Frederick Frazier, a dishonorably discharged Dallas police officer and unpopular former Texas legislator, has officially been censured by the Collin County Conservative Assembly for endorsing a Democrat for McKinney City Council
Frazier, who is currently running for House District 61 against incumbent Keresa Richardson, was censured by CCRA for publicly endorsing Democrat Gere Feltus for McKinney City Council District 3, where she won 53 percent of the vote.
While Feltus was running for District 3, she was also endorsed by Sandy Dulaney, the vice president of McKinney Democrats. Additionally, she was endorsed by the Executive Committee of the Collin County Democratic Party in her first run in 2021.
Furthermore, in the 2018, 2020, and 2024 primary elections, she voted using the Democrat ballot. There was only one year she voted using a Republican ballot, which was in 2022, the same year Frazier ran for and won HD 61.

Feltus ran against Republican Tammy Warren, the president of the McKinney Values PAC, a conservative organization dedicated to recruiting, vetting, endorsing, and funding conservative candidates for both McKinney City Council and the school board.
Frazier and other McKinney leaders, including former Mayor George Fuller, current councilmembers Michael Jones, Patrick Cloutier, and Rick Franklin, endorsed Feltus instead of the Republican-aligned candidate.
In CCRA’s resolution, they state that “supporting candidates affiliated with the Democrat Party undermines Republican values, confuses voters, weakens Republican candidates, and damages trust within the Republican grassroots.”
The assembly added that endorsements in favor of Democrat candidates are a “direct breach of trust with Republican voters” and that their actions are contrary to Republican values.
Frazier has previously been involved in significant controversy after he was dishonorably discharged from the Dallas PD and charged with one count of criminal mischief, a Class C misdemeanor, for vandalizing campaign signs belonging to his primary opponent, Paul Chabot, during the 2022 election. He was fined $500 for the offense.
He was also charged with two counts of attempted impersonation of a public servant, a Class A misdemeanor, for claiming to be a code compliance officer during the same incident. As a result, Frazier received one year of deferred adjudication probation and was fined $4,000 for each charge.
In 2023, Frazier was named in a civil suit accusing him and other leaders of the Dallas Police Association’s charity foundation, Assist the Officer, of misappropriating donations intended for fallen officers.
Additionally, in May 2023, Frazier voted in favor of impeaching Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton, who was accused of bribery, abuse of office, and obstruction of justice. Paxton was eventually acquitted of all charges by the Texas Senate.
The censure resolution will be distributed to the Collin County Republican Party for further action to be taken.
