Texas: Indicted Judge Lina Hidalgo’s Chief of Staff Violates Bail Rules, Steers $48 Million Contract to Small Firm – IOTW Report

Texas: Indicted Judge Lina Hidalgo’s Chief of Staff Violates Bail Rules, Steers $48 Million Contract to Small Firm

GP:

As previously reported, three of far-left Harris County, Texas Judge Lina Hidalgo’s staffers were indicted last month after prosecutors expanded the investigation into an $11 million ‘vaccine outreach contract’ awarded to one of the judge’s political cronies.

While Hidalgo was threatening to jail and fine people for violating her Covid rules, she was secretly trying to award one of her political cronies an $11 million ‘vaccine outreach’ contract.

Hidalgo ultimately panicked and canceled the $11 million vaccine contract after questions were raised that it was with a one-person firm with no experience.

Prosecutors are now alleging Hidalgo’s indicted Chief of Staff, Alex Triantaphyllis, violated one of four bond conditions just one day after a court hearing on April 12. MORE

10 Comments on Texas: Indicted Judge Lina Hidalgo’s Chief of Staff Violates Bail Rules, Steers $48 Million Contract to Small Firm

  1. “Hidalgo ultimately panicked and canceled the $11 million vaccine contract after questions were raised that it was with a one-person firm with no experience.”

    …see, that’s not how you Democrat, that’s where she went wrong.

    You never admit error, never walk anything back, double the contract if someone complains, and go to your freind, the media, about how everyone who questions you and your freind is racist and needs to lose their jobs, while doxxing whoever is investigating you and having brownshirts harass them and their families day and night.

    THAT’S how you Democrat.

    9
  2. Why does this cunt need $40,000 per month worth of security?

    She must be in bed with even worse people than are known. Probably the child and drug traffickers.

    3
  3. Many of these judges and their “clerks” engage in this type of criminal activity and more so than anyone thinks. They also hand out long-term imprisonment sentences to private prisons which gets payment from outside sources, with kickbacks going to the judges.

Comments are closed.