austin Police Department. “It sounds paranoid, but I can’t let them — the less they know about me the better.”

During a wide-ranging interview in October 2020, Paxton said he never before felt this at risk. For the first time in his 20-year political career, he said he had asked his detail for round-the-clock security. Paxton’s recorded remarks, which obtained from the Austin police through a public records request, provide rare insight into the attorney general’s mindset.

For Paxton, everything happening seemed connected.

“Could it all be a coincidence? Sure. But do I think it is? No,” Paxton said in the recording.

His closest aides had just accused him of serious crimes, prompting some fellow Republicans to question his fitness for office and the FBI to get involved.

Today, the cloud of legal troubles over Paxton hasn’t lifted. After nearly eight years of being buffeted by personal scandals and criminal charges, he says he is the target of powerful enemies who want to bring down one of the most prominent conservative attorneys general in the country. But instead of backing away from the limelight, he has doubled down on politically charged lawsuits that rally his core supporters and loudly punched back at his foes.

Paxton, 59, is banking that this approach will propel him to a third term. He is delivering a series of attack ads and has built a hefty cash advantage over his opponent, Democrat Rochelle Garza, 37. The most recent polling shows Paxton with a double-digit lead over Garza, a civil rights attorney from South Texas. She has zeroed in on Paxton’s criminal charges, including a new ad that says he is “under a cloud of corruption.”

Paxton did not respond to multiple requests for an interview. This reporting is based on public records, news clips, court files, Paxton’s public statements and interviews with friends and colleagues. His campaign declined to respond to questions, and instead accused The News of focusing on negative press.

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