Texas taxpayers ROBBED to the tune of millions; paying for illegal aliens to lawyer up



Taxpayers in Texas have been footing the bill for illegal aliens to the tune of millions — as in just a year and a half alone, taxpayers spent upwards of $30 million on illegal alien representation in the justice system.

“Texans are still paying for illegals' attorneys, defense attorneys, due to this emergency court order issued in August 2021, way back when Texas created Operation Lonestar, which was, of course, an operation to try to get all of these illegal aliens the heck out of the state,” Sara Gonzales of “Sara Gonzales Unfiltered” explains, adding, “Because we knew that the Biden administration wasn’t going to help us out at all.”

“And in fact, of course, we watched them make it more difficult for us to patrol and police our own border. And so, we had this emergency court order that was issued all the way back in August 2021,” she continues.


Between 2024 and 2025, there was an allotment given through the Texas Indigent Defense Commission that was awarded to the Lonestar Defender's Office, which is a nonprofit organization that works with the TIDC.

This office received a taxpayer-funded grant of $30 million to provide defense attorneys for Operation Lonestar defendants.

“Now, what do we know about Operation Lonestar defendants? They’re all illegal criminals. How do you know that? Well, they walked onto our soil and shouldn’t have been here, which makes them a criminal,” Gonzales explains.

TIDC then upped the grant to $37 million in July 2024.

When all of this was happening, the then-Texas Supreme Court Chief Justice Nathan Hecht justified this as a constitutional right.

“Now, listen. I understand and obviously very much respect the Constitution. I love this country, I love our founding documents, I love our founding principles, I love our Founding Fathers, but you know, just look at how far we extend that to we really have to give illegal aliens a right to taxpayer money,” Gonzales says.

“That’s insane,” she adds.

Thankfully, under President Trump, we're finally seeing an end to the madness.

“And so now you have President Trump actually not fighting us, the federal government not fighting our state in removing these people, and since that has happened, Texas’s new Supreme Court chief justice’s office said that the chief justice does not anticipate an ongoing need for the Supreme Court’s intervention after the current order expires, which is set to end now May 1,” Gonzales explains.

“So there is an end in sight,” she adds.

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CENSORSHIP ALERT: Is Texas about to BAN political memes?



In an Orwellian move by former Speaker of the Texas House Rep. Dade Phelan (R), a bill has been filed that would criminalize political expression in Texas.

House Bill 366 would make it a crime to distribute altered media, including political memes, without a government-approved disclaimer. Violators of the proposed bill could face up to a year in jail for a political meme.

“Wait, I thought we wanted less government here in the state of Texas?” Sara Gonzales asks on “Come and Take It.” “I feel personally attacked. I’m not going to lie, I feel like this was written because Dade Phelan wants me in jail.”


The bill specifically targets political advertising that features an image, audio recording, or video recording of an office holder's or candidate's appearance, speech, or conduct that did not occur in reality.

This includes media altered using generative artificial intelligence technology.

“So like you can use AI to make any sort of memes, any sort of pictures, as ridiculous as they may be,” Gonzales says. “It doesn’t say, ‘Hey, if this is satire, you get a pass.’ This doesn’t say, ‘Hey, if this is so ridiculously absurd that any reasonable person would know that it’s clearly satire, that it is clearly made up, that it is clearly photoshopped’ — it doesn’t give a pass for any of that.”

Representative Phelan said in response to criticism, “I’m not coming for your memes. If you like your memes, you can keep your memes. This has nothing to do with X or Facebook or anything on social media.”

But Gonzales isn’t buying it.

“It’s just that the TEC general counsel James Tinley blatantly said that social media posts would be covered under this communist China-style law,” she says, noting that Phelan’s response was a play on something Barack Obama once said.

“‘If you like your doctor, you can keep your doctor, if you like your health care, you can keep your health care,’” Gonzales says. “So obviously, a throwback to that line. It’s just cute because in the same way that Obama was lying when he said that, Dade Phelan is also lying when he says, ‘If you like your memes, you can keep your memes.’”

“So the irony is not lost on me,” she adds.

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