Mclennan County Sheriff’s Office
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Today was a bittersweet day for the McLennan County Sheriff’s Office as we said farewell to Chief Deputy Cody Blossman on his last day. For the past 13 years, Chief Deputy Blossman has served with dedication, professionalism, and a true commitment to the citizens of McLennan County. His leadership and the countless contributions he has made to this agency have left a lasting impact, and he will be greatly missed.
While we are sad to see him step away from this role, we are excited for him as he begins a new chapter. We wish him nothing but continued success in his next endeavor and are grateful for the legacy he leaves behind.
Fortunately, this is not a goodbye, but a new beginning. We are proud to share that he will continue to serve alongside us in his new role as Chief of the McLennan County Sheriff’s Office Reserve Unit. We look forward to seeing the positive influence he will continue to have in this capacity.
Thank you, Chief Deputy Blossman, for your years of service and dedication you will always be part of the Sheriff’s Office family.
THANK YOU FOR HOLDING MY DICK ALL THESE YEARS AWARD

A Bittersweet Day… or Just Another Backroom Deal in McLennan County?
Today was described as a bittersweet day for the McLennan County Sheriff’s Office as they announced the “farewell” of Chief Deputy Cody Blossman after 13 years of service, praising his dedication, professionalism, and commitment to the citizens of McLennan County.
But let’s stop pretending this is just a retirement celebration.
Before we clap, smile, and move on, let’s take a hard look at what’s really happening here — because the taxpayers of McLennan County deserve the truth, not another polished press release.
Why would a Texas Ranger leave one of the most respected law enforcement positions in the state to take a job for less money at the county level?
Especially when his wife was reportedly one of the highest-paid civilians in the county at one point in time.
That doesn’t just raise eyebrows — it screams nepotism.
Let’s not forget — this same Texas Ranger allegedly had access to information about corruption involving Sheriff Parnell McNamara long before Teaton’s administration came into office.
Instead of stopping it, citizens are left wondering whether the information was quietly passed along to protect the very person under investigation. Since a certain ranger’s wife worked with Parnell every day
Then, allegedly , he was suddenly moved out of Company F and sent back to DPS.
No clear explanation.
No accountability.
No transparency.
That alone should make every taxpayer ask:
What happened?
And why would anyone take a significant pay cut to come work for the very county tied to those same controversies — unless there was something waiting for them on the other side?
Now fast-forward to today.
We are told Chief Deputy Cody Blossman is stepping down — and a brand-new reserve
position magically appears: Chief Deputy of the McLennan County Sheriff’s Office Reserve Unit.
Not elected.
Not earned at the ballot box.
Appointed.
So again, the public is left asking:
Why create a special reserve chief deputy role at all?
Was this position built to keep power in the same hands after voters had their say?
And are citizens expected to blindly trust that anyone with the title “Texas Ranger” is automatically a good guy — even when the facts tell a very different story?
Now let’s talk about the County Commissioners.
The very same commissioners — especially the ones on their way out the door — approved this whole deal.
They approved it knowing full well the concerns that have been raised for years.
They approved it after being told, repeatedly, that the Rangers were protecting Parnell McNamara and Cody Blossman instead of holding them accountable.
And they did it anyway.
They did it at the end of their terms.
They did it quietly.
And they did it while the public is still waiting for answers.
So the real questions are simple:
Why rush this through now?
Why create a new position for the same leadership under a different title?
And why do the same names keep getting protected while taxpayers keep getting ignored?
People are not blind.
They are not stupid.
And they are not buying the story anymore.
They see the pattern.
They see the backroom deals.
They see the reshuffling of titles instead of accountability.
Some might call it politics.
Some might call it favoritism.
Some might even call it election interference.
Whatever you call it, one thing is certain:
The citizens of McLennan County deserve better than this.
They deserve transparency.
They deserve accountability.
And they deserve leaders who answer to the public — not to each other.
This wasn’t just a goodbye.
This was a setup.
Election Interference!!!!
