
WILL RANGER BURSON BE FORCED TO FIND HIS BALLS AND DO WHAT’S RIGHT FOR A CHANGE INSTEAD OF TOTAL PAR PROTECTION FOREVER???? bURSON HELPED CREATE ALL OF THIS BY IGNORING COMPLAINT AFTER COMPLAINT. MCSO IS TIRED OF IT, TIRED OF BULLIES AND OLD PEOPLE TRYING TO RUN THINGS FROM THEIR GRAVE. FIND YOUR FORTITUDE BURSON, ALL AMBITION AND NO NADS.
Ranger, DPS, Chief Deputy, a natural progression? Nope. Cody the Body Snatcher decided he’d had enough of working with the elderly. He hated the dinners, not as fond of Kitok’s as Par, bored at events, and really too young to be baby sitting ole Par, that’s for one of his posse after all, or better yet, Char if she can get out of bed with the cookies and pastries. Yep knowing HE DID IT and she was also to blame is rough. Oh, well, that’s just me, here’s our FIRST reader rant destined not to be the last.
Let’s talk about corruption — the kind that hides in plain sight.
While the public is still waiting — over a year later — for the Texas Rangers to return findings on allegations involving Sheriff Parnell McNamara, we now see Ranger Jake Burson stepping into the role of Chief Deputy right in the middle of an election season.
That’s not just questionable.
That’s dangerous to public trust.
Because when a law enforcement officer who has been tied to sensitive investigations suddenly moves into a top command position during an election, it raises one unavoidable question:
Is this law enforcement — or political interference?
Perhaps since they’re already raising money for Burson this is election interference!!!!!
The people of McLennan County deserve to know:
- Why is a Texas Ranger with knowledge of ongoing allegations being placed into a leadership role now?
- Who approved this move — and why during an election cycle?
- Did the County Commissioners sign off on this knowing the appearance of influence it creates?
- And most importantly — who is protecting whom?
This isn’t about personalities.
This is about power, timing, and accountability.
We’ve watched investigations stall.
We’ve watched officials close ranks.
We’ve watched silence where there should have been transparency.
Now we’re expected to believe that installing a Ranger into the second-highest position in the Sheriff’s Office — while unresolved complaints and personnel issues swirl — is just business as usual?
The public isn’t that naive.
If Ranger Burson has knowledge of misconduct, the law requires reporting it — not stepping into a political role that could influence witnesses, employees, or the direction of an election.
And let’s be honest:
The County Commissioners know exactly what this looks like.
They are not bystanders.
They are elected stewards of public trust.
So here’s the bottom line:
This isn’t about Easter.
This isn’t about personalities.
And it sure isn’t about loyalty to any one man.
It’s about whether the rule of law still applies in McLennan County — or whether insiders get promoted while the public gets ignored.
The voters are watching.
The employees are watching.
And sooner or later, the truth always catches up.
Let’s find out who’s been naughty — and who’s been protecting them.