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Prosecutors offer deal to former Coffee City police chief facing 6 felonies

JohnJay Portillo is facing six felony counts related to lying on his job application when he applied in Coffee City.

COFFEE CITY, Texas — JohnJay Portillo made a court appearance on Monday in Henderson County.

He's facing six felony counts related to lying on his job application when he applied in Coffee City.

His attorney asked the judge for more time to consider the offer. Terms of the deal weren't disclosed and the case was reset until next month.

RELATED: Former Coffee City police chief faces felony charges after KHOU 11 investigation

Portillo was fired on Sept. 12, two weeks after KHOU 11 Investigates exposed questionable hiring practices by the chief and his own legal troubles. In a rare move, city council members voted unanimously to disband the police force.

The charges

The six felony counts in the grand jury indictment allege Portillo repeatedly lied on his Coffee City job application by failing to disclose a driving under the influence charge out of Florida and discipline he received at two previous police agencies in Harris County.

RELATED: In wake of KHOU 11 Investigates reports, Coffee City fires police chief, deactivates police department

The Texas Commission on Law Enforcement, TCOLE, requires police agency job applicants to disclose any prior citations, arrests, convictions and disciplinary actions on their personal history statements. The form contains a written warning: “Be truthful, as there are criminal consequences for lying on a government document.”

The criminal allegations against Portillo are similar to issues his former officers faced, a KHOU 11 investigation found this summer. Portillo was sworn in as Coffee City Police Chief in April 2021 and quickly expanded the police force to 50 officers for a town of barely 250 people. KHOU 11 Investigates revealed how more than half of those cops had been suspended, demoted, terminated, or dishonorably discharged from their previous law enforcement jobs. The then-chief conceded the appointments allowed officers to work extra jobs, where they earned up to $100,000 a year.

Portillo himself worked extra security jobs. At an apartment complex in Southeast Houston, nearly 200 miles away from his former full-time job in Coffee City, KHOU 11 Investigates uncovered a profanity-laced tirade Portillo launched at an elected Harris County constable, involving a dispute over filing charges on a suspect.

How we got here

KHOU 11 Investigates discovered the town had five times the number of cops than any town its size, according to Texas Commission on Law Enforcement records. More than half of the department’s 50 officers had been suspended, demoted, terminated or dishonorably discharged from their previous law enforcement jobs, according to personnel files obtained through open records requests to other law enforcement agencies. Most of the officers were hired by Portillo.

A series of reports by KHOU 11 Investigative Reporter Jeremy Rogalski led to a deeper look into the Coffee City Police Department and Portillo.

KHOU 11 Investigates also uncovered Portillo launched a questionable warrant division, in which full-time Coffee City officers were not even required to work in Coffee City at all.

"There were things that we weren’t aware of and that really just opened our eyes, you know, there’s major changes that have got to be made and made quickly," Coffee City Mayor Jeff Blackstone said in August after the council vote.

Portillo tried to email his resignation before the meeting, but council members refused to accept the unsigned notice and instead outright fired the police chief.

"We just felt it was best to basically terminate the program, that way we’re able to go out and find a new chief, let him do the proper evaluations and determine if he wants to re-hire anybody or start from scratch," Blackstone said at the time.

Portillo did not return a request for comment after the council vote.

When asked why he would hire so many people with red flags, Portillo defended the practice.

"There’s more to just what’s on paper," Portillo said at the time. "And that's where I rely on my captain and my background investigators to go in and dig and say, ‘Hey, what's that? What's the truth behind this?'"

Portillo said in some cases, the criminal charges officers faced were dismissed or expunged, and the dishonorable discharges overturned after officers appealed them through the State Office of Administrative Hearings. Portillo claimed most of the applicants he’s hired got on the wrong side of agency politics.

Where is Coffee City?

Coffee City is a town in northeast Texas southwest of Tyler.

Jeremy Rogalski on social media: Facebook | Twitter | Instagram

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