FRIO COUNTY, Texas – Several Frio County elected officials are accused of targeting elderly voters at a Pearsall nursing home, according to search warrants obtained Wednesday afternoon by KSAT Investigates.
KSAT was the first to tell you about the arrests of five suspects, including the Frio County Judge and two Pearsall City Council members. Court records show they are accused of paying for vote-harvesting services.
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FCSO deputies arrested five of the suspects on May 2:
- Pearsall City Council member Ramiro Trevino on one count of vote harvesting
- Pearsall Independent School District board member Adriann Ramirez on three counts of vote harvesting
- Former Frio County Elections Administrator Carlos Segura on one count of tampering with evidence
- Pearsall City Council member Racheal Garza on one count of vote harvesting
- Rosa Rodriguez, who the 81st Judicial District Attorney said is an alleged vote harvester, on two counts of vote harvesting
The sheriff’s office said Frio County Judge Rochelle Lozano Camacho has not been arrested yet. She faces three counts of vote harvesting.
According to search warrants and affidavits, which KSAT Investigates has requested for days, the state attorney general’s office began investigating election fraud claims in Frio County after a candidate for county judge, identified as Mary Moore, filed a complaint in November 2022.
Moore ran against Camacho in the race for Frio County Judge in 2022. Both ran as Democrats.
Records state Moore told investigators she began her own investigation after receiving tips that Camacho hired Cheryl Denise Castillo to collect mail ballots for her. Public records show Castillo died in October 2024.
Moore said she looked at several of the ballots and found Castillo, who has not been charged, filled out several of the ballots without noting she had assisted anyone.
According to an affidavit, Moore went to the Pine Hill Estates II, a nursing home, and got video of Camacho, Rodriguez, Ramirez, Castillo and a woman who has not been charged walking out of a resident‘s home. The records state Moore saw Camacho walk up to Rodriguez and another woman‘s car with “what appeared to be carrier envelopes.”
KSAT reached out to Moore on Wednesday afternoon, but she has not responded.
The investigator from the attorney general’s office noted that he found Rodriguez and Castillo helped fill out several of the mail-in ballots.
“Several residents confirmed that Castillo picked up their ballot by mail, and in some instances advised them how they should vote their ballot,” according to court records.
According to court records, Castillo told a Frio County elections worker about how certain candidates would pay her through a relative’s Cash App to fill out mail-in ballots, pick them up and drive voters to vote curbside.
Segura is accused of concealing 2023 applications to vote by mail “with the intent to impair the availability of the documents and records as evidence in any subsequent investigation related to the offense,” records show.
Trevino is accused of knowingly providing vote harvesting services to Camacho in exchange for money, gas, lunches and/or employment with Frio County,” in September 2022, the indictment states.
On Wednesday morning, Attorney General Ken Paxton shared the following statement:
“The people of Texas deserve fair and honest elections, not backroom deals and political insiders rigging the system. Elected officials who think they can cheat to stay in power will be held accountable. No one is above the law. My office will continue to work with Frio County District Attorney Audrey Louis to protect the integrity of our elections.”
81st Judicial District Attorney Audrey Gossett Louis also shared a statement about the indictments.
VOTER FRAUD IN FRIO COUNTY PRESS RELEASE: Last week a Frio County Grand Jury indicted the following individuals: •...
Posted by Audrey Gossett Louis, 81st Judicial District Attorney on Wednesday, May 7, 2025
This is a developing story. Check back for updates.
Read more reporting on the KSAT Investigates page.
More coverage of this story on KSAT: