Former Houston Police Captain Mark Aguirre ran an AC repairman off the road because he thought the man had 700K in fraudulent election ballots...
He thought this guy had 750,000 fraudlent ballots in his truck, so he rammed into the back of the truck, pulled the man out of the truck at gupoint and put him on the ground with his knee on his back. (story by @jaspscherer and @zachdespart) https://t.co/1Kw47as85M
— Matt Young (@Chron_MattYoung) December 15, 2020
This is wild.
— Matthew Watkins (@MWatkinsTrib) December 16, 2020
GOP megadonor Steve Hotze hired 20 investigators to find voter fraud in Harris County. So far there's been one arrest: An ex-cop he hired rammed a van he thought was filled with illegal ballots.
(The van actually had A/C parts and tools.) https://t.co/s32756J05P
Mark Aguirre was part of a group of 20 private investigators hired by a right-wing organization led by GOP megadonor Steve Hotze to investigate unsubstantiated voter fraud claims in Texas.https://t.co/45eOenuUMX
— Erin Douglas (@erinmdouglas23) December 16, 2020
A former Houston police captain is accused of a violent attempt to find evidence for an election conspiracy theory.
— Texas Tribune (@TexasTribune) December 16, 2020
He was working for a powerful Texas Republican activist's group, trying to investigate unsubstantiated claims of widespread voter fraud. https://t.co/36CGx4xme3
Former @HoustonPolice Captain Mark Aguirre allegedly ran an AC repairman off the road because he thought the man had 700K in fraudulent election ballots. #abc13 https://t.co/xiYGZ5lbCn pic.twitter.com/I5J40e9gMM
— Miya Shay (@ABC13Miya) December 16, 2020
Mark Aguirre was the guy who ordered the arrest of 273 people in a Kmart parking lot in 2002 in what was supposed to be a crackdown on street racing. He was fired as several arrestees sued the city, saying they were just customers at the time of the raid.https://t.co/GLFA2kRVzJ
— Matt Young (@Chron_MattYoung) December 15, 2020
Charlie Kirk criticizes Mitch McConnell for congratulating President-elect Joe Biden: "You typically don't use the term 'congratulations' when someone just stole a bank" pic.twitter.com/1o7egxjGBF
— Jason Campbell (@JasonSCampbell) December 15, 2020
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