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Texas attorney general’s office paying lead lawyer $540 per hour to defend against whistleblower lawsuit

The Texas attorney general’s office will pay outside counsel $540 an hour to defend the state agency against accusations that it was retaliating against top aides when it fired them just weeks after they reported their boss, Ken Paxton, to authorities for possibly breaking the law.

William Helfand, a Houston attorney with Lewis Brisbois Bisgaard & Smith LLP, will make $540 per hour for his work on the case while an associate attorney and a paralegal will make $350 and $215 per hour, respectively, according to a contract with the agency.

They filed the agency’s first official response Monday to a lawsuit filed by four of eight whistleblowers who left the agency after leveling the accusations. Paxton’s attorneys roundly rejected pages and pages of allegations of wrongdoing and retaliation in just a few brief sentences.

The agency “generally denies each and every claim and allegation” made by the whistleblowers, attorneys for the state wrote in the brief filing.

“Any action Plaintiffs allege to be an adverse employment action was the result of each Plaintiff’s own misconduct, lack of competence, and/or disloyalty to the Office,” the outside attorneys for the agency wrote.

Paxton is reportedly being investigated by the FBI over the allegations raised by the aides.

Separately, he has been under indictment since 2015 on felony securities fraud charges but has yet to stand trial amid side issues over venue and prosecutor pay. Notably, his defense team and political allies have loudly objected to the special prosecutors in the case making $300 per hour — far lower than the pay scale for the outside attorneys in the whistleblower case.

That point was not lost on Brian Wice, one of the special prosecutors, who said it was “ludicrous for Paxton to believe that a seven-year attorney, not to mention a paralegal, should be paid more for defending him than two lawyers with over 80 years of combined experience should be paid for prosecuting him.”

“And it is outrageous that the taxpayers of Texas will be obligated to pay the legal fees for defending Paxton’s alleged misconduct that has reportedly triggered an FBI investigation,” Wice added.

Four former top staffers at the agency — Blake Brickman, Ryan Vassar, Mark Penley and David Maxwell — sued their former employer Nov. 12, claiming they suffered retaliation, including wrongful termination, after reporting Paxton to authorities. At the time, just three of the men had been fired; Vassar, who had been placed on paid leave, was fired days after filing the lawsuit. His attorney, Joseph Knight, said he was given “made-up, nonsense reasons” for the termination, which he believes was motivated by the lawsuit.

The agency did not respond to questions about why Vassar was fired, but a spokesperson for Paxton has said that other terminations were not acts of retaliation. Spokespeople for the agency did not immediately return requests for comment on the lawsuit Monday morning.

TJ Turner and Tom Nesbitt, who represent Brickman in the whistleblower suit, called the response from the attorney general’s office “laughable and completely unsupported,” pointing out that under Texas law, adverse personnel actions taken within three months of a whistleblower report are “presumed” to be retaliation.

“Calling the whistleblowers disloyal reveals Ken Paxton’s perverted sense of what it means to be a public servant,” the attorneys said in a joint statement. “The whistleblowers acted with loyalty to the rule of law, not to Ken Paxton personally, and he punished them for it.”

Ultimately, five of the whistleblowers were fired and three resigned.

The top aides allege that Paxton broke the law by using the agency to do favors for a political donor, real estate investor Nate Paul. According to the aides, as well as numerous court records, official documents and media reports, Paxton intervened on Paul’s behalf in a number of open records requests, rushed out a legal opinion that helped Paul avoid foreclosure sales on multiple properties, and took the unusual step of intervening in a lawsuit between Paul and an Austin charity.

Most strikingly, Paxton hired an outside attorney to probe claims by Paul that federal and state authorities had mistreated Paul in a raid on his home and office in 2019. Paxton hired the outside lawyer, top aides say, even though agency staff had already vetted Paul’s allegations and found them meritless.

Paxton has dismissed his aides’ allegations as “false” and called them “rogue employees.” In a statement last month, Paxton said he knows “a little something about being falsely accused” and dismissed the allegations made by the whistleblowers, which he said were “overblown, based upon assumptions, and to a large degree misrepresent the facts.”

The relationship between Paul and Paxton remains unclear, though they are friendly and Paul gave Paxton’s campaign $25,000 in 2018, as Paxton sought a second term as attorney general. Paul also revealed in a deposition this fall that he had employed a woman at Paxton’s recommendation, though he said it was not a favor to Paxton. The woman, according to two people who said they learned directly from Paxton in 2018, had been involved in an extramarital affair with the attorney general.

This story originally appeared on the Texas Tribune. To read this article in its original format, click here.

Emma Platoff, The Texas Tribune
Emma Platoff, The Texas Tribune
Emma Platoff covers the law and its intersections with politics for The Texas Tribune.

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