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As John Blake steps back, spotlight shines on Texas Rangers PR man’s one-of-a-kind efforts

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As John Blake steps back, spotlight shines on Texas Rangers PR man’s one-of-a-kind efforts


ARLINGTON – Here’s the thing about PR guys: They create and curate team Halls of Fame, they don’t populate them.

Then again, John Blake has always been one of a kind.

For nearly 40 years in Arlington – usually a bit disheveled, occasionally gruff, always prepared and exceptionally loyal to the franchise – it would be hard to argue that anybody has had a bigger hand in how the Rangers’ brand has matured. As the public relations man, then executive vice president for communications and lately public affairs, he has overseen the casting of virtually every story involving the team. He didn’t make the stories, but he spun them into myths when possible and managed them with honesty when crises arose (which was often).

He helped create a sense of history for a franchise that had none, establishing the club’s Hall of Fame in 2003 and entering it as an inductee 21 years later.

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“I don’t know that there has been anyone in our organization who has worked harder, invested more time and put more heart and soul into the team than John Blake,” said no one less than Mr. Ranger himself, Tom Grieve. “And that includes players, coaches and executives.”

Texas Rangers vice president of media relations John Blake is pictured during the Houston Astros vs. Texas Rangers Major League Baseball home opener on Friday, April 10, 2015.(Louis DeLuca / Staff Photographer)

Which is why it’s hard to imagine that on Sunday the Rangers will honor Blake as he prepares to “retire from full-time employment,” on Nov. 1 after 46 years in baseball, 36 of which have been with the Rangers. Blake is expected to step back into a part-time and consulting role, though nobody around the club can quite find a way to put Blake, 69, and “part-time” into the same sentence.

As the club’s unofficial historian, he will continue to help build the team’s legacy initiatives, conduct a series of popular ballpark tours, oversee team publications and consult, particularly in crisis management (of which there has never been a shortage).

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John Blake’s philosophy in public relations leads him into Rangers’ Hall of Fame

Blake did not comment for this story, because to do so, would have forced himself to become part of the story. And his working credo has always been to put the club first. That even applied to the kids. His kids. He was in Toronto in 1989, when his first son, Chris, was born six weeks early and in days before cell phones, he couldn’t get back. He was, however, at the appropriate movie, “Parenthood,” at the moment. When doctors were getting ready to let Chris go home, Blake first consulted how it would conflict with Nolan Ryan approaching his 5,000th strikeout.

When his daughter, Becky, was born three years later, he was sure to be there. It’s just that the C-Section was scheduled around the Rangers’ precursor to FanFest.

(Full disclosure: We’ve worked alongside Blake for most of the last 28 years, consider him a friend, his wife of 46 years, Harriet, an unofficial saint of the Greek Orthodox Church, and the kids family).

It’s hard to put into words the sense of duty he feels to the Rangers, but allow us to try. After 20 years with the Rangers, he was exiled by a GM and manager when he lobbied for more transparency and accountability and fell into the dream job for a New England-born, prep-school reared baseball fan as a vice president with the Red Sox. Won a World Series there, too. Then, a year later, when Ryan became the Rangers president, his first call was to Blake, asking him to return. And he did.

“Working at Fenway was always a dream for him,” Harriet said this week. “But it wasn’t meant to be. The Rangers have had their ups and downs, but he loved working for the Rangers. He adores them.”

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John Blake, Executive Vice-President of Communicatons for the Texas Rangers listens as new...
John Blake, Executive Vice-President of Communicatons for the Texas Rangers listens as new Texas Rangers co-owner Nolan Ryan talks to the media at Rangers Ballpark in Arlington on August 5, 2010. He and Chuck Greenberg won the bankruptcy auction against Jim Crane and Mark Cuban.(MICHAEL AINSWORTH/Staff Photogra)

We should stop here to mention that Harriet, a former editor at The Dallas Morning News, met Blake when they were both students working at campus newspapers at Georgetown in the 1970s. At the time, Blake had also been a manager for the Georgetown football team, covered high schools for The Washington Post, worked in the press box for the Baltimore Orioles and was studying to be an international diplomat (his degree is International Politics).

Perhaps the only thing that stopped him from a career of mediating international disputes was mediating the equivalent of one on the Georgetown campus. After a banner with a vile racial epithet was hung in the Georgetown gym directed at new basketball coach John Thompson, Blake wrote a column defending the new coach.

Not soon after, Thompson was recruiting Blake to run the school’s sports information department and help on the radio broadcasts. Worked out OK. The Hoyas won a national championship while he was there. Though Blake may be one of the only color analysts in NCAA history to pick up a technical for shouting at the referee. His trademark call: “Break out the raincoats! Here comes the hose job!”

The Georgetown gig became part-time when he landed with the Orioles. He’d go from basketball season, into spring training where he occasionally had to round up wayward Hall of Fame manager Earl Weaver, who could drink into the night and argue into the morning. He spent six years with the Orioles. Won his first World Series ring, too. He was well-entrenched in the “Oriole Way,” when the Rangers called the then 29-year-old about becoming the second PR director in the club’s history.

He got a quick course in what to expect. On the day he arrived for his interview, he picked up a paper to read a report that the Rangers were about to fire GM Joe Klein, one of the people with whom he was supposed to work. Went through the interview anyway. He was offered the job the same morning the Rangers announced Klein’s firing. And he still accepted the offer. Came back three weeks later to look for housing and get a feel for the environment. Still not yet on the payroll, with Blake in attendance, California’s Mike Witt finished off the season by throwing a perfect game at the Rangers.

Blake leaned over to then-Dallas Morning News beat man Tim Kurkjian and asked: “Are all the games here like this?”

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And he still took the job. The Rangers became a better organization for it.

“We were a major league team,” said fellow executive vice president Chuck Morgan, one of a handful of employees who have been with the club as long as Blake. “But we became a little more major when he got here. He’s got an unmatched work ethic and a passion for the game that is even better than mine. He reveres the game.”

“There was an emphasis on doing things right,” said radio broadcaster Eric Nadel, who preceded Blake by five years and became a Hall of Fame broadcaster thanks in part to Blake’s belief in him and loyalty to him. “You know that when he is in charge, everything was going to be done with the utmost efficiency. When he came here, he saw it as a challenge to bring things up to big league caliber. It became a labor of love to build that and then maintain it.”

He oversaw the arrival and ascent of Nolan Ryan from mere mortal to pitching god (helped, of course, by two no-hitters after the age of 40 and the all-time strikeout record). He helped create excitement about not one, but two, new stadiums and hyped, not one, but two All-Star Games, as well.

John Blake, Executive Vice President, Public Affairs for the Texas Rangers, chats with...
John Blake, Executive Vice President, Public Affairs for the Texas Rangers, chats with Dallas Morning News Rangers beat writer Evan Grant in the Rangers’s old locker room at Choctaw Stadium during a hardhat media tour at MLB’s All-Star Village in Arlington on Thursday, July 11, 2024. All-Star Village includes Choctaw Stadium, the north lawn of the stadium, Esports Stadium Arlington and the Expo Center.(Juan Figueroa / Staff Photographer)

On the crisis front, there was always something to manage. Just consider this run from 2009-14: An All-Star recovering alcoholic who showed up in photos at a local bar, licking whipped cream off a woman; a manager acknowledging drug use to his team; a pair of internal power struggles; and the sudden resignation of the same manager for infidelity. And all of the principles involved end up still beloved by Rangers fans. Pretty impressive crisis management.

“There is nobody better in a time of crisis,” said former Rangers GM Jon Daniels, who didn’t work with Blake until three seasons into his own tenure and still spent more time with him in a GM-PR relationship than anybody else. “He was such a stable resource of good judgment and understanding and how things would play.

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“He loves the game, loves the community and what is in the best interests of the team. The first day of spring training, he’d introduce his staff to the team and say: ‘We are here for you.’ And it was true and authentic. He earned the trust of everybody around. He truly has the organization and your best interests at heart.”

At times, that meant getting combative with media.

“My second favorite John Blake story is after every postseason win we had, just seeing the pride he had in the job and the organization; it made us know how invested he was in us,” said Michael Young. “My favorite was anytime he’d blow somebody up. We’d all laugh hysterically. We knew it was out of loyalty.”

About the Blake dustups, there were many. And they could be directed at the performance on the field, too. Nobody took losses harder. Grieve remembers an occasion in his first year as GM when he was sitting next to Blake in the press box, where emotions of any kind are generally frowned upon, and the Rangers blew a late lead. Grieve sat in silence as the game ended. Until Blake slammed his fists on the counter.

“It was hard enough that my arms flew up off the table,” Grieve said. “It told me how much he was invested.”

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His loud voice became a drop on The Ticket, when he’d finish off interviews with Yu Darvish, shouting “questions in Japanese?” His “cut” motion became a meme after TV cameras caught him delivering one to play-by-play man Dave Raymond when an in-booth interview with just-retired Adrián Beltré went too long.

Drops and memes. The modern way to immortalize funny, awkward moments.

“Beyond a distinctive exterior, John has used his extreme intelligence, savvy and PR acumen to elevate the Rangers for decades,” said Rich Rice, his patient, long-time assistant who has succeeded him atop the Rangers communications department. “He has made this his life’s work, and his contributions to the club are immeasurable. There will never be another John Blake.”

Well-said. Or, as Blake himself, would put it: “ANY MORE QUESTIONS!”

    Jacob deGrom keeps building on Texas Rangers return with strong second start
    Kirby Yates thinks he can keep pitching at a high level. Will it be with the Rangers?

Find more Rangers coverage from The Dallas Morning News here.

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Why are Mississippi State softball fans wearing broccoli shirts vs Texas at WCWS?

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Why are Mississippi State softball fans wearing broccoli shirts vs Texas at WCWS?


OKLAHOMA CITY — Mississippi State softball is playing in an elimination game at the Women’s College World Series.

The Bulldogs (43-20) are facing No. 2 seed Texas (47-12) at Devon Park on May 29 (6 p.m. CT, ESPN).

Mississippi State and its fans are doing everything they can to muster up some good luck, including using broccoli, which has become the team’s rally prop throughout the NCAA Tournament.

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Some fans and parents of the players are even wearing T-shirts with images of broccoli on them that read “Broccoli Power.”

Here’s what to know about the shirts and why MSU is wearing them.

Why are Mississippi State fans wearing broccoli shirts?

Broccoli became MSU’s good luck charm after a fan known as Broccoli Guy started cheering them on at the Eugene Regional.

He used broccoli as pom-poms while dancing in the stands. For the regional final, MSU brought broccoli for players to hold in the dugout for good luck.

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This trend continued during the super regionals, with MSU bringing broccoli on the bus, holding it in the dugout and posting pictures and videos of it on social media ahead of Game 3 against Oklahoma. Broccoli Guy also showed up to support the Bulldogs again.

Now, with the Bulldogs facing elimination at the WCWS, fans, parents and players are hoping the broccoli shirts, along with their physical stalks of broccoli, will help power them to a win over the Longhorns.

2026 Women’s College World Series schedule

All times CT

  • May 28
    • Game 1: Texas Tech 8, Mississippi State 0
    • Game 2: Tennessee 6, Texas 3
    • Game 3: Alabama 6, UCLA 3
    • Game 4: Nebraska 5, Arkansas 3
  • May 29
    • Game 5: Mississippi State vs Texas (6 p.m., ESPN)
    • Game 6: UCLA vs Arkansas (8:30 p.m., ESPN)
  • May 30
    • Game 7: Texas Tech vs Tennessee (2 p.m., ABC)
    • Game 8: Alabama vs Nebraska (6 p.m., ESPN)
  • May 31
    • Game 9: Game 5 winner vs Game 8 loser (2 p.m., ABC)
    • Game 10: Game 6 winner vs Game 7 loser (6 p.m., ESPN2)
  • June 1
    • Game 11: Game 7 winner vs Game 9 winner (11 a.m., ESPN)
    • Game 12 (if necessary): Game 7 winner vs Game 9 winner (1:30 p.m., ESPN)
    • Game 13: Game 8 winner vs Game 10 winner (6 p.m., ESPN2)
    • Game 14 (if necessary): Game 8 winner vs Game 10 winner (8:30 p.m., ESPN2)
  • June 3
    • Finals Game 1 (7 p.m., ESPN)
  • June 4
    • Finals Game 2 (7 p.m., ESPN)
  • June 5
    • If necessary, finals Game 3 (7 p.m., ESPN)

Tia Reid covers Jackson State sports for the Clarion Ledger. Email her at treid@usatodayco.com and follow her on X @tiareid65.



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Can data center project help Texas town pay for repairs?

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Can data center project help Texas town pay for repairs?

The Waco Bridge is a nonprofit local news organization supported by The Texas Tribune, reporting on Waco government, education and community. Sign up for the Bridge’s free newsletter here.

Audio recording is automated for accessibility. Humans wrote and edited the story. See our AI policy, and give us feedback.

Jim Wallingsford drove his white Chevy truck one morning last month down North Walnut Street in Lacy Lakeview, dodging potholes on his way to inspect a repair project on a sewer lift station.

As public works director for this Waco suburb of 8,000 residents, Wallingsford is always triaging the city’s needs: Cracked and cratered streets, aging pipes and pump stations and the old water tower, which needs a $1 million facelift.

The Connally Lift Station under repair on April 16. The lift station pumps sewage from deeper underground to a higher elevation. “You know the shape that our streets are in, our water and sewer mains are in the same shape. We replace when we can and repair when we have to,” Wallingsford said. Justin Hamel/The Waco Bridge/CatchLight Local/Report for America

“I want to be a good steward of the City of Lacy Lakeview with the money I’m given to spend,” he said. “So I give everything a weighted scale and I base it off of the likelihood and consequences of failure.”

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Out of two water towers in Lacy Lakeview, this one needs significant repairs, including a new catwalk and paint. In the meantime Wallingsford said “I wouldn’t send anyone up there.”
Out of two water towers in Lacy Lakeview, this one needs significant repairs, including a new catwalk and paint. In the meantime Wallingsford said “I wouldn’t send anyone up there.” Justin Hamel/The Waco Bridge/CatchLight Local/Report for America

Lacy Lakeview, population 8,000, is typical of many small Texas towns that lack the resources to keep up with streets and pipes that are wearing out. Most of that infrastructure in Lacy Lakeview was installed more than 50 years ago. And the longer maintenance is deferred, the faster it deteriorates.

Water from the City of Waco is pumped into the storage tank on the right, before being pressurized with compressed air from the smaller tank, and pumped into the Lacy Lakeview’s water system.
Water from the City of Waco is pumped into the storage tank on the right, before being pressurized with compressed air from the smaller tank, and pumped into the Lacy Lakeview’s water system. Justin Hamel/The Waco Bridge/CatchLight Local/Report for America

Mayor Chuck Wilson has pointed to the city’s maintenance backlog to justify the pursuit of a data center. He wants to partner with Infrakey to develop and annex a proposed $10 billion data center north of town near Ross.

That development represents tax base that would increase Lacy Lakeview’s tax base enough to increase city tax revenues from $6.5 million to $50 million a year. But the project has drawn a backlash from neighbors of the Infrakey site, as well as from some Lacy Lakeview residents, who just elected data center opponent Amy Gage to the City Council.

Cars often crash into raised manhole covers along Route 77 in Lacy Lakeview. The city would replace or relocate the manholes with additional tax revenue from the proposed Infrakey data center.
Cars often crash into raised manhole covers along Route 77 in Lacy Lakeview. The city would replace or relocate the manholes with additional tax revenue from the proposed Infrakey data center. Justin Hamel/The Waco Bridge/CatchLight Local/Report for America

As Wallingsford sees it, the city needs new development, or the existing taxpayer and utility ratepayers will be on the hook for improvements.

“Everything that we purchase is going up, literally,” he said. “The only other solution is that we have to have a rate increase just to be able to keep up.”

Wallingsford said a dump truck will be the first pieces of equipment replaced once more funding is secured. “We’re going to have to get at least one dump truck,” Wallingsford said. “ I’d like to get two in this next year’s budget because, you know, these dump trucks are 25 years old.” The current maintenance outweighs the cost of the current fleet.
Wallingsford said a dump truck will be the first pieces of equipment replaced once more funding is secured. “We’re going to have to get at least one dump truck,” Wallingsford said. “ I’d like to get two in this next year’s budget because, you know, these dump trucks are 25 years old.” The current maintenance outweighs the cost of the current fleet. Justin Hamel/The Waco Bridge/CatchLight Local/Report for America

Wallingsford stopped his truck at the Meyers water pump station, which was under repair after it was observed to be leaking.

“The consequence of them failing is pretty high but their issues aren’t critical and they continue to operate,” he said. “The city only needs one pump to operate and we have three, so there’s a backup.

The Meyers Pump Station in Lacy Lakeview is outdated and in need of upgrade as of April 16. The pumps leak, even when they aren’t running.
The Meyers Pump Station in Lacy Lakeview is outdated and in need of upgrade as of April 16. The pumps leak, even when they aren’t running. Justin Hamel/The Waco Bridge/CatchLight Local/Report for America

“At the end of the day when something fails, we go back and work off of the plan.”

Wallingsford, a former city of Waco staffer, said utility infrastructure like this typically has a 50-year lifespan, and the ideal practice in public works is to set aside 2% of the system’s cost each year for replacement.

“I haven’t worked for a city that’s ever done that,” he said.

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Even more visible is the wear and tear on Lacy Lakeview’s 30 miles of city streets. Asked which ones need to be repaved, he didn’t hesitate.

“All of them,” he said. “They all need to be done. I’d say we have about 15 critical streets” that need to be repaved.

South Barbara Street is the first street on the list to be repaired in Lacy Lakeview in 2026. The city currently has a 30-mile backlog of streets that need significant work.
South Barbara Street is the first street on the list to be repaired in Lacy Lakeview in 2026. The city currently has a 30-mile backlog of streets that need significant work. Justin Hamel/The Waco Bridge/CatchLight Local/Report for America
A view down Avenue B at its intersection with South Barbara Street shows the contrast of before and after. Avenue B was rehabilitated last year using the city’s “zipper” recycling machine, while South Barbara Street, seen at center, awaits its fix.
A view down Avenue B at its intersection with South Barbara Street shows the contrast of before and after. Avenue B was rehabilitated last year using the city’s “zipper” recycling machine, while South Barbara Street, seen at center, awaits its fix. Justin Hamel/The Waco Bridge/CatchLight Local/Report for America

The city is now repairing and reconstructing streets using a $9.5 million bond issue that voters approved in 2024. To save money, the city is using its own workers and equipment to grind up and recycle pavement, which is then compacted and resealed.

Among the most critical projects is Walnut Street, which is being reconstructed along with replacement of water, sewer, fiber optic and gas utilities under the street. That project is to be completed in February 2027.

Wallingsford explained: “That is what our guys do probably eight months out of the year. They use this zipper machine here to eat up the old asphalt. Then we compact it with a rolling machine over there, and then we come back and chip seal the existing roads. It’s a cheaper way of getting the potholes out of the roads and giving the citizens a smoother surface to drive on.” The equipment was purchased in a bond election to save the city money by paying outside contractors to repave the city’s streets. Previously the maintenance department was only able to fill potholes.
Wallingsford explained: “That is what our guys do probably eight months out of the year. They use this zipper machine here to eat up the old asphalt. Then we compact it with a rolling machine over there, and then we come back and chip seal the existing roads. It’s a cheaper way of getting the potholes out of the roads and giving the citizens a smoother surface to drive on.” The equipment was purchased in a bond election to save the city money by paying outside contractors to repave the city’s streets. Previously the maintenance department was only able to fill potholes. Justin Hamel/The Waco Bridge/CatchLight Local/Report for America

This article first appeared on The Waco Bridge.



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Houston-area raids expose Texas loophole allowing illegal game rooms to reopen, costing taxpayers

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Houston-area raids expose Texas loophole allowing illegal game rooms to reopen, costing taxpayers


HARRIS COUNTY, TX – On a February afternoon, 2 Investigates showed up to a North Harris County strip mall.

Minutes earlier, deputies raided what law enforcement described as an illegal gaming room operating in plain sight. The operation to shut down the room ended quickly, as one person was arrested and more than 80 gaming machines were seized. The scene was littered with evidence, including cash and a firearm.

However, what 2 Investigates uncovered was a bigger component after the raid: this was not a new location.

“We’ve been here a couple of times,” said Lt. Jeffrey Lee with Harris County Constable Precinct 4, referring to the same location being raided in September of last year.

Law enforcement officials, from investigators to prosecutor, we spoke with over the course of our investigation say these operations have become increasingly common across the Houston area and Texas.

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“It’s extremely common. We run these operations numerous times,” Lee said.

Why authorities say these operations matter

Every member of law enforcement, from the courts to the streets, we spoke with during our months-long investigation made it clear that illegal gaming rooms create more than just gambling concerns.

“At its base, these gaming operations prey on the vulnerable members of our community-those on a fixed income, older people-promising these huge payouts that never materialize,” said Lee, who went on to add, “At its wider angle, these are funding operations for much more serious criminal enterprises like human trafficking, drug trafficking, and things like that.”

Criminal defense attorney Rick Detoto, who has experience with these cases, said the locations for these rooms can also become magnets for violent crime

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“They are targets.” Detoto went on to add, “There is a lot of cash there, their security is minimal at best, and they go in there and they rob them and people get shot and there are capital murders and aggravated robberies and all kinds of stuff that come out of those game rooms.”

Houston police raid Lucky J Social Club in Midwest Houston, arrest several in illegal gambling bust

In February, an illegal game room in Southwest Houston was the site of the shooting death of a security guard during a robbery.

A raid is underway in Harris County of an illegal game room (KPRC 2026)

The “8-Liner” loophole

At the center of the gaming controversy are machines commonly known as “8-liners.” These are not unfamiliar machines for Texans, as many can be found inside gas stations, convenience stores, or small strip mall businesses. Under Texas law, certain gaming devices may legally operate if they are considered entertainment-only machines and do not provide illegal cash payouts. In some cases, stores may offer small prizes or store credits instead.

However, critics and elected leaders have asked for clarification from the state, saying some operators exploit a gray area in the law centered around whether a machine is considered a “game of skill” or a “game of chance.”

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What is the difference between a game of skill and a game of chance?

As Detoto explained, “A game of chance [is] you press a button and there is a computer program that randomly picks the numbers or the fruit or whatever and you win, compared to a game of skill where it’s based on memory or perception or your timing, where you are kind of playing a game and you have to remember things. That’s the loophole that these people are exploiting, and it’s allowing some of these games to be legally put into these stores.”

Warrants executed at 20 locations around Hitchcock believed to be involved in illegal gambling operation

Investigators say some operators allegedly go beyond the legal boundaries by offering cash payouts either privately or openly. 2 Investigates found one machine advertising as much in Fort Bend County.

Detoto said the machines are becoming more common throughout everyday neighborhoods, including his. “I’ve started to notice them every time I get gas,” he said. “I go in to get a Coke or something to drink, water-there are three 8-liners there that weren’t there before.”

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A raid is underway in Harris County of an illegal game room (KPRC 2026)

Raids, auctions, and recycled machines

Authorities say shutting down illegal game rooms can become expensive for taxpayers due to investigations, raids, manpower, and evidence storage. However, another issue emerged during our investigation: many confiscated machines are not destroyed after they are seized. Instead, there are law enforcement jurisdictions that auction them off.

Investigators confirmed to us that some of those machines seized by other agencies eventually make their way back into circulation because they’ve been made available again, “We do see reintroduction of machines and the equipment that come from these game rooms back in again,” Lee said.

Lee’s constable office does not engage in the practice of auctioning off machines.

How did Detoto describe the system? “It’s a revolving door of law enforcement seizing the machines, waiting until a case gets resolved, selling them, making a profit for the asset funds, and doing it over again.”

Multiple sources interviewed for this story questioned whether current enforcement efforts are actually deterring illegal operations.

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Detoto said criminal prosecutions tied to 8-liners are relatively rare.

“I’ve never seen, in my experience, anyone go to jail for these 8-liners.” The Houston-based defense attorney added, “The prosecutors don’t have the time to deal with these cases. They are not the most important case on their docket.”

Lee agreed that stronger oversight and penalties may be needed: “There is room for improvement with regards to the oversight, the laws, and the stuff that concerns these gaming rooms-that we could actually enact some stiffer penalties to discourage this behavior.”

When 2 Investigates asked whether Texas lawmakers need to do more, Lee responded: “We would like to see some improvements, yes.”

A police officer seizes an illegal gaming machine in north Harris County, Texas (KPRC 2026)

Calls for legislative change

Texas State Senator Bob Hall, who represents Senate District 2, said the current system leaves too much room for abuse. “We need to do more to make sure that we can shut down and stop the operation of the illegal game rooms,” said Hall, who added, “There is no question about that.”

During an interview at his Dallas-area office, Hall acknowledged that changing the law could prove to be difficult. “It will be a challenge because it will depend on our local law enforcement doing its job the way it should be done,” Hall said.

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Bottom line for Hall regarding a problem hiding in plain sight? “There is no reason for a gambling machine to exist in Texas.”

Copyright 2026 by KPRC Click2Houston – All rights reserved.



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