• Ep. 26-003 —They jailed three Texans using judges nobody approved
    May 31 2026

    Texas citizens sue the shadow bench

    Case No. 4:25-CV-1422 · N.D. Tex., Fort Worth · ~9 min · Pending — no final ruling

    What this episode covers

    Four pro se litigants challenge the way Texas assigns visiting judges to family court cases — arguing they were jailed, denied notice, and stripped of indigency protections through a system that shields judicial insiders from scrutiny. When they took it to federal court, the dismissal itself became another example of the problem.

    The plaintiffs & what happened to them

    Randles — jailed June 2025, no notice, no assignment order, elected judge available. Ross — jailed May 2024; couldn't exercise her objection right until December 2025. Tuter — jailed fall 2024 by a judge whose wife was paid $1,400 to mediate the same case. Yan — missed a hearing over an illegible notice date; fee waiver stripped in his absence.

    Key legal issues

    14th Judges running mediation businesses can't earn referral fees from the same attorneys appearing before them. 14th Visiting judges are only lawful when the elected judge is absent — that wasn't documented here. 14th · 1st Stripping a fee waiver after someone files an appeal, using DA resources, looks like retaliation.

    The number that matters

    ~56 elected judges, ~44 visiting judges in one region — a shadow bench with no electoral accountability. At least 10 also appear on the county's approved mediator list.

    How the federal court misapplied the law

    Used one defendant's motion to dismiss every claim across all plaintiffs. Tarrant County was dismissed March 11 — and served March 24. Distinct claims (Yan's clerk issues, Ross's family claims, Tuter's spouse-mediator conflict) swept out under a single unrelated motion. Younger abstention misapplied: court ignored Texas § 30.017, which bars the exact path it told plaintiffs to take. Rule 59(e) motion pending — the final order ignored ECF 35, 58, 59, and 60.

    Practical takeaway

    In any Texas family court hearing: ask whether a written assignment order is on the docket before the visiting judge speaks. If a Rule 145 contest is filed against you, demand to see the sworn evidence before any hearing proceeds.

    "A judge's wife gets paid to mediate — he jails the client. A coordinator sends an illegible notice and ignores the follow-up. A clerk waives fees for a contestant with no sworn evidence. Each looks like a mistake. Together they look like a system."

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    20 mins
  • Ep. 26-002 — " "Warrantless Phone Seizures Over a Website Rule — Is That Even Legal in Texas?"
    May 31 2026

    EPISODE SUMMARY:

    A man walks into a Tarrant County family courtroom. Before the hearing even starts, a bailiff threatens to throw him in jail for recording. He objects — arguing the rule was never properly adopted. The judge cites "the website in this county" as the legal authority. Minutes later, deputies physically take his phone under threat of a taser. The phone ends up as Court Exhibit 1 — then gets handed to the Tarrant County Sheriff's Office for a criminal investigation. No warrant. No written order. No return procedure.

    This episode breaks down a formal administrative challenge filed May 27, 2026 by pro se litigant Conghua Yan, demanding that Tarrant County Family Courts withdraw or fix their recording and confiscation rule — and asking that the assigned reviewing judge step aside due to a direct conflict of interest.

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    11 mins
  • Ep. 26-001 — Grounded: The Houston Hobby Airport Bidding Battle | Supreme Court of Texas
    May 31 2026

    For over 20 years, Pappas Restaurants ran the food and beverage concessions at Houston's Hobby Airport. Then the City held a bidding competition — and after three rounds spanning three years, awarded the contract to a competitor by a slim margin.

    Pappas fought back, arguing the City violated Texas law by skipping required competitive bidding procedures on a contract worth well over $50,000. The City said the law didn't apply because the contract generates revenue for the City rather than spending it.

    The Court of Appeals sided with the City and threw the case out. But the Texas Supreme Court said — not so fast.

    In this episode, we break down what the Supreme Court ruled, why a single "No City Expenditure" clause wasn't enough to end the case, and what it means for any Texas city trying to award a major contract without following the competitive bidding rules.

    🔑 Key issues covered:

    • When does Texas's competitive bidding law apply to city contracts?
    • Can a city escape scrutiny by labeling a contract a "revenue deal"?
    • What is jurisdictional discovery — and why did it save Pappas's case?

    AI-generated summary of Texas Supreme Court Opinion No. 24-0796, decided January 9, 2026. For informational purposes only. Not legal advice.

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    18 mins