Posts Tagged ‘Brooks Landgraf’

Loon Launching Loving Lasso Lacks Legitimacy, Lands Litigation

Tuesday, October 14th, 2025

Loving County is not only the least populated county in Texas, but with 64 official inhabitants as of the 2020 census, it’s also the least populated county in the entire nation. (Kalawao County, Hawaii, on an island that was formerly a leper colony, comes in second.) Flat desert land up along the New Mexico border, Loving doesn’t have much to recommend it except splendid isolation.

And oil.

It’s that last little bit, Loving’s notable oil wealth, that probably inspired a carpetbagger gadfly from Indiana to try to take over Loving County.

Malcolm Tanner, a political activist from Indiana who has filed to run for president of the United States, has drawn widespread attention after the Houston Chronicle first reported on his plan to recruit new residents to Loving County by offering them free homes. Tanner purchased and subdivided land in the remote county, promising a title to anyone willing to move there, register to vote, and join his effort to remake the community’s government.

Tanner evidently ran for President in 2024, and made so little an impression that he failed to register the low four-digit totals of Vermin Supreme and “Lucifer Everylove.” Tanner’s platform (“an executive order that would provide African Americans with a $5,000 monthly settlement”) and naming his group “Melanated People of Power” does rather suggest a social justice bent to his politics.

Back to The Texan:

The plan’s implications are significant, given two defining features of Loving County: its minuscule population and its oil-rich tax base. The U.S. Census Bureau estimates only about 64 residents live within its boundaries, yet the county government takes in roughly $60 million annually in property tax revenue from the surrounding Permian Basin oilfields.

With the Chronicle reporting that Tanner has already relocated some 30 people to the area, an unprecedented political takeover has gone from just another viral social media post to a very serious reality.

“This woman right here is in the running to be the next county judge right here in Loving County,” Tanner said in one video, referring to a new resident while jokingly calling the area “Tanner County.”

In the footage, Tanner stands on a patch of dry, windswept land he claims as his future subdivision, surrounded by recruits who have accepted his offer of free homes and, according to his plan, will soon register to vote and run for local office.

This past week, Tanner also promoted an event called “Tanner Fest” in the county seat of Mentone, advertising “100 free homes up for grabs” and promising to “share the vision and process” behind his movement.

It does rather sound like Tanner is promising material rewards for voting his way. Tiny problem: That’s illegal under federal law.

In another video, Tanner is seen confronting a Loving County deputy at the courthouse. “Once we get here, we are going to fine-tooth everything,” he says. “If we find anything out of pocket, we’re gonna lock you up.” He also added that he believes county officials have been “stealing money.”

News of Tanner’s plan has triggered a wave of attention across state and national media — and drawn alarm from state and federal officials, who are now calling for investigations into what they describe as a potential threat to election integrity.

“We write to request immediate action and coordination among agencies to address serious election irregularities and threats of manipulation in Loving County,” state Sen. Kevin Sparks (R-Midland) and state Rep. Brooks Landgraf (R-Odessa) said in a joint letter last week to Secretary of State Jane Nelson.

The lawmakers cited “disparities in recent election results” and emphasized the seriousness of the matter. “All Texans, including those in the most rural areas, deserve fair and lawful elections,” they wrote, asking the secretary of state to “use all available authority to investigate and address election fraud in Loving County.”

Enter Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton.

Attorney General Ken Paxton has filed a sweeping lawsuit and is seeking an emergency restraining order against an Indiana man accused of trying to “take over” Texas’ least populous county through what he is calling an illegal and unsafe settlement scheme.

Filed in Loving County’s 143rd Judicial District Court, the petition names Malcolm Tanner, a Crawfordsville, Indiana, resident who purchased two adjoining five-acre tracts in January of this year.

According to the complaint, Tanner has been using social media to invite followers—many of them women with children—to move to the barren property, promising “free homes” and even “$5,000 a month” if they help him “take over” local government.

“Indiana resident Malcolm Tanner has no right to try and take over Loving County with illegal schemes that endanger real Texans,” Paxton said in a statement. “His deceptive and unlawful scheme to lure people with free housing for the purpose of conducting a political takeover is a disgustingly fraudulent plot to line his own pockets.”

The lawsuit alleges Tanner’s property has no sewer, septic systems, or running water, relying instead on gas generators and a “burn pit” for trash disposal. Dozens of people have reportedly moved in, living in RVs and tents on the desolate land.

State attorneys say those conditions violate Chapter 341 of the Texas Health and Safety Code, which governs the disposal of sewage and other waste that could spread disease. The requested temporary restraining order would bar Tanner and others from discharging human waste in ways that could contaminate soil or groundwater and would prohibit any additional residents from moving onto the site until it meets health-code standards.

The 14-page filing goes further, accusing Tanner of running a “combination” engaged in organized criminal activity, citing alleged threats against law-enforcement and oil-field workers. It also seeks to declare the site a public nuisance and asks the court to impose any restrictions needed to prevent future “gang activity.”

Separately, Paxton’s office brings claims under the Texas Deceptive Trade Practices Act, asserting that Tanner falsely advertised free housing, misrepresented the quality of property being offered, and failed to disclose critical information about living conditions. The State is seeking up to $10,000 per violation and additional penalties of $10 to $200 per day for ongoing health-code violations.

Prosecutors note that Tanner has publicly bragged online about plans to “change the name of Loving County to Tanner County” and to run for president in 2028. The filing describes his effort as both a public-health hazard and a fraudulent political operation, alleging he “receives financial support from individuals as a condition of them remaining on the property.”

The attorney general’s office is asking the court to immediately issue an ex parte temporary restraining order, followed by a temporary and then permanent injunction halting habitation and advertising at the property.

If the scheme itself sound familiar, that’s because it’s exactly what Bhagwan Shree Rajneesh managed to do to Antelope (briefly “Rajneesh”), Oregon in the early 1980s: Encouraged his followers to settle there and take over the local town council. A lot of criminality and lunacy (including a “bioweapon attack” of salmonella) ensued before Rajneesh was deported for immigration fraud in 1985, and the whole scheme collapsed.

I had previously had the impression that no land in Loving County was for sale, as the locales didn’t want to sell, but it appears that a few plots are now available at relatively modest prices. I’m not sure how deep “Dr.” Malcolm Tanner’s pockets are, but the gadfly nature of his actions suggests someone bigger on impractical dreams than cold, hard cash.

I sincerely doubt Mr. Tanner has Bhagwan money.

In a way, Loving County is quite fortunate. Someone with deeper pockets and the ability not to shoot their mouth off about their cockamamie carpetbagging schemes might have actually managed a takeover of the county before anyone noticed…

Texas Special Session Begins

Thursday, July 8th, 2021

Today the Texas Special Legislative Session begins:

Governor Greg Abbott unveiled an agenda of 11 items for the legislature to tackle in its first special session of 2021 when it convenes later this week.

The whole agenda includes:

  • Bail reform
  • Election reform
  • Border security
  • Social media censorship
  • Article X funding
  • Family violence protection
  • Requirement for student athletes to compete within their own sex
  • Restriction on abortion-inducing drugs
  • Supplemental payment to the Teachers Retirement System
  • More comprehensive critical race theory ban
  • Property tax relief
  • Foster care system appropriation
  • Cyber security appropriation
  • Items like election reform, social media censorship, and a more comprehensive ban on critical race theory were already identified by Abbott as part of the agenda.

    After House Democrats walked out of the chamber on the last night of the regular session — breaking quorum and killing various pieces of legislation, most notably the election bill — Abbott declared that he would call a special session to tackle some of those items in addition to the fall special dealing with redistricting and federal coronavirus funds.

    Another bill that died that night was bail reform, which was among Abbott’s emergency item list. It is included on the special session call.

    Abbott then vetoed Article X of the state budget which governs funding for the legislature due to, in his words, the legislature not “showing up and doing their job.”

    House Democrats petitioned the Texas Supreme Court to block Abbott’s veto of legislative funding and also appealed to Speaker Dade Phelan (R-Beaumont) earlier this week to commit to stalling any special session agenda item until Article X funding is restored.

    Here’s Abbott on the special session:

    Notably missing from the agenda: A ban on the genital mutilation of minors.

    Michael Quinn Sullivan noted via email:

  • The items placed on the call by Gov. Abbott can be thought of as the “primary effect” – which is to say, how the coming contested primary is impacting the governor’s actions.
  • The items on the call read like a laundry list of what the Texas Senate under Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick has actually done… and what the Texas House under Speaker Dade Phelan failed to do.
  • Whether Speaker Phelan intends to help enact the governor’s agenda remains to be seen but he did announce a brand new committee to deal with them:

    The day before Abbott released the agenda, Phelan announced the creation of a new committee: the House Select Committee on Constitutional Rights and Remedies. “The issues that will be submitted by the Governor for our consideration in the upcoming special session impact some of the most fundamental rights of Texans under the U.S. and Texas Constitutions,” Phelan said.

    “These issues, by their very nature, are complex. A select committee with expanded membership and expertise is the ideal forum for ensuring the thoughtful consideration of diverse viewpoints as these constitutional issues are expressed, debated, and decided by the House.”

    The committee will be chaired by Rep. Trent Ashby (R-Lufkin) and vice-chaired by Rep. Senfronia Thompson (D-Houston).

    The other members on the body include:

  • John Bucy (D-Austin)
  • Travis Clardy (R-Nacogdoches)
  • Charlie Geren (R-Fort Worth)
  • Jacey Jetton (R-Richmond)
  • Ann Johnson (D-Houston)
  • Stephanie Klick (R-Fort Worth)
  • Brooks Landgraf (R-Odessa)
  • J.M. Lozano (R-Kingsville)
  • Oscar Longoria (D-Mission)
  • Joe Moody (D-El Paso)
  • Victoria Neave (D-Dallas)
  • Matt Shaheen (R-Plano)
  • James White (R-Hillister)
  • That committee doesn’t fill one with confidence. Geran was Joe Straus’ righthand man for many years, and an aide once filed a false child protection report against a primary opponent. Klick was one of only 16 Republicans to vote for creation of a Critical Race Theory-friendly Office of Health Equity in the regular session.

    Then there’s a the question of whether Democrats will walk out again to avoid the election integrity bill from passing, just as they did during the regular session.

    Stay tuned…