Tripti Joshi (Editor)

Ron Reynolds (Texas politician)

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Preceded by
  
Dora Olivo

Name
  
Ron Reynolds

Children
  
3


Political party
  
Democratic

Nationality
  
American

Party
  
Democratic Party

Ron Reynolds (Texas politician) ww1hdnuxcomphotos5253271118769211920x920jpg


Spouse(s)
  
Jonita Bernice Wallace Reynolds

Parents
  
Conrell B. Brown Glenda Purham-Brown (deceased)

Role
  
Texas State Representative

Office
  
Texas State Representative since 2011

Education
  
Texas Tech University School of Law, Texas Tech University, Texas Southern University

Ronald Eugene Reynolds, known as Ron Reynolds (born 1973), is an American lawyer and politician in Missouri City near Houston, Texas, who is a Democratic member of the Texas House of Representatives from District 27. He was first elected in 2010. Reynolds is also an attorney in private practice with the Brown, Brown & Reynolds law firm. Additionally, Reynolds has served as a Houston Associate Municipal Judge.

Contents

In 2015, he was convicted of barratry and was sentenced to one year in jail.

Early life

A native of Jackson, Tennessee, Reynolds is the son of Houston attorney Conrell B. Brown (born 1953) and his wife and fellow attorney, the former Glenda Purham (1956-2011), the oldest of the seven children of the Reverend Louis and Mary Purham. Reynolds was a law partner of both parents until his mother's death. Reynolds has a younger brother, Christopher Brown.

Reynolds holds a Bachelor of Science degree from Texas Southern University in Houston. In May 2000, he received his Juris Doctor from the Texas Tech University School of Law in Lubbock. Reynolds is married to the former Jonita Bernice Wallace, who holds a doctorate in education from the University of Houston and is the chief executive officer of a local Community Action Agency. The couple has three children. Ron and Jonita Reynolds are members of the Brookhollow Baptist Church in Houston.

Elections

2008

Reynolds was narrowly defeated for the seat in the 2008 primary election by the long-term incumbent Dora Olivo of Richmond, Texas. He polled 14,634 (49.7 percent) to Olivo's 14,821 (50.3 percent).

2010

Two years later in the 2010 primary, he unseated Olivo, 5,158 (57.6 percent) to 3,791 (42.4 percent). In the 2010 general election, Reynolds ran without Republican, defeating Libertarian Party nominee Derek Dean Grayson 32,030 (84.6 percent) to 5,812 (15.4 percent).

2012

Reynolds won re-election in 2012, running unopposed in the primary and defeating Republican Kris Allfrey and Libertarian John Henry Petter IV in the general election. Reynolds won 69% of the vote in the general election.

2014

Reynolds easily won his third term to the House in 2014 by defeating Republican pro-life activist David Wayne Hamilton 24,326 (67 percent) to 11,990 (33 percent).

Tenure

In 2012, Reynolds was arrested and charged in Harris County with violating the state barratry law, which forbids the unlawful solicitation of clients by lawyers. Reynolds has twice been suspended from the practice of law by the State Bar of Texas for unprofessional conduct, including a one-year period from 2005 to 2006 and again in 2011.

Texas Monthly magazine in 2013 placed Reynolds on its list of "Worst Representatives." He was arrested again in 2013, this time in Montgomery County, on ten charges of violating the barratry law. He faces potential disbarment and a conviction of a third degree felony punishable by up to ten years in jail and a $10,000 fine. Reynolds requested that his case be removed from Montgomery County; he also alleges that he is a victim of racial discrimination regarding the charges against him.

In 2011, the Texas Ethics Commission fined Reynolds $10,000 for failure to submit campaign finance disclosures in 2008 and 2009. The office of then Attorney General Greg Abbott sued Reynolds in an effort to collect on the fine. Fifteen health care companies have suits pending against Reynolds for non-payment after the companies had treated his clients and he received settlements for them.

Reynolds is a member of the House Committees on Technology and Environmental Regulation.

Personal

Reynolds is a partner in the firm Brown, Brown, & Reynolds. He is a former president of the NAACP in Missouri City and Fort Bend County and a member of the Houston area chapter of the National Urban League.

References

Ron Reynolds (Texas politician) Wikipedia