Life

Ex-Houston Police Captain Arrested for Pointing Gun at Man He Believed to Be Voter Fraud 'Mastermind'

A former Houston police captain has been charged for pointing a gun at the head of an innocent man he believed was the "mastermind" behind a voter fraud plot.

Picture taken on December 20, 2012 in Maubeuge of the flashing light of a police vehicle.
Image via Getty/PHILIPPE HUGUEN/AFP
Getty

A former Houston police captain was arrested Tuesday following an altercation two weeks prior to the 2020 presidential election where he pointed a gun at the head of a man he falsely accused of being "the mastermind of a giant (voter) fraud" scheme, CNN reports. He has been charged with aggravated assault with a deadly weapon, and faces up to 20 years in prison.

According to the Harris County District Attorney Kim Ogg, Mark Anthony Aguirre, 63, received more than $260,000 from a Houston-based private citizens group called "Liberty Center for God and Country" to look into baseless claims of voter fraud in the city. On October 16, Aguirre asked that a lieutenant with the Texas Attorney General's Office help with his investigation by conducting a traffic stop, but when his request was rejected, he decided to take matters into his own hands.

Three days later, Aguirre rammed his SUV into the back of the truck of someone he had been tracking for four days. When his suspect got out of the vehicle, Aguirre pointed a gun at his head, forced him to the ground, and pinned him to the ground by putting his knee in the man's back. When authorities arrived, Aguirre told them that he had been "investigating a voter fraud ballot harvesting conspiracy," and believed the man had been running an illegal operation out of his home.

Aguirre suspected that the man had 750,000 fraudulent mail ballots, and was "using Hispanic children to sign the ballots" because their fingerprints wouldn't show up in any databases. When police conducted a search of the man's truck, no such evidence supporting his wild claim existed. The "innocent and ordinary" air-conditioner repairman was allowed to leave. His home was later searched with his permission, and once again, nothing was found.

Jared Woodfill, president of "Liberty Center for God and Country," told CNN that they, along with Republican activist Steve Hotze, hired a private firm, which included "Aguirre, a former FBI investigator and about 20 investigators that investigated reports of voter fraud." Their findings were handed over to Hotze.

Aguirre has since released from jail after posting $30,000 bond.

Related Stories

ballots
life

No Evidence of Voter Fraud Found According To Election Officials

Republican and Democratic election officials alike told the Times they could find no evidence that anything untoward had happened on Election Day.

Alex Galbraith2001 days ago
obama
life

Obama Calls Out Republicans for 'Humoring' Trump's Baseless Claims of Voter Fraud

Former POTUS Barack Obama returns to '60 Minutes' ahead of the release of his new book, a volume of presidential memoirs titled 'A Promised Land.'

Trace William Cowen1999 days ago
William Barr
life

Attorney General William Barr Says Justice Department Found No Evidence of Widespread Voter Fraud

Attorney General William Barr broke from President Donald Trump by revealing that the Justice Department uncovered no evidence of widespread voter fraud. 

Alex Galbraith1981 days ago

Stay ahead on Exclusives

Download the Complex App