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11/05/2020 – Denton County, TX

Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton rules that Texas citizens have no right to independently review the RAW data of COVID-19 statistics collected by Denton County Health Services.

All COVID related reporting in Denton County is submitted to and compiled by the Denton County Health Services Department. In July, the Trophy Club Journal submitted an Open Records Request (ORR) for the specific statistics that related to the Town of Trophy Club, Texas.

At the time, Denton County was only providing statistics for the number of “Confirmed COVID Cases” in each Town or City in Denton County. The remainder of statistics, such as the number of tests performed, the number of cases recovered or active, the age & sex of infected individuals, were only provided at the broader County level. We felt that the citizens of Trophy Club have the right to know the full picture of COVID as it relates specifically to where they live.

Initially, Denton County rejected our request for information. The statement from Jennifer Rainey, Public Information Officer (PIO) at Denton County stated,

“Good morning Mr. Pipkins,

The Public Information Act does not require a governmental body to answer factual questions, conduct legal research, or create new information in responding to a request.  See open Records Decision Nos. 563 at 8 (1990) 555 at 1-2 (1990) and OR-2014-7190.  Furthermore, the Act does not require a governmental body to compile information or prepare new information.  See Economic Opportunities Dev. Corp. v. Bustamante, 562 S.W.2d 266 (Tec. Civ. App.-San Antonio 1978, writ dism’d); Open Records Decision No. 542 at 3 (1986).  However a governmental body must make a good faith effort to relate a request to information held by the governmental body.

With this said, Denton County Public Health has made data publicly available at DentonCounty.gov/COVIDstats and available for download at https://data-dentoncounty.hub.arcgis.com/pages/public-health.  Deaths due to COVID-19 can be found on the press releases available on the “Press Releases” link on our COVID stats page.

If you have any questions or concerns, please contact our office.  Otherwise, this concludes your request.

Best Regards,”

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To the Trophy Club Journal, this response is simply unacceptable. While Mrs. Rainey is correct in her quotation of Texas Law, at the Journal we fail to understand how this database search is any different than any other search for documents or email.

Not to be deterred, we revised our request. We figured that if they were unwilling to parse the data then we would just do it ourselves. So we asked for the complete RAW data for all of Denton County.

We replied by asking,

“… Please provide me with the complete RAW data file that you collect for the entire county of Denton in regards to all 5,544 COVID 19 positive cases. This is information you already possess and does not require compilation.

You may redact any personally identifiable information such as names, street addresses, phone numbers, social security numbers, medical history etc. As you are familiar with the law you will understand that redaction can not be considered a barrier to the release of the information. Nor is it considered a compilation of information.

At a minimum, information that must remain shall include the City of Residency, test result, & birth date…. if such information is collected.”

Faced with a request they simply could not refute, the Health District put their team of lawyers together to draft a letter to Ken Paxton, Attorney General for the State of Texas, asking him to rule on whether or not they should be required to comply with our request. They cited a litany of Texas provisions (mostly regarding privacy concerns) all aimed at preventing the COVID data from being released.

As it turns out, Ken Paxton would rule against the Trophy Club Journal and in favor of the Denton County Health District. See below to view/download the letter we received from Ken Paxton’s office.

The gravity of this ruling should infuriate all Texans (and perhaps the nation).

In essence, the State of Texas (ie: Ken Paxton) has ruled that YOU, the citizens of Texas have no right to refute any claim made by health authorities. You have no right to review any data collected that relates to public health. You have no right to analyze the research on your own. YOU must shut up and accept whatever the unelected health department bureaucrats tells you.

Oversight of our government is a cornerstone of our democracy. Policies are created, laws are passed, based on the information that is being fed to citizens by the Denton County Health Services department. The citizens should have a right to verify that the information being fed to them by government sources is correct. Otherwise our government could manipulate the people to serve their own agenda. History is replete with examples of governments doing exactly that.

In an interesting twist, the Denton County Health Services COVID GIS website now shows the very information that we initially requested. Information that they stated did not exist. The only piece of information that is missing is the number of tests performed. However, in light of Ken Paxton’s response the issue has now shifted. The story is no longer about getting the information to the people, it is about a government that is rejecting oversight by the people.

The story is ongoing. The Trophy Club Journal has submitted another request to discover who is receiving COVID data from Denton County and what type of information is being transmitted. We expect that Denton County has no basis to deny our latest request. Once we have that information, we will take further action as necessary.

See the letter from Ken Paxton’s office below.

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Michael Pipkins focuses on public integrity, governance, constitutional issues, and political developments affecting Texans. His investigative reporting covers public-record disputes, city-government controversies, campaign finance matters, and the use of public authority. Pipkins is a member of the Society of Professional Journalists (SPJ). As an SPJ member, Pipkins adheres to established principles of ethical reporting, including accuracy, fairness, source protection, and independent journalism.

Fate, TX

CyberSquatting City Hall: How City Claimed a Developer’s Domain

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Secret Domains

How Fate registered a developer’s project domain after seeing it in official plans, then fought to keep that fact hidden

FATE, TX – Cities are expected to regulate development, not steal its name.

Records obtained by Pipkins Reports show the City of Fate registered the domain name of a private development, lafayettecrossing.com, while actively working with the developer who had already claimed that name in official plans. The move, made quietly during a heated approval process, raises serious questions about whether Fate’s city government crossed from partner to predator, taking digital ownership of a project it was supposed to oversee with neutrality and good faith… and depriving the developer of their rights to domain ownership.

What followed, attempts to conceal the purchase, shifting explanations from city officials, and a documented pattern of advocacy on behalf of the developer, suggests the domain registration was not an accident, but part of a broader effort to control the narrative around one of the most divisive projects in the city’s history.

A site plan submitted by the developer, D-F Funds GP, LLC, led by Robert Yu, shows the project title “Lafayette Crossing” clearly identified in the title block on December 20, 2023. The document was part of the city’s official development review for the controversial project at the corner of I-30 and Highway 551.

Plan Submitted December 20, 2023 to Fate Planning and Zoning

Less than two months later, on February 7, 2024, the City of Fate registered the domain lafayettecrossing.com, Invoice #116953461, for $12.

Domain records confirm the registration date, with the domain set to expire on February 7, 2027. By that point, Lafayette Crossing was already the established name of the project, used by the developer and embedded in official plans circulating within City Hall.

This was not a coincidence. The city had the plans from the developer. Their were extensive talks regarding the project. Then the city registered the domain without the knowledge of the developer. This is known in the industry as, “Cybersquatting.”

The development, originally referred to as the “Yu Tract,” became known as Lafayette Crossing as it moved through the approval process. The project ignited intense public opposition over density, traffic congestion, infrastructure strain, and the long-term direction of Fate’s growth. Despite sustained resistance and packed council chambers, the city council approved the project.

The political fallout was severe. In the elections that followed, four council members and the mayor were replaced, an extraordinary level of turnover that reflected deep voter dissatisfaction. Two members from that Council, Councilman Mark Harper and Councilman Scott Kelley, remain, but are up for reelection this May.

That context matters, because the domain registration did not occur in isolation. It occurred amid a broader, documented pattern of city officials actively working to shape public perception in favor of the developer.

In February 2024, Pipkins Reports, then operating as the Fate Tribune, published an exposé based on internal city emails showing City Manager Michael Kovacs discussing strategies to “educate” the public about Lafayette Crossing. In those emails, Kovacs suggested deploying what he referred to as “Fire Support,” a term used to describe both paid and unpaid advocates brought forward to counter citizen opposition and astroturf public support for the project.

That reporting revealed a city government not merely responding to public concerns, but actively attempting to manage and counter them.

In a later publication, Pipkins Reports (Fate Tribune) documented the City of Fate’s hiring of Ryan Breckenridge of BRK Partners, engaging in what records showed to be a coordinated public relations effort aimed at improving the project’s image and swaying public sentiment. The campaign was presented as informational, but residents viewed it as advocacy on behalf of the developer, funded with public resources.

It was within this environment, where city staff had already aligned themselves publicly and privately with the developer’s interests, that the city registered the lafayettecrossing.com domain. Yet that fact remained hidden until PipkinsReports.com submitted an Open Records Request on September 30, 2025, seeking a list of all domains owned by the city.

Rather than comply, the City of Fate objected. On October 14, 2025, officials asked the Texas Attorney General’s Office for permission to withhold the records, citing “cybersecurity” concerns.

On January 6, 2026, the Attorney General rejected that claim and ordered the information released. The city complied on January 20, 2026.

In addition to the lafayettecrossing.com domain, the records revealed the city owns numerous domains tied to redevelopment and branding initiatives, including:

  • FateTX.gov
  • DowntownFate.com
  • FateFoodHaul.com
  • FateMainStreet.com
  • FateStationHub.com
  • FateStationMarket.com
  • FateStationPark.com
  • FateStationSpur.com
  • OldTownFate.com
  • TheHubAtFateStation.com
  • TheSpurAtFateStation.com
  • ForwardFate.com

Most clearly relate to city-led initiatives. LafayetteCrossing.com stands apart because it mirrors the established name of a private development already proposed, named, and publicly debated.

When questioned via email, Assistant City Manager Steven Downs initially suggested the domain purchase occurred long before his involvement and downplayed any potential issues. When we revealed documents to show Downs was actively engaged with the project at the same time the Lafayette Crossing name entered the city’s official workflow, his story changed.

In follow-up correspondence, Downs acknowledged he was aware of the project name, while placing responsibility for the domain purchase on former Assistant City Manager Justin Weiss. Downs stated he did not know whether the developer was aware of the purchase and said he was not concerned about potential liability.

What remains unexplained is why the city registered the domain at all, knowing it belonged to a private project, and why it attempted to keep that information from the public.

Opinion

Viewed in isolation, a $12 domain purchase might seem trivial. Viewed in context, it is not.

When a city that has already worked to astroturf support, hire public relations firms, and counter citizen opposition also quietly registers a developer’s project domain, then attempts to conceal that information from the public, the line between regulator and advocate disappears.

The question is no longer whether the city knew the name. The record shows it did.

The question is why a city government so deeply invested in selling a controversial project to its residents felt the need to take ownership of the project’s digital identity as well.

Control of messaging, control of perception, and control of narrative are powerful tools. Sometimes it is equally as important to control what is not said.

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Election

New Poll Shows Crockett, Paxton Leading Texas Senate Primary Contests

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Jasmine Crockett Takes the Lead in Race with Talarico

Texas Senate Primaries Show Early Leads for Crockett and Paxton

AUSTIN, Texas – A new poll released by The Texas Tribune indicates that Jasmine Crockett and Ken Paxton are leading their respective primary races for the U.S. Senate seat in Texas. The survey, published on February 9, 2026, highlights the early momentum for both candidates as they vie for their party nominations in a closely watched election cycle. The results point to strong voter recognition and support for Crockett in the Democratic primary and Paxton in the Republican primary.

The poll, conducted among likely primary voters across the state, shows Crockett holding a significant lead over her Democratic challenger James Talarico, while Paxton maintains a commanding position among Republican contenders John Cornyn & Wesley Hunt.

According to the poll, Ken Paxton leads with 38 percent of likely GOP primary voters, pulling ahead of incumbent John Cornyn, who trails at 31 percent, while Wesley Hunt remains a distant third at 17 percent. The survey indicates Paxton would hold a commanding advantage in a runoff scenario and currently outperforms Cornyn across nearly every key Republican demographic group, with Latino voters the lone exception, where Cornyn maintains a seven-point edge.

Among Democrats, the poll shows Jasmine Crockett opening a notable lead, capturing 47 percent of likely primary voters compared to 39 percent for James Talarico—a meaningful shift from earlier polling that had Talarico in the lead. While still early, the numbers suggest momentum is consolidating ahead of primaries that will determine the general election matchups.

Jasmine Crockett, a sitting U.S. Representative whose district lines were redrawn out from under her, has responded to political extinction with a desperate lurch toward the U.S. Senate. Her campaign, widely criticized as race-baiting and grievance-driven, has leaned heavily on inflaming urban Democratic turnout while cloaking thin policy substance in fashionable slogans about healthcare and “equity.”

By contrast, Ken Paxton enters the race with a long, battle-tested record as Texas Attorney General, earning fierce loyalty from conservatives for his aggressive defense of state sovereignty, constitutional limits, and successful legal challenges to federal overreach. Though relentlessly targeted by opponents, Paxton’s tenure reflects durability, clarity of purpose, and an unapologetic alignment with the voters he represents—qualities that define his standing in the contest.

The Texas U.S. Senate race draws national attention, as the state remains a critical battleground in determining the balance of power in Congress. With incumbent dynamics and shifting voter demographics at play, the primary outcomes will set the stage for a potentially contentious general election. The Texas Tribune poll serves as an initial benchmark, though voter sentiment could evolve as campaigns intensify and debates unfold in the coming weeks.

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Featured

Kristi Noem Commemorates Border Crossing Decline with National Leaders

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Kristi Noem Border

WASHINGTON, D.C. – Secretary of Homeland Security Kristi Noem joined national security leaders in a dual-state event to commemorate a historic decline in border crossings, according to an official release from the Department of Homeland Security. The event spanned two locations, Arizona and North Dakota, in a single day, highlighting coordinated efforts to strengthen border security. Noem, alongside other officials, marked the achievement as a significant milestone in national security policy.

The Department of Homeland Security reported a measurable drop in unauthorized border crossings, attributing the success to enhanced enforcement measures and inter-agency collaboration. Specific data on the decline was not detailed in the initial announcement, though officials emphasized the impact of recent policy implementations. The two-state commemoration underscored the geographic breadth of the issue, addressing both southern and northern border concerns.

In Arizona, Noem and security leaders reviewed operations along the southern border, a longstanding focal point for immigration enforcement. Later in the day, the group traveled to North Dakota to assess northern border security, an area often overlooked in national discussions but critical to comprehensive policy. The dual focus aimed to demonstrate a unified approach to protecting all U.S. borders, per the department’s statement.

The official release from Homeland Security included remarks from Noem, who praised the dedication of personnel involved in the effort. “This decline in crossings is a testament to the hard work of our agents and the effectiveness of our strategies,” she said. Her comments were echoed by other leaders present, though no additional direct quotations were provided in the initial report.

Background on the border security initiatives reveals a multi-year push to address vulnerabilities at both entry points. Southern border challenges, particularly in Arizona, have long dominated policy debates due to high volumes of crossings and complex terrain. Meanwhile, northern border issues in states like North Dakota often involve different dynamics, including trade security and seasonal migration patterns. The Department of Homeland Security has prioritized resources for both regions, though specific funding allocations remain undisclosed in the latest update.

The cause of the reported decline ties directly to recent enforcement actions, though exact mechanisms were not specified in the announcement. Officials pointed to improved technology, increased staffing, and stronger partnerships with local and state authorities as contributing factors. Further details on these efforts are expected in forthcoming reports from the department, which has committed to transparency on border metrics.

Opinion

The recognition of a decline in border crossings signals a potential turning point in how the nation secures its frontiers. Celebrating this achievement in two distinct regions reinforces the importance of a comprehensive strategy that does not neglect less-discussed areas like the northern border.

Events like these also serve as a reminder that security is not a partisan issue but a fundamental duty of government. Prioritizing resources and personnel to protect sovereignty while maintaining lawful entry processes should remain a core focus, ensuring that progress is sustained through consistent policy and accountability.

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