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Former Paxton Aide: I Didn’t Ask For Departure Deal

Allison Castle, a former aide to Attorney General Ken Paxton, said Friday that he asked her to resign her post and that she did not ask for nor negotiate a now-controversial departure package.

Allison Castle, left, resigned in March 2016 from her position as senior communications director for Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton, right.

A former aide to Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton said Friday that he asked for her resignation and that she did not ask for nor negotiate a now-controversial departure package that left the state paying her thousands of dollars in salary and benefits.

“The attorney general wanted to bring in a new team and go in a different direction, and that is certainly his prerogative,” said Allison Castle, who resigned as senior communications director for the embattled attorney general on March 9. 

Paxton’s request for her resignation was unexpected, said Castle, who was a veteran adviser to former Gov. Rick Perry before she joined Paxton’s team. After being handed a pre-written resignation letter including the terms of a compensation package, she said she signed it, packed up her belongings and was out of the AG’s office that afternoon. 

Castle said she had no reason to question the appropriateness of the terms. 

The benefits and compensation deal granted Castle 64 days of paid leave. Another outgoing adviser who resigned at the same time as Castle, first assistant attorney general Chip Roy, received a similar package.

Paxton currently faces three state felony charges and a federal civil lawsuit over claims he misled investors in personal business dealings before he became attorney general. He has pled not guilty and denied any wrongdoing in the cases, which he says are politically motivated.

Paxton’s office did not return a request for comment Friday afternoon. But earlier this week, the agency’s human resources director John Poole defended both deals — since scrutinized by media reports, and as of Friday, the subject of a liberal advocacy group’s request for investigation from the State Auditor’s Office — in an op-ed. Poole said Paxton "acted in a compassionate, legal, and ethical manner.” He said the AG acted under a provision in state law that permits paid leave for employees for "good cause."

Roy, who now works for a super PAC supporting Republican presidential candidate Ted Cruz, later clarified that he was using an "option for leave beyond my earned vacation and holiday time," primarily to cover health care costs associated with his recovery from cancer. He declined to comment for this story. 

In addition to Castle and Roy, the agency has recently lost a number of other employees, including chief of staff Bernard McNamee, scheduler Katie Lawhon and two spokeswomen, Katherine Wise and Cynthia Meyer.

Lawhon, who, like Roy and Castle, also received administrative leave upon her resignation, told The Texas Tribune on Friday she did not negotiate paid leave beyond her earned vacation time. She said she was informed that she would be getting additional administrative leave, details that appeared in a pre-written resignation letter she later received.  

Amid the staffing shakeup, Paxton, a McKinney Republican, has filled several key positions with longtime allies from North Texas.

His new communications director is Marc Rylander, a former pastor at Prestonwood Baptist Church, where Paxton is a member. Rylander has supported efforts to cut payments to special prosecutors appointed to pursue the financial fraud charges the attorney general currently faces in state court.

Paxton tapped Jeff Mateer, the former general counsel for the First Liberty Institute, to replace Roy as first assistant attorney general. He also hired that Plano-based conservative legal defense foundation’s deputy chief counsel, Hiram Sasser, as his chief of staff. 

Paxton’s ties with the group date back to the start of his political career. He has credited First Liberty’s executive director, Kelly Shackelford, with helping to plant the seed that Paxton run for the Texas House in 2002.  

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