Embattled Texas AG Paxton secretly went on China junket against advice of staff, docs show

Ken Paxton, the suspended attorney general of Texas, traveled to China with other attorneys general in a secretive trip that included meetings with government officials and did so against the advice of his staff who expressed worry over potential Chinese Communist Party influence, according to sources and internal documents obtained by Fox News Digital.

The shadowy trip — facilitated by the Attorney General Alliance (AGA) and Conference of Western Attorneys General (CWAG) — was a 10-day excursion taking place between Oct. 30, 2019, and Nov. 8, 2019, and included stops in the Chinese cities of Beijing, Hangzhou, Shanghai and Macau, according to an itinerary of the trip reviewed by Fox News Digital.

"My first thought was this is a terrible decision to have made," said one individual with knowledge of the trip, speaking on condition of anonymity in order to avoid retribution. "Under no set of circumstances as a U.S. law enforcement official should you willingly go to China."

Paxton — accompanied on the trip by his wife Angela, a Texas state senator — was not required to report the trip and ultimately attended against wishes from staffers who raised potential government influence and surveillance concerns, officials familiar with the matter said. 

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The documents showed AGA and CWAG arranged lavish accommodations and travel for Paxton and the other attorneys general who attended. And the top state law enforcement officers, both Republicans like Paxton and Democrats including then-Hawaii Attorney General Clare Connors, met with both Chinese government officials and private sector representatives. 

Multiple individuals, who requested anonymity to avoid retribution, confirmed the authenticity of the trip and documents. Fox News Digital is withholding their names to protect their identities.

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In addition to Paxton, his wife and Connors, then-Attorneys General Hector Balderas of New Mexico, Mark Brnovich of Arizona and Wayne Stenehjem of North Dakota; former Connecticut Deputy Attorney General Margaret Chapple; and Utah Attorney General Sean Reyes joined the trip. Balderas, Brnovich and Reyes brought their wives.

Attendees such as Connors and Brnovich, for example, reported the trip due to disclosure laws in their state, filings show.

AGA Executive Director Karen White and executives from Microsoft, Alibaba, JUUL and various other companies and law firms were also listed on the trip attendee list.

"The international delegations are centered around matters to include Consumer Protection, organized crime, and cybercrime, all of which are priorities in other countries and the United States’ bilateral security relations," AGA Deputy Director and General Counsel Tania Maestas told Fox News Digital in a statement. "The United States and has extensive cultural ties and a mutually beneficial economic relationship and continues to build them through these delegations." 

"The China International Delegation surrounded issues like combating counterfeit goods and violations of intellectual property laws," Maestas continued. "Meetings with Chinese officials regarding counterfeit vaping products flooding the U.S. market also assists further protections for U.S. consumers as state attorneys general have regulatory and enforcement responsibility under the national tobacco settlements and ongoing matters related to vaping."

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On the trip, the delegation first traveled to Beijing where they stayed at a Four Seasons hotel. 

In Beijing, the attorneys general met with Chinese federal court officials and Chinese prosecutors; met with the general counsel of the state-run China State Construction and Engineering; toured the Microsoft offices; and participated in several historical tours including one to Tiananmen Square, the site of an infamous government massacre of protesting students in 1989.

They then traveled to Hangzhou where they stayed in a Sheraton resort. Their short stay in the city was highlighted by an all-day visit to the headquarters for Alibaba, the hundred-billion-dollar e-commerce platform closely regulated by the Chinese government.

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After Hangzhou, the delegation traveled to Shanghai where they stayed at a Waldorf Astoria hotel. In addition to sightseeing in the city, they met with leaders at law firm Squire Patton Boggs Shanghai and anonymous "local officials."

In their final leg of the trip, the delegation traveled to Macau where they stayed at the Venetian Macau. The main purpose of the leg was leisure.

"The Attorney General Alliance serves as a bipartisan forum where Attorneys General work in cooperation to share ideas, build relationships, and foster enforcement through meetings, panels, working groups, and social activities," Maestas, AGA's deputy director and general counsel, said.

"Importantly, AGA provides a unique environment where attorneys general can interact and discuss policy initiatives, leading to development of key long-term relationships with both state and international partners," she continued.

The AGA began as the Conference of Western Attorneys General, which still exists today as an AGA program, according to its website. CWAG's most recent financial audit covering its finances for the year ending June 30, 2022, shows it had nearly $7.5 million in total assets.

The AGA has received criticism for allegedly selling access to special interests, Axios reported last year. Chris Toth, who acted as the executive director of the National Association of Attorneys General, made the comments in his retirement letter last June.

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"I have become increasingly alarmed at the growing influence of lobbyist and corporate money in the attorney general arena, particularly involving entities that are being investigated and/or sued by AGs," Toth wrote in the letter, singling out AGA and CWAG, saying it "seems to exist for no other reason than to provide access by such actors to attorneys general."

"But the AGA funding model, e.g., a minimum contribution of $10k to attend their annual meeting, forecloses access to all but the most well-funded persons and groups," Toth wrote. "There is clearly no functional vetting mechanism for who gains access and who can essentially buy programming at AGA meetings."

Toth said that "this places AGs in a very compromising and potentially embarrassing situation," adding that "AGA is overwhelmingly dependent on corporate and lobbyist money for its activities." 

"Dues only account for a very small share of its revenue," Toth wrote. "That means when you go on a delegation, some lobbyist or corporation is paying for that. When you have your room and airfare paid for, some portion of that is coming from someone you are investigating or suing."

Toth's former group distanced themselves from his comments, saying they were "his statements alone" and were not on behalf of the National Association of Attorneys General.

The Texas House voted in May to impeach Paxton after a months-long House investigation into him that led to 20 charges alleging abuse of power, obstruction of justice, bribery and abuse of public trust. The impeachment triggered an automatic suspension of Paxton who must now wait until the end of August for the Texas Senate impeachment trial.

"The ugly spectacle in the Texas House today confirmed the outrageous impeachment plot against me was never meant to be fair or just. It was a politically motivated sham from the beginning," Paxton said in a statement after the House impeachment.

Paxton and his wife's offices did not respond to Fox News Digital's inquiries for this story.

Homeland Security Chair Mark Green: Southern and ‘cyber’ borders top focus for holding Biden, China to account

EXCLUSIVE: House Homeland Security Chairman Mark Green, R-Tenn., told Fox News Digital that securing America's southern and "cyber" borders are top priorities for his committee, as well as holding China to account after the spy balloon incident.

Green sent a letter to Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas Tuesday, first obtained by Fox News Digital, in which he demanded information about China's "espionage" in U.S. airspace.

In an interview ahead of President Biden's State of the Union address Tuesday, Green said the issue with the spy balloon saga is "twofold."

"One, how the [DHS] Office of Intelligence and Analysis, you know, functioned within all of the notifications and the decision making for not shooting down a spy balloon that invaded our, you know, airspace," said Green.

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"And then, of course, we have oversight and have the Coast Guard inside Homeland Security. So they're very involved right now in the recovery of the stuff and securing the site where the balloon was shot down and landed in the ocean. So just making sure they have the resources to do their job," he said.

As for top priorities for his committee, Green said they are securing the southern border, as well as the country's "cyber" border.

"A lot of people don't think of cyber as a border. But I want to shift the paradigm a little bit and have people think of cybersecurity as the nation's fourth border," explained.

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Another top focus will be to "reorganize and restructure" DHS to maximize effectiveness and efficiency because it's "unconscionable" what the Border Patrol have been put through due to demands on them by Biden's open border policies.

Green wasn't too enthusiastic about the possibility of impeaching Mayorkas, even though articles of impeachment have been put forward by some of his GOP colleagues. "My perspective right now is we're going to do some significant oversight. And when we're done, if the information that we gather shows that he's worthy of being impeached, we'll pass that off to [House Judiciary Chairman] Jim Jordan," he said.

"The Pentagon acknowledged that they had been monitoring this surveillance balloon for several days, yet took no action to prevent it from entering U.S. airspace. Even worse, news reports indicate that the Biden administration knew about the spy balloon for more than a week before it was shot down. This inaction is both dangerous and egregious," the chairman wrote in his letter to Mayorkas.

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He told Mayorkas that the Chinese Communist Party (CCP)'s access to sensitive information as it traveled across the country is especially troubling as the CCP seeks to steal U.S. info and "exploit" academic and scientific communities.

"The CCP's espionage in our skies – left unaddressed by this administration – is a serious concern to Americans. As members of the Committee with jurisdiction over the Department of Homeland Security (DHS), we must understand DHS' role in identifying, assessing, and tracking this threat," the letter continued, including a deadline of Feb. 17 for the requested info.

DHS did not immediately respond to Fox News Digital's request for comment on the letter.

‘Border-free Biden:’ Republicans connect China spy balloon fiasco to migrant crisis at southern border

The incursion of a Chinese surveillance balloon into U.S. territory this week has led some Republicans to make a connection between the breaching of U.S. territory by the Chinese craft — and what they see as a lackluster response by the Biden administration — and the ongoing migrant crisis at the southern border.

"First Biden refused to defend our borders. Now he won’t defend our skies," House Speaker Kevin McCarthy tweeted Saturday.

The craft was hovering at an altitude of approximately 60,000 feet, according to the Pentagon, and was seen flying over Montana on Thursday, before changing course and heading over Missouri and being seen above North Carolina Saturday morning. The presence of the craft has caused a major diplomatic incident between the U.S. and China, which has asserted that it is not a spy balloon, but a civilian craft that went adrift.

"Regarding the unintended entry of a Chinese unmanned airship into US airspace due to force majeure, the Chinese side has verified it and communicated it to the US side. It is a civilian airship used for research, mainly meteorological, purposes," said a Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson on Saturday. "Affected by the Westerlies and with limited self-steering capability, the airship deviated far from its planned course."

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It’s a narrative that has been firmly rejected by U.S. officials, who have described the incursion as "intentional." Secretary of State Antony Blinken has canceled a planned visit to Beijing over the incident.

Republicans have been hammering the administration over the incident, demanding the balloon be shot down — something the administration has not yet done due to the potential risk of civilian injury and collateral damage. Top Republicans have also called for hearings on the matter, with senators accusing Biden of a passive response.

But as the balloon continues to float across the continental U.S. unopposed, some Republicans made the connection with the ongoing migrant crisis at the southern border, where there have been millions of illegal migrant crossings since Biden took office.

The Biden administration has blamed congressional inaction to fix a "broken" immigration system and a hemisphere-wide crisis for the ongoing situation at the border. It has also pointed to ongoing anti-smuggling efforts and new border measures that it says have led to a drop in migrant crossings. But Republicans have blamed the administration’s policies for the surge in migrants under its watch, and have accused officials of failing to act.

Texas Gov. Greg Abbott, who has been a vocal critic of the administration’s handling of the critic, called Biden’s "refusal" to stop the balloon a "dereliction of duty."

"From flying balloons to open borders, Biden has no regard for our national security and sovereignty," he said.

Rep. Mary Miller, R-Ill., accused Biden of giving up U.S. sovereignty.

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"As President Trump says, without borders, we are not a country. By allowing China to send spy balloons across our airspace & allowing 5 million foreign nationals to illegally cross our southern border, Joe Biden is surrendering our sovereignty as a nation. Biden is America Last!" she said.

Sen. Steve Daines, R-Mont., said the administration has "failed to protect our border and now has failed to protect our skies."

"Border-free Biden: from Chinese spy balloons to illegal immigration, why won’t the @POTUS uphold America’s borders?" Sen. Tommy Tuberville, R-Ala., tweeted Friday evening.

Rep. Andy Biggs, R-Ariz., who is co-chair of the House Border Security Caucus, accused the administration of "attacking the geographic integrity of this nation by facilitating the historic invasion at our southern border and allowing a CCP military balloon to fly over critical national security locations."

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"A nation that cannot control its borders is not a nation," he said.

Meanwhile, the Border Patrol union also took a dig at the administration over its handling of the border crisis.

"China watching our border more closely than the Biden admin."

A White House official on Friday said that Biden administration officials briefed the Gang of Eight staff on Thursday afternoon and offered additional congressional briefings, which likely will take place next week.

Officials said that Biden made his decision not to shoot down the balloon based on a "strong recommendation" from Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs Gen. Mark Milley and the commander of Northern Command "not to take kinetic action at this time because of risk to safety and security of the people on the ground."

"The president will always put the safety and security of the American people first," White House Press Secretary Karine Jean-Pierre said. "We are tracking closely and keeping all options on the table." 

Fox News' Brooke Singman and Timothy Nerozzi contributed to this report.
 

From Trump’s impeachment trial to Hunter Biden: The biggest political scandals of 2020

As 2020 comes to a close, the news has been dominated by a global pandemic, statewide lockdowns and a presidential election. Amid all that, it’s easy to forget about political events, including scandals and controversies, that otherwise would have been more in the spotlight.