It reads like a script for a satirical political drama — except it really happened, right here in Texas.
Taral Patel, a once-rising figure in Fort Bend County politics, was caught running a digital smear campaign… against himself.
Yes, you read that right.
According to a recent Texas Ethics Commission order, Patel created fake Facebook accounts with names like “Antonio Scalywag,” “Paul Rosenstein,” “Jennifer Tremaine,” and “Jane Donnie.” He used these accounts to post racist and xenophobic attacks — not on others, but aimed at himself — only to then share those same posts publicly as “evidence” of the hate he was facing during his campaign.
If it sounds absurd, it is.
Unfortunately for Patel, the paper trail wasn’t just sloppy — it was practically neon-lit. Meta, Google, T-Mobile, Chase Bank, and even IP address logs all pointed right back to him. One fake account even used a stranger’s photo without consent.
What started as a misguided attempt to sway public sympathy turned into a series of criminal charges. Patel ultimately pleaded guilty to multiple misdemeanor violations of Texas Election Code §255.005 — which prohibits misrepresenting one’s identity to influence an election. He was sentenced to 24 months probation, 200 hours of community service, and found himself publicly reprimanded by the Texas Ethics Commission.
Here’s the Sad — and Funny — Lesson:
Trying to “catfish” your way into elected office using racist sock-puppet accounts isn’t just unethical… it’s criminal.
And in today’s world of IP tracing, digital forensics, and AI-based monitoring — you will get caught.
What Can We Learn?
Whether you’re running for office, managing a business, or just posting in your local Facebook group:
- Be authentic.
- Don’t manufacture drama for attention.
- And above all, don’t break the law trying to manipulate others online.
In East Texas, we pride ourselves on real values: hard work, honesty, and community integrity. Let this bizarre story be a warning — and a reminder — to keep our politics (and social media) clean.
Because the next headline could be about you.