Texas AG expands order to halt Beto O'Rourke's group fundraising efforts

ASAN (KXAN) – The Texas Pact Prosecutor announced on Saturday that he had obtained a “temporary restriction” will stop former American MP Beto Orkork and his political group, supported by people “from removing any property or money outside Texas.”

Actblue, who is also involved in its operation by people, was included in this order, according to a press statement from the Paxton office.

Buckston said in the statement: “In Texas, the procedures free of law have consequences, and Beto finds this in the difficult way,” Paxon said in the statement.

All this comes after Paxton first got the temporary restriction order last week against people supported by people because of the “illegal donation collection activity” for Democrats who broke the quorum during the private session in Texas, A press release from his office. The provincial judge stood from Tarant County with Paxon by temporarily preventing the organization from collecting donations for “Democrats or supporting the quorum break.”

“This is the man we are talking about, and who was accused twice on charges of fraud in securities. Women and women, was isolated by the Legislative Council in Texas – a republican institution for the majority – on charges of bribery itself. Now because it proves that we are doing the right thing.”

The first special session ended on Friday after it had no legal quorum for the sixth consecutive time, as the House of Representatives failed to reach the old quorum required to conduct its work. In addition, the state governor Greg Abbott announced a second special session just minutes after the end of the first special session, which will include 18 original elements announced in the first one.

On Saturday, Uruk, supported by people who donated more than a million dollars to Democrats in Texas, announced during the private session, according to the Texas Tribune. “More than 55,000 donations,” he added, came from people throughout the country since the beginning of the first special session.

Earlier this month, Dourk filed a lawsuit against the public prosecutor after his prosecution. He asked the judge to prevent Buckston’s investigation in the people backed, claiming that he had participated in a “hunting trip, cursed constitutional rights,” according to the Tribune newspaper.

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