Fort Bend County District Attorney Brian Middleton acknowledged last week that embattled Judge KP George is making every possible attempt to get out of being prosecuted for money laundering and involvement in a social media hoax, but said George’s allegations of prosecutorial misconduct are meritless.
George, who has served as Fort Bend County judge since 2019, is scheduled for a jury trial on a misdemeanor charge of identity misrepresentation โ involving allegations that he worked with a staff member to fake racist attacks against his own campaign on social media โ on January 6, with a pre-trial conference hearing set for December 16.
Middleton is also planning to prosecute George on felony money laundering charges in February. A pretrial hearing on that case, which alleges that George used campaign funds to pay his property taxes and put a down payment on a house, is scheduled for December 15 in the 458th District Court.
George, a new Republican, and Middleton, a Democrat, are both up for re-election in 2026. George has maintained that Middleton is pursuing a political vendetta against him and committed prosecutorial misconduct by withholding evidence, including recorded conversations and text messages about the cases against George.
Middletonโs response to Georgeโs accusations states that several text messages sent to the media by George’s attorneys were cherry-picked from hundreds of thousands of communications and are unrelated to Middletonโs prosecutorial or governmental duties and responsibilities.
Georgeโs attorney Jared Woodfill published some of the text messages in a first round of legal filings on October 31 and added more fuel to the fire in another set of documents filed last week. Woodfill is asking that the cases against George be dismissed, or at the very least that Middleton and his office be disqualified from involvement in the case.
The attorney is also requesting the immediate cessation of encrypted, auto-deleting communication apps by the DAโs office and production of remaining electronic communications that havenโt yet been disclosed.
Woodfill told the Houston Press that he obtained secret audio recordings and text messages from Georgeโs former chief of staff Taral Patel, who was charged in the social media hoax and sentenced to probation. Those transcripts and text messages were not included in the discovery provided by the DAโs office, Woodfill said, alleging that Middleton withheld such evidence because he knew about the social media hoax while it was going on.
โWhat is extremely troubling is that the last few minutes of a three-hour proffer interview with Patel by the Fort Bend County District Attorneyโs Office has been wiped clean,โ Georgeโs legal filing states. โThis is highly suspicious, as the discussion just prior to erasure centered around which Fort Bend County public figures โ and of course Middleton is one of those public figures โ knew about Patelโs activities.โ
In Middletonโs response, he points out that a 130-second portion of the videotaped interview was indeed corrupted but his office provided a backup video that captured the entire meeting with Patel. Woodfill claims the backup video is of poor quality and even a transcriber wasnโt able to make out what was said.
The DAโs office responded to Georgeโs original legal documents by pointing out โthe inaccuracies and lack of evidence to support such wild accusations.โ
Wesley Wittig, second assistant DA and a spokesman for the office, said George continues to make false allegations and “the same tired argument,” but Middleton filed a response, and Houston attorney Brian Wice was sworn in on Friday to serve as a special prosecutor on the case. Wice will be assisting, but not replacing the DA, a hire funded through asset forfeiture funds, not taxpayer money, Wittig said.
โThis is yet another desperate attempt, in a long line of attempts, to smear anyone (especially the Fort Bend County District Attorney) through allegations that are baseless and inaccurate,โ Wittig said in an email to the Press. โThere is no retaliation, no misconduct, and no evidence was destroyed or withheld.โ
โWe look forward to challenging these assertions in the courtroom and focusing our energy on the upcoming trials of KP George for the criminal conduct he is charged with,โ Wittig added.
A 15-page legal filing from the DAโs office issued in early November states that โGeorge has shown no basis for disqualification of the Fort Bend County District Attorney’s Office on the merits of his motion. He does not cite a statutory reason for disqualification, nor does he allege a non-statutory circumstance the Court of Criminal Appeals has recognized as due process violation.โ
โInstead, he seeks to disqualify the elected District Attorney Brian Middleton and his entire office on the basis that at some point, prior to the filing of this case, DA Middleton used messaging application with disappearing-messages feature; that certain messages appear to demonstrate personal animus against him; and that if DA Middleton failed to preserve the messages it could constitute other law violations. This theory does not establish conflict of interest, much less one that meets the due process violation standard,โ the motion continues.
The text messages and phone call transcripts produced by Georgeโs legal team arenโt particularly flattering to Middleton. Theyโre littered with profanity and suggestions that the DAโs office wants to โdestroyโ political opponents. However, those close to the matter have pointed out that the documents came from Patel, who was sentenced for identity misrepresentation, and brought forth by the legal team of George, who is accused of faking social media accounts and posts.
Woodfill told the Press that he had not deposed Patel because thatโs not a standard practice in a criminal case, but he did ask for an evidentiary hearing, at which time a judge would likely ask the question of whether the text messages and recorded conversations were AI-generated or otherwise โfaked.โ
Middletonโs office has opposed an evidentiary hearing, claiming itโs not needed since the accusations are without merit.
Woodfill said last week the text messages obtained from Patelโs phone outline numerous conversations with Middleton that prove the DA is willing to take down those who oppose him.
โIt appears based on that evidence that we put in our motion that if you cross [Middleton] or make him mad, he will fight you and go after you and use our taxpayer dollars to target you,โ Woodfill said. โThe recordings show that he was clearly complicit in the fake Facebook campaign. Why wouldnโt he disqualify himself and let another judge hear it? He needs to resign.โ
The felony case against George, 61, carries a potential sentence of two to 10 years in prison and fines of up to $10,000. Woodfill maintains that George gave himself a campaign loan, a common practice when running for office, and paid it back but the paperwork was not filed properly. As for the social media hoax, Georgeโs lawyers say thereโs no evidence that the judge was involved.
If anyone wants to wade through the back and forth paperwork that’s been filed in this case, here it is for your reading pleasure:
This article appears in Jan 1 – Dec 31, 2025.
