Ken Paxton Age, Wife, Children, Family, Biography
Quick Info→
Hometown: Texas
Wife: Angela Allen
Age: 62 Years
Bio/Wiki | |
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Full Name | Warren Kenneth Paxton Jr |
Profession(s) | • Politician • Lawyer |
Famous for | Being a staunch ally of President Donald Trump |
Physical Stats | |
Height (approx.) | 5' 9" (175 cm) |
Eye Colour | Dark Green |
Hair Colour | Light Blonde |
Politics | |
Political Party | Republican |
Political Journey | • In 2002, joined Republican party • From 2003 to 2012, served in the Texas House as a Republican • From 2013–2015, elected to the Texas Senate (District 8), again as a Republican • From 2015 to present, serving as Republican Attorney General of Texas |
Personal Life | |
Date of Birth | 23 December 1962 (Sunday) |
Age (as of 2024) | 62 Years |
Birthplace | Minot, North Dakota, USA |
Zodiac sign | Capricorn |
Signature | ![]() |
Nationality | American |
Hometown | Texas, USA |
College/University | • Baylor University, Texas • University of Virginia School of Law, Virginia |
Educational Qualification(s) | • A bachelor's degree in Psychology (1985) from Baylor University • A Master of Business Administration (1986) from Baylor University • Doctor of Law (1991) from the University of Virginia School of Law |
Religion | Christianity |
Hobbies | Reading, Writing |
Controversies | • State Securities Fraud Felony Indictment (2015–2024) In 2015, after becoming Texas Attorney General, Ken Paxton was found guilty for three crime: two for securities fraud and one for failing to register as an investment adviser. Prosecutors alleged he solicited investors for a tech company without disclosing he was being paid by that company, and misled clients while not properly registered. However, Paxton pleaded not guilty and delayed trial for years through legal challenges. In March 2024, a deal was reached where he agreed to pay restitution, complete community service, and take legal ethics classes. The charges were dismissed in April 2024 after he fulfilled the deal’s terms. [1]Wikipedia • Securities and Exchange Commission civil action (2016) In 2016, the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) filed a civil enforcement action against Ken Paxton in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Texas. The SEC's complaint specifically charged Paxton with violating various provisions of the Securities Act of 1933 and various provisions of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 by defrauding the Servergy investors.Ken Paxton denied the allegations. A judge initially dismissed the case in October 2016, saying the SEC hadn’t shown he was legally required to tell investors about his commission but allowed the SEC to amend its complaint. The SEC refiled, adding more claims about Ken Paxton’s role in an investment club and how he handled his Servergy stake. In March 2017, the judge dismissed the case permanently, ruling Paxton had no clear legal duty to disclose the deal. [2]The Texas Tribune • FBI Investigation & Whistleblower Lawsuit (2020) In 2020, eight top aides in Ken Paxton’s office accused him of bribery and abuse of office, claiming he used his power to help a political donor, real estate developer Nate Paul. The allegations triggered an FBI investigation that is still open as of 2025. The whistleblowers sued Ken Paxton under Texas law protecting employees who report wrongdoing. Paxton’s office agreed in 2023 to pay $3.3 million in taxpayer money to settle the lawsuit — but the Texas House refused to fund the payment, which partly triggered his impeachment. [3]CNN Politics • State Bar Professional Misconduct Lawsuit Against Ken Paxton (2022) In May 2022, the State Bar of Texas sued Ken Paxton, claiming he acted unethically by trying to overturn the 2020 presidential election. They said he made dishonest statements in his lawsuits and asked the court to punish him — this could be anything from a warning to taking away his license to practice law. Paxton called the Bar “leftists” and even opened an investigation into the Texas Bar Foundation. He also banned employees in his office from speaking at Bar events. When the court refused to throw out the case, Paxton appealed, arguing that as Attorney General, he shouldn’t be punished for filing lawsuits, even if they had false claims. Then, in August 2023, just before his impeachment trial, fourteen lawyers filed another complaint asking the Bar to stop Paxton from practicing law completely. They accused him of abusing his office, bribery, and other misconduct. Three former presidents of the Texas Bar signed that complaint too. [4]The Texas Tribune • Impeachment by Texas House (2023) In May 2023, the Texas House of Representatives voted to impeach Ken Paxton on 20 articles, including bribery, obstruction of justice, dereliction of duty, and retaliation against whistleblowers. He was suspended from office while awaiting trial in the Texas Senate. In September 2023, the Texas Senate acquitted Paxton on all charges after a heated trial. He returned to his role as Attorney General, calling the effort a “political sham.” [5]CNN Politics |
Social Media | • Instagram |
Relationships & More | |
Marital Status | Married |
Affair/Girlfriend | Laura Olson (American professor of Russian Program) |
Marriage Date | 1986 |
Family | |
Wife/Spouse | Angela Paxtron (American Politician, Senator) (m. 1986 - sep. 2024)![]() |
Children | Son- Tucker Paxton Daughter(s)- 3 • Abby Paxton • Katie Paxton • Mattie Paxton ![]() |
Parents | Father- Warren Kenneth Paxton Sr. (Deceased) Mother- Sally Ann Sandidge (Deceased) |
Money Factor | |
Net Worth | $3 million (as of 2024) |
Some Lesser Known Facts About Ken Paxton
- Ken Paxton is the 51st Attorney General of Texas.
- Paxton was born on Minot Air Force Base in North Dakota, where his father was stationed while in the United States Air Force.
- He grew up living in various cities of the USA, such as Florida, New York, North Carolina, California, and Oklahoma.
- In his childhood, his family lived in a trailer, often without air conditioning, parked wherever his father was temporarily stationed.
- In his childhood, Paxton was a fan of football. He carried a jersey autographed by Bill Bates, who was formerly a player Dallas Cowboys football team.
- When Paxton was 12 years old, he nearly lost an eye while playing hide-and-seek. A misdiagnosis resulted in long-term vision problems. As a consequence, his good eye is green, while the damaged one is brown and droopy. He further injured his eye while in college.
- While studying at Baylor University, he was elected president of the student government.
- From 1986 to 1988, Ken Paxton worked as a management consultant at Arthur Anderson LLP, Chicago.
- In 1988, Ken enrolled in the University of Virginia School of Law and received a Juris Doctor degree in 1991.
- In the 1990s. Paxton and his wife, Angela, helped financially to found Stonebriar Community Church, a Christian evangelical megachurch, in Frisco, Texas.
- From 1991 to 1995, Ken Paxton worked in a law firm named Strasburger & Price, LLP in Dallas, USA, as an Attorney.
- In 2002, Ken Paxton joined politics by joining the Republican party, where he was elected to the Texas House of Representatives in 2002, serving District 70 in Collin County for the next ten years till 2012.
- In 2012, Ken Paxton won a senator seat in the Texas Senate (District 8), succeeding Florence Shapiro. He served in the position till 2015.
- During his time as senator, Paxton became known for sponsoring anti-abortion legislation and opposing Common Core education standards.
- In 2012, he participated in a lawsuit filed by 33 state attorneys general against Apple, accusing the company of violating antitrust laws by tying up with publishers to artificially raise the prices of electronic books.
- In 2014, Ken Paxton became a candidate for the Texas attorney general election. In the general election held on November 4, 2014, Paxton defeated his Democratic opponent, Sam Houston, an attorney from Houston. Paxton won the attorney general’s election without the endorsement of a single Texas newspaper.
- He took the office on January 5, 2015. After a few months of taking charge as AG, he was indicted for felony securities fraud charges.
- In 2015, Paxton set up a human trafficking unit in the Attorney General’s office. By 2019, he successfully convinced Texas lawmakers to increase the unit’s annual funding by more than four times. However, in 2020, the unit did not achieve any human trafficking convictions, and in 2021, it only tracked four convictions, two of which resulted in dismissal.
- As Attorney General, Paxton appointed several social conservatives and prominent opponents of LGBT rights to positions in his department.
- In June 2015, after the Supreme Court ruled that same-sex couples have a constitutional right to marry, Paxton expressed support for clerks who refused to issue marriage licenses to same-sex couples. He stated,
I will do everything I can from this office to be a public voice for those who are standing in defense of their rights.”
- In 2016, Paxton led a movement of twenty-six states which they challenged President Barack Obama‘s Deferred Action for Parents of Americans and Lawful Permanent Residents (DAPA) executive action. This action granted deferred action to certain undocumented immigrants who had lived in the United States since 2010 and had children who were American citizens or lawful permanent residents.
- In 2016, Ken was one of eleven Republican state attorneys general who supported ExxonMobil in the company’s attempt to block a climate change investigation by the Commonwealth of Massachusetts.
- He had also sued the Obama administration over a 2016 rule by the United States Department of Labor, which would have made five million additional workers eligible for overtime pay.
- Ken Paxton is an advocate of handgun culture in the United States. In 2016, when three professors from the University of Texas at Austin filed a lawsuit to prohibit concealed handguns on campus and challenge the state’s campus carry law, Paxton described the lawsuit as “frivolous” and dismissed it. Additionally, he took legal action against the City of Austin to permit license holders to openly carry handguns in Austin City Hall.
- In July 2017, Paxton, along with a group of Republican Attorneys General, threatened the Trump administration with legal action if the president did not terminate the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) policy that had been implemented by President Barack Obama.
- In the same year, Paxton filed lawsuits against six Texas cities to remove marijuana decriminalization measures adopted by citizens.
- In 2018, Paxton ran unopposed in the Republican primary for re-election.
- With the endorsement of U.S. President Donald Trump, he won second time as attorney general in the general election held on November 6, 2018. Paxton narrowly defeated his opponents, Democratic nominee Justin Nelson, a lawyer, and Libertarian Party nominee Michael Ray Harris.
- In 2020 and 2021, during COVID-19, Ken Paxton threatened and sued local governments like Austin for keeping strict safety rules on people, like stay-at-home orders, mask mandates, and limits on indoor dining in restaurants. He called Austin’s contact tracing ideas “Orwellian” and fought their mask rules even after the governor ended the statewide mask mandate.
- In October 2020, seven of Ken Paxton’s top officials accused him of serious misconduct in a letter to their HR director. They claimed Paxton had abused his office, accepted bribes, and used his position to help his friend and donor, real estate developer Nate Paul, who had given Paxton’s campaign $25,000 in the 2018 general election.
- For several years, Paxton was involved in an extramarital affair. Although he claimed to have ended the affair in 2018, it reportedly continued at least until 2020. Nate Paul allegedly arranged to meet Paxton with his girlfriend so she could move to Austin. He also helped Paxton connect with her through a secret Uber account that they created with a pseudonym.
- On December 8, 2020, after Joe Biden won over Donald Trump, Ken Paxton filed a lawsuit against the states of Georgia, Michigan, Wisconsin, and Pennsylvania. In the lawsuit, he alleged various unconstitutional actions, including voter fraud. Following the 2020 election, Paxton’s office spent over 22,000 hours investigating claims of voter fraud. However, they found only 16 false addresses on registration forms out of nearly 17 million registered voters.
- In 2022, Paxton won the Attorney General of Texas office for the third time.
- On May 25, 2023, the Republican Party-led House General Investigating Committee mutually recommended the impeachment of Ken Paxton. The committee filed a total of 20 articles of his impeachment.
- On May 27, 2023, Paxton was impeached after the Texas House voted 121-23 in favour of impeachment. Sixty Republicans and sixty-one Democrats voted for impeachment, while all twenty-three who opposed it were Republicans.
- After the impeachment, the Texas House of Representatives appointed 12 representatives (seven Republicans and five Democrats) to serve as impeachment managers. His wife, Angela Paxton, was also one of the senators in his impeachment trial. However, the Senate voted to bar her from voting in her husband’s impeachment trial.
- The impeachment trial began on September 5, 2023, and concluded on September 16, 2023, in which the Senate dismissed Paxton on all charges, with 16 Republicans voting to acquit and 12 Democrats plus 2 Republicans voting to convict. He resumed office on September 18, 2023.
- In August 2023, just a week before Ken Paxton’s impeachment trial began in the state Senate, 14 lawyers submitted a complaint to the State Bar, where they sought to prevent Paxton from practicing law. In the complaint, they accused Paxton of abusing his office and engaging in other misconduct, including bribery and organised crime.
- He met his wife, Angela Allen, while they were students at Baylor University. She is the state Senator for District 8 and a former teacher and guidance counsellor at Legacy Christian Academy in Frisco.
- Ken’s wife was considered as his closest political advisor. She often opens up his events with a musical performance. She oftenly called her husband “a very competitive person”.
- On April 8, 2025, Paxton went on the Ingraham Angle (an American conservative news and opinion-based talk show) to announce his candidacy for the U.S. Senate, challenging current senior Senator John Cornyn.
- On July 10, 2025, Angela Paxton, his wife, tweeted that she had “filed for divorce on biblical grounds.” The court filing claimed that Ken Paxton was at fault for committing adultery and stated that the couple had not lived together since June 2024.
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