The Mission

Transparency is not a smear campaign.

Expect the standard, focus-grouped response: that this project is a “political hit job,” the work of disgruntled rivals. Let them say it. A smear relies on lies. This relies on the public record — grand-jury “no-bills,” sealed dockets, campaign finance filings, and an 18-year track record. You cannot smear a public official by holding up a mirror to the official record. When a system is built on secrecy, the truth itself feels like an attack.

Who we are

We are not politicians and we are not part of any establishment’s inner circle. We are the taxpayers who fund the office. We are parents who send children to public schools. We are residents who use the same roads and courts as everyone else. We don’t hold a political action committee or a country-club table. What we have is the public record — and a refusal to let it stay buried.

The objective: civic reclamation

Accountability is not a partisan issue; it is a civic one. For nearly two decades the Rockwall County District Attorney has operated with little public scrutiny, shielded by a culture of polite, suburban silence. This project exists to break that silence — to build a permanent, public, sourced archive of the record that cannot be buried, sealed, or quietly swept aside.

If you benefit from the current arrangement, consider this notice: the era of plausible deniability is ending. The record is going on the wall, in public, with citations.