Judge DaSean Jones (far right) is not a "SOFT ON CRIME JUDGE." Judge DaSean Jones is a high-ranking combat military veteran, loving father, and husband with a biological female wife who bore him two beautiful children. In his 18th Criminal District courtroom, Judge DaSean Jones issues court rulings from the bench following the law while using our beloved United States Constitution and the rule of law as his guide. Judge Jones is also a fierce defender of America's assets at home and abroad. The freedoms we all enjoy but sometimes take for granted are protected by the brave men and women of our United States Military, like combat veteran Judge DaSean Jones, who serves as the presiding judge for the 180th Criminal District Court. Judge Jones deserves better than becoming the target of a "RACIST LGBTQ+MOB" seeking to purge him and heterosexual African American female judges from local judicial benches. However, this evil, vindictive, revengeful, retaliatory plot was not hatched in the mind of Tami C. Pierce, even though her fellow "LGBTQ+ COMMUNITY MEMBERS," like Kay Shepard and others, are the driving forces behind the plot to purge "BLACK HETEROSEXUAL JUDGES" from local judicial benches in Harris County, Texas. AS PROOF of my assertion, you only need to review the results of the 2022 Midterm Election, where the only "DEMOCRATIC JUDICIAL CANDIDATES" who were defeated running countywide were African Americans with ethnic-sounding names. Judge Ronnisha Bowman, Je'Rell Rogers, Gemayel Hanes, and Porchia Natasha Brown are the names I'm referring to as targeted Black judicial candidates from the Tuesday, November 8, 2022, Midterm Election.
The guy in the cowboy hat on the right is Nile Copeland, a former Democrat who flipped to a Republican and has lost every judicial race he's entered. Investigative Reporter/publisher Aubrey R. Taylor (left) is the person who designed and printed the campaign sign and push card you see Tami C. Pierce (Center) holding in her hand. After rumors began circulating around Harris County, Texas, about Tami C. Pierce being a lesbian (RINO) "Republican in Name Only," who had slipped her way into the 2022 Republican Party Primary unnoticed, she began to get worried and her consultant called Aubrey R. Taylor Communications for help in fending off some of the negative criticisms that were coming her way. Tami C. Pierce and her wife/husband, Dr. Stephanie L. Gross-Pierce, paid Aubrey R. Taylor Communications $27,000.00 over 2 months to run her ground game.
"THE BACK STORY."
The difficulty Tami C. Pierce (Republican) has heading into the upcoming Saturday, May 3, 2025, between her and Judge DaSean Jones for the 180th Criminal District Court is that the rank-and-file Republican voters are beginning to realize that she's a member of the "LGBTQ+ COMMUNITY," and many the fact that she has been married to a woman for nearly 22 years. That said, Tami C. Pierce and her wife/husband, Stephanie L. Gross-Pierce, love each other dearly and should not be forced to hide their marriage for political gain. I love Tami, Stephanie, Judge DaSean Jones, and his wife Audia. However, rank-and-file Republican and Democratic voters deserve to have all of the facts laid out for them so that they vote for their values and select the candidate they feel is right for them.
- VIEW DOCUMENT -
Tami Pierce paid Aubrey R. Taylor Communications $12,500.00 on 10/20/2022, $12,500.00 on 8/31/2022, and another $2,000.00 on 10/20/2022 for consulting, branding, marketing, polling place support, and public relations services.
Judge DaSean Jones and his beautiful wife, Audia Jones, are happily married and have been huge supporters of Aubrey R. Taylor Communications for years. Their support has been very much appreciated. Judge DaSean Jones wrote (3) three checks to Aubrey R. Taylor Communications over the years. He paid $1,250.00 on 8/24/2018, $2,500.00 on 9/7/2021, and another $2,500.00 on 8/27/2022 for advertising and marketing services inside Houston Business Connections Newspaper. Note: Judge DaSean Jones being pictured in uniform does not constitute an endorsement by the Department of Defense in any way, shape, or form.
- VIEW DOCUMENT -
- VIEW DOCUMENT -
Aubrey R. Taylor Communications publishes Houston Business Connections Newspaper© to inform, empower, and mobilize our "OPEN-MINDED READERS" and assist them in making informed voting decisions. Aubrey R. Taylor is one of the top investigative reporters in the southwest region of the United States of America.
Judge DaSean Jones and Tami C Pierce Will Face Off on Saturday, May 3, 2025, In the race for the 180th Criminal District Court
AUBREY R. TAYLOR REPORTS©
Many political operatives operating deep inside the upper ranks of the Harris County Democratic Party have a problem with Judge DaSean Jones because he is a no-nonsense “HETEROSEXUAL JUDGE” who does not play political games from his bench. Nor is Judge DaSean Jones afraid of the “POLITICAL PARTY BOSSES” or their cronies like Kay Shepard, who is little more than a nuisance to him.
I don’t have a problem with people not voting for Judge DaSean Jones or other “BLACK JUDGES” because they believe that an “AFRICAN AMERICAN JUDGE” isn’t as qualified as their opponent in a given race. However, not voting for a “BLACK JUDICIAL CANDIDATE” because of their skin color is another issue – a form of overt discrimination fueled by racism.
Listen! Plain and simple, it’s a fact that racism is still alive and well in America. And it’s also a fact that our “CRIMINAL JUSTICE SYSTEM” is broken and needs to be reformed. However, we cannot allow people with racist ideologies to make their way onto local judicial benches from the right or the left.
As a reminder, systematically skipping over ethnic-sounding names in “JUDICIAL RACES” is one of the most blatant forms of discrimination that has surfaced in Harris County, Texas, over the last few election cycles that my investigative team and I have identified.
What’s unfolding if we don’t get a handle on this “OVERT RACISM” that has taken hold of the hearts and minds of a segment of the voting population is a situation where all (26) twenty-six of the African American Democratic incumbent judges up for re-election in the 2026 Midterms will be swept from office – without any regard to their job performance, judicial temperament, or qualifications,
Republicans did not conceptualize the “OVERT RACISM” my investigative team and I have uncovered, where African Americans are systematically getting targeted in down-ballot judicial races. If you ask me, a handful of racist Democrats began to infiltrate the Harris County Republican Party once African Americans started winning local judicial races over the last decade.
“THE PROBLEM.”
When a little-known attorney named Elaine Palmer unseated a well-known ‘openly gay’ Democrat Judge named Judge Steven Kirkland in the 2012 Democratic Party Primary, members of the “LGBTQ+ COMMUNITY” and other Liberals did not take kindly to a “BLACK WOMAN” defeating a “WHITE MAN” in the race for the 215th Civil District Court, in Harris County, Texas – which was a bitter contest.
And in the 2020 Democratic Party Primary, when a little-known attorney named Dawn DaShea Rogers ran against Judge Steven Kirkland, her fellow Democrat, and took his second judicial bench (the 334th Civil District Court bench) away, rumblings of retribution began to surface.
In essence, with the abolishment of “STRAIGHT-TICKET VOTING” in Texas, we can see significant gaps between the number of votes African Americans running as Democrats in down-ballot judicial races are receiving and nominees from other ethnic groups running as Democrats are receiving.
“BLACK GIRL MAGIC.”
Judge Ronnisha Bowman was the only member of the “BLACK GIRL MAGIC” phenomenon who got defeated in the 2022 Midterms. Still, she and three other African Americans running as Democrats in countywide judicial races lost their opportunities to become judges due to becoming targets in the scheme to “SYSTEMATICALLY TARGET” African American judges by using the code phrase: “SOFT ON CRIME JUDGES,” recently used to target more African American members of the judiciary in the recent 2024, Presidential Election.
“BROKEN SYSTEM.”
You may not know this, but nearly 60% of the people that the “INNOCENCE PROJECT” has helped to exonerate and set free from prison since 1992 are Black men. Like it or not, we have a two-tiered Criminal Justice System in America.
Listen. You can’t say that President Donald Trump was “WRONGFULLY CONVICTED” and did not get a fair shot in court and then turn around and ignore the thousands upon thousands of innocent “BLACK MEN” who are sitting behind bars in prison all across America simply because they could not afford the type of representation that President Trump was able to afford to put forth his defense.
Trust me when I tell you I know what it feels like to be on the wrong side of the law without resources. I also know what it feels like to stand before an “UNJUST JUDGE” who is racist and dead-bent on making you another statistic.
Nobody is perfect, but it’s a fact that African American males are treated more harshly by the Criminal Justice System than any other ethnic group in America. Truth be told, the 13th Amendment to our United States Constitution defines incarceration as another form of slavery.
The 13th Amendment to our United States Constitution states, “Neither slavery nor involuntary servitude, except as a punishment for crime whereof the party shall have been duly convicted, shall exist within the United States, or any place subject to their jurisdiction.”
What does “INVOLUNTARY SERVITUDE” mean? When you get right down to it, Involuntary servitude is nothing more than a condition of servitude or (forced imprisonment) formed as schemes, plans, or patterns related to confinement intended to cause harm to the person or someone else.
What you might not know is that in 50% of the cases where African American men have been wrongfully convicted and confined, the police used investigatory practices that were deceptive during the interrogation process. The police also used threats to coerce witnesses and racially profiled the wrongfully convicted individuals in nearly all the wrongfully convicted cases.
In the courts, “ROGUE PROSECUTORS” also played significant roles in nearly all of the cases where African American males were wrongfully convicted. In many cases, “ROGUE PROSECUTORS” would officer plea bargains that would allow a person immediate release from pretrial detention; this acted as a strong incentive for an innocent person to go before a judge or magistrate to plead guilty and accept responsibility and punishment for a crime they did not commit.
What you might not know is that in nearly 25% of all the cases where “THE INNOCENCE PROJECT” helped to free wrongly convicted “BLACK AND BROWN MEN” since 1989, plead guilty.
“LOOKING AHEAD.”
The upcoming Saturday, May 3, 2025, “RE-DO ELECTION” between Tami C. Pierce and Judge DaSean Jones is much more than an “OFF CYCLE” political contest between a man and a woman. The 180th Civil District Court race is a contest between two remarkable individuals (one an outstanding prosecutor) and the other an honorable man of valor with the judicial pedigree to match.
“WRONGFUL CONVICTIONS.”
AUBREY R. TAYLOR COMMUNICATIONS
EMAIL: aubreyrtaylor@gmail.com
957 NASA PARKWAY #251
HOUSTON, TEXAS 77058-3039
DIRECT CONTACT:
(281)788-3033
Tami C. Pierce (left) and her wife/husband, Dr. Stephanie L. Gross-Pierce, M.D., have been happily married for over 22 years. Tami and Stephanie are two of the most sociable, caring, loving people I have ever met. Their love for one another is truly genuine. However, Cindy Siegel, the chairman of the Harris County Republican Party, has a responsibility as chairman to give Republican voters facts about their nominees to help them get a better understanding of who they are voting for when they go to the polls. It is unfair to mislead "REPUBLICAN VOTERS" by not informing them that Tami C. Pierce, the candidate running against Judge DaSean Jones on Saturday, May 3, 2025, is a member of the "LGBTQ+ COMMUNITY," but ran under the radar during the 2022 Midterm Election as a Republican Judicial nominee. How difficult is that? After all, A few weeks ago, several Republican lawmakers introduced
legislation to clarify that the terms “male,” “female,” and “sex,” among others,
refer to the biological distinctions between men and women.
Kay Shepard, a woman who was accused by State Rep. Shawn Theirry of stalking her after she rebuffed her sexual advances, appears to be on a mission to help her fellow "LGBTQ+ SISTER" defeat Judge DaSean Jones on Saturday, May 3, 2025, in the "DO-OVER RACE" for the 180th Criminal District Court, in Harris County, Texas.
---------- Forwarded message ---------
From: KAY SHEPARD <kayshepard@yahoo.com>
Date: Tue, Dec 17, 2024 at 1:43 PM
Subject: Has anyone see Candidate DeSean Jones?
To: Precinct Chairs,
"As we gear up for the May 2025 elections, there’s only one judicial race on the ballot: Desean Jones, who is running for a criminal bench seat. Now, as most of you know, his previous election was overturned, and for reasons that are still a mystery to us all, he opted not to have his case heard alongside the others. Why? I have no idea. Does he think he's a solo act in a group project?
Anyway, this creates a bit of a conundrum for me. It seems like he’s under the impression that he’s all on his own, but last I checked, he’s a Democrat, and we’re all here to help elect DEMOCRATS. I’m committed to our party’s success, but honestly, Desean’s actions are making me wonder if he thinks he's a solo act and doesn't need a team's support.
Let’s take a trip down memory lane. A few years ago, during our sweep in Harris County, it honestly felt like Desean just jumped on the bandwagon, waved from the back seat, and went along for the ride. You could’ve called him the "Invisible Candidate" because he was nowhere to be found—no block walks, no phone banks, not even a yard sign. I’m starting to think he thought the “DEMOCRATIC PARTY” was a kind of all-you-can-eat buffet where you can take credit without lifting a finger. Then, to add insult to injury, he threw a victory party for himself, even though he did absolutely nothing to earn it. It was like watching someone show up at a potluck with an empty plate and leave with a doggy bag.
Now, we’ve got a serious problem on our hands. Why on earth did he choose to separate his case? Does he think he’s the chosen one, some kind of judicial Jedi? Does he think he’s better than the rest of us? I mean, is campaigning beneath him? I’m honestly starting to think he’s treating this race like a Netflix show—he’s in it, but he’s not really in it, you know?
He doesn’t even have a website. Not one sign, not one piece of lit, flyer, nothing. He’s like the “Where’s Waldo?” of the Harris County election scene. Has anyone actually seen him campaigning in Harris County? Crickets… I haven’t either. It's like he’s running a “ghost campaign”—which, come to think of it, could actually be his strategy: invisibility. He's not even attending Democratic events where he’s the honoree. If he’s showing up at a party, it’s the kind where the guest of honor has left before anyone arrives.
But here’s the thing—despite all of this, we have no choice but to work our tails off to keep this seat blue. We can’t let the Republicans gain any more ground, and that’s why I’m reaching out to all of you. We need to win this seat—not because we’re in love with the candidate (though I’m still waiting for him to make an appearance), but because we need to make sure Harris County stays blue.
At this point, I’m not sure if we’re electing Desean Jones or the idea of Desean Jones. But hey, that’s democracy for you—sometimes you get the candidate you deserve, and other times, you get the one who left their campaign in the “drafts” folder.
So, let’s do what we do best—work harder than the person we’re supporting. If Desean Jones won’t show up for his own race, we’ll show up for him. Because, at the end of the day, it's not about him; it’s about us-DEMOCRATS. And if he shows up to the polls on election day, I’ll be the first one to say, “Welcome to the team, buddy.”
Let’s keep this seat blue, no matter who’s running. DEMOCRATS we must save this seat.
Much Love,
We must be more cognizant and bring forth viable candidates who will represent our party well.
Please share this email with others. Sometimes I duplicate and other times I miss folks."
Judge Dawn DaShea Rogers ran unchallenged in the 2024 Democratic Party Primary, and the Republicans had difficulty filling out their judicial slots for the 2024 Presidential Election, which allowed Judge Dawn DaShea Rogers to run for re-election unopposed. However, what you may not realize is Judge Rogers, the presiding judge for the 334th Civil District Court, ran against and defeated a very popular "LGBTQ+ JUDGE" named Judge Steven Kirkland, which did not sit well with members of the "LGBTQ+ POLITICAL CAUCUS," and their allies. To make matters worse, Dawn DaShea Rogers wasn't the first Black female to target Judge Kirkland and defeat him in a Democratic Party Primary. In 2012, a little-known African American attorney named Elaine Palmer challenged Judge Steven Kirkland for his 215th Civil District Court bench and, after a bitter primary battle, defeated him, which enraged members of the Democratic Party.
Judge DaSean Jones is not a "SOFT ON CRIME JUDGE" but a "FAMILY MAN" who values and respects the sanctity of holy matrimony between a man and a woman. Besides being a heterosexual male, Judge DaSean Jones is a decorated combat veteran and former civil rights attorney currently serving as the presiding judge for the 180th Criminal District Court. Truth be told, Judge DaSean Jones’s military experience, love for America, and willingness to lay his life down to protect America's interests at home and abroad is a combination of asset qualities that make him one of the “MOST UNIQUELY QUALIFIED” members of the judiciary in Texas if not the entire nation. NOTE: Judge DaSean Jones, being pictured above in his military uniform, does not constitute an endorsement by the Department of Defense (DOD) in any way, shape, or form.
Judge Dasean Jones, appears to have "POLITICAL OPERATIVES" working against him like Kay Shepard from inside the Harris County Democratic Party. This story is still developing, but from what we can see, Kay Shepard appears to be trying to sabotage Judge DaSean Jones's re-election Campaign.
Judge Lashawn Williams, Judge Angela Graves Harrington, Judge Shannon Baldwin, Judge Tonya Jones, and Judge Toria J. Finch will be in the fight of their political lives as Democrats are already contemplating challenging the (26) twenty-six "AFRICAN AMERICAN JUDGES" who are up for re-election in the upcoming 2026 Midterm Election for Harris County, Texas. However, I'm not sure why so many potential candidates are seeking to run against the (26) twenty-six African American incumbent judges when there will be (68) sixty-eight local benches up for grabs in the 2026 Midterm Election in Harris County, Texas.
There are (68) Sixty-Eight Local Benches to Choose From in the 2026 Midterms
55th Civil District Court
Judge Latosha Lewis Payne (DEM)
113th Civil District Court
Judge Rabeea Collier (DEM)
157th Civil District Court
Judge Tanya Garrison (DEM)
180th Criminal District Court
Judge DaSean Jones (DEM)
182nd Criminal District Court
Judge Danilo "Danny" Lacayo (DEM)
183rd Criminal District Court
Kristin M. Guiney (REP)
Judge Kristin M. Guiney ran for the 1st Court of Appeals District, Place 8, and defeated Judge Richard Hightower and, therefore, will not be on the 2026 Midterm Election ballot.
184th Criminal District Court
Judge Katherine "Kat" Thomas (DEM)
185th Criminal District Court
Judge Andrea Beall (DEM)
189th Civil District Court
Katherine "Kat" Thomas (DEM)
190th Civil District Court
Judge Beau Miller (DEM)
208th Criminal District Court
Judge Beverly Armstrong (DEM)
209th Criminal District Court
Judge Brian E. Warren (DEM)
228th Criminal District Court
(Deceased) Judge Frank Aguilar (DEM)
230th Criminal District Court
Judge Chris Morton (DEM)
232nd Criminal District Court
Judge Josh Hill (Dem)
234th Civil District Court
Judge Lauren Reeder (DEM)
248th Criminal District Court
Judge Hilary Unger (DEM)
262nd Criminal District Court
Judge Lori Chambers Gray (DEM)
263rd Criminal District Court
Judge Melissa Marie Morris (DEM)
269th Civil District Court
Judge Cory Don Sepolio (DEM)
270th Civil District Court
Judge Dedra Davis (DEM)
281st Civil District Court
Judge Christine Weems (DEM
295th Civil District Court
Judge Donna Roth (DEM)
482nd Criminal District Court
Judge Veronica M. Nelson (DEM)
246th Family District Court
Judge Angela Graves Harrington (DEM)
247th Family District Court
Judge Janice Berg (DEM)
257th Family District Court
Judge Sandra Peake (DEM)
280th Family Protective Court
Judge Damiene Dianne Curvey (DEM)
308th Family District Court
Judge Gloria Lopez (DEM)
309th Family District Court
Judge Linda Marie Dunson (DEM)
310th Family District Court
Judge Sonya Leah Heath (DEM)
311th Family District Court
Judge Germaine Ja'net Tanner (DEM)
312th Family District Court
Judge Teresa J. Waldrop (DEM)
313th Juvenile District Court
Judge Natalia Cokinos Oakes (DEM)
314th Juvenile District Court
Judge Michelle Moore (DEM)
315th Juvenile District Court
Judge Leah Shapiro (DEM)
Harris County Judge
County Judge Lina Hidalgo (DEM)
County Civil Court at Law No. 1
Judge Audrie Lawton Evans (DEM)
County Civil Court at Law No. 2
Judge Jim F. Kovach (DEM)
County Civil Court at Law No. 3
Judge LaShawn A. Williams (DEM)
County Civil Court at Law No. 4
Judge M.K. Monica Singh (DEM)
County Criminal Court at Law No. 1
Judge Alex Salgado (DEM)
County Criminal Court at Law No. 2
Judge Paula Goodhart (REP)
County Criminal Court at Law No. 3
Judge Leslie Johnson (REP)
County Criminal Court at Law No. 4
Judge Shannon Baldwin (DEM)
County Criminal Court at Law No. 5
Judge David Marcel Fleischer (DEM)
County Criminal Court at Law No. 6
Judge Kelly Andrews (DEM)
County Criminal Court at Law No. 7
Judge Andrew A. Wright (DEM)
County Criminal Court at Law No. 8
Judge Erika Ramirez (DEM)
County Criminal Court at Law No. 9
Judge Toria J. Finch (DEM)
County Criminal Court at Law No. 10
Judge Juanita Jackson (DEM)
County Criminal Court at Law No. 11
Judge Sedrick T. Walker, II (DEM)
County Criminal Court at Law No. 12
Judge Genesis E. Draper (DEM)
County Criminal Court at Law No. 13
Judge Raul Rodriguez (DEM)
County Criminal Court at Law No. 14
Judge Jessica N. Padilla (REP)
County Criminal Court at Law No. 15
Judge Tonya Jones (DEM)
County Probate Court No. 1
Judge Jerry Simoneaux (DEM)
County Probate Court No. 2
Judge Pamela Medina (DEM)
County Probate Court No. 3
Judge Jason Cox (DEM)
County Probate Court No. 4
Judge James Horwitz (DEM)
Justice of the Peace, Precinct 1, Place 2
Judge Steve Duble (DEM)
Justice of the Peace, Precinct 2, Place 2
Judge Delores Lozano (DEM)
Justice of the Peace, Precinct 3, Place 2
Judge Lucia Bates (DEM)
Justice of the Peace, Precinct 4, Place 2
Judge Laryssa Korduba (REP)
Justice of the Peace, Precinct 5, Place 2
Judge Bob Wolfe (REP)
Justice of the Peace, Precinct 6, Place 2
Judge Angela D. Rodriguez (DEM)
Justice of the Peace, Precinct 7, Place 2
Judge Sharon M. Burney (DEM)
Justice of the Peace, Precinct 8, Place 2
Judge Louie Ditta (REP)
- 2026 MIDTERM CYCLE -
Judge Latosha Lewis Payne is the presiding judge for the 55th Civil District Court in Harris County, Texas. Judge Latosha Lewis Payne will be up for reelection in the 2026 Midterm Election.
- 2026 MIDTERM CYCLE -
Judge DaSean Jones is the presiding judge for the 180th Criminal District Court in Harris County, Texas. He will be up for reelection in the 2026 Midterm Election. However, Judge DaSean Jones must defeat his Republican challenger, Tami C. Pierce, on Saturday, May 3, 2025, to remain the presiding judge for the 180th Criminal District Court in Harris County, Texas.
- 2026 MIDTERM CYCLE -
Judge Katherine N. Thomas is the presiding judge for the 184th Civil District Court in Harris County, Texas. Judge Katherine N. Thomas will be up for reelection in the 2026 Midterm Election.
- 2026 MIDTERM CYCLE -
Judge Beverly D. Armstrong is the presiding judge for the 208th Criminal District Court in Harris County, Texas. Judge Beverly D. Armstrong will be up for reelection in the 2026 Midterm Election.
- 2026 MIDTERM CYCLE -
Judge Angela Graves Harrington is the presiding judge for the 246th Family District Court in Harris County, Texas. Judge Angela Graves Harrington will be up for reelection in the 2026 Midterm Election.
- 2026 MIDTERM CYCLE -
Judge Sandra J. Peake is the presiding judge for the 257th Family District Court in Harris County, Texas. Judge Sandra J. Peake will be up for reelection in the 2026 Midterm Election.
- 2026 MIDTERM CYCLE -
Judge Lori Chambers Gray is the presiding judge for the 262nd Criminal District Court in Harris County, Texas. Judge Lori Chambers Gray will be up for reelection in the 2026 Midterm Election.
- 2026 MIDTERM CYCLE -
Judge Dedra Davis is the presiding judge for the 270th Civil District Court in Harris County, Texas. Judge Dedra Davis will be up for reelection in the 2026 Midterm Election.
- 2026 MIDTERM CYCLE -
Judge Damiane “Dianne” Curvey presides over the 280th Family District Court in Harris County, Texas. Judge “Damiane “Dianne” Curvey will be up for reelection in the 2026 Midterm Election.
- 2026 MIDTERM CYCLE -
Judge Michelle Moore is the presiding judge for the 314th Juvenile District Court in Harris County, Texas. Judge Michelle Moore will be up for reelection in the 2026 Midterm Election.
- 2026 MIDTERM CYCLE -
Judge Toria J. Finch presides over the County Criminal Court at Law No. 9 in Harris County, Texas. Judge Toria J. Finch will be up for reelection in the 2026 Midterm Election.
- 2026 MIDTERM CYCLE -
Judge Juanita Jackson is the presiding judge for the County Criminal Court at Law No. 10 in Harris County, Texas. Judge Juanita Jackson will be up for reelection in the 2026 Midterm Election.
- 2026 MIDTERM CYCLE -
Judge Genesis Draper presides for the County Criminal Court at Law No. 12 in Harris County, Texas. Judge Genesis Draper will be up for reelection in the 2026 Midterm Election.
- 2026 MIDTERM CYCLE -
Judge Tonya Jones is the presiding judge for the County Criminal Court at Law No. 15 in Harris County, Texas. Judge Tonya Jones will be up for reelection in the 2026 Midterm Election.
- 2026 MIDTERM CYCLE -
Judge LaShawn A. Williams is the presiding judge for the County Civil Court at Law No. 3 in Harris County, Texas. Judge LaShawn A. Williams will be up for reelection in the 2026 Midterm Election.
- 2026 MIDTERM CYCLE -
Judge Lucia Bates is the Justice of the Peace for Precinct 3, Place 2, in Harris County, Texas. Judge Lucia Bates will be up for reelection in the 2026 Midterm Election.