德克萨斯州总检察长反对大型穆斯林“规划社区”项目。
Gigantic Muslim 'Planned Community' Meets Resistance From Texas AG

原始链接: https://www.zerohedge.com/political/gigantic-muslim-planned-community-meets-resistance-texas-ag

德克萨斯州总检察长肯·帕克斯顿正在寻求德克萨斯州证券委员会(TSSB)对EPIC City项目的审查,该项目是一个402英亩的总体规划社区,与东普莱诺伊斯兰中心(EPIC)有关。帕克斯顿指控该项目存在“公然”违反州和联邦证券法的行为,核心问题在于出售价值8万美元的“股份”,这些股份保证在开发项目中获得15%的折扣未来地块。 调查于三月启动,重点在于这些股份是否构成未注册的证券,因为承诺的回报依赖于开发商的努力——这是证券法下的一个关键要素。担忧包括可能具有误导性的关于许可、时间表和投资者资金使用的披露,尤其是在截至2025年中旬,建筑许可尚未获得的情况下。 与此同时,州长格雷格·阿博特启动了对潜在欺诈和外国敌对势力参与的调查,并签署了一项旨在防止歧视性住宅安排的法案。司法部因担心对非穆斯林进行宗教歧视而发起的民权调查在获得包容性保证后已无罪释放。尽管如此,州级对EPIC City财务行为的调查仍在继续。

相关文章

原文

Authored by Wendi Strauch Mahoney via AmericanThinker.com,

Texas attorney general Ken Paxton has asked the Texas State Securities Board (TSSB) to review what he says is evidence that entities tied to the East Plano Islamic Center (EPIC)’s EPIC City project violated state and federal securities laws — and to refer the matter back so he can file suit.  

Paxton called the alleged misconduct “flagrant,” arguing that state law requires a TSSB referral before his office can bring a securities action.

"After a thorough investigation, it has become clear that the developers behind EPIC City flagrantly and undeniably violated the law,” said Attorney General Paxton.

The bad actors behind this illegal scheme must be held accountable for ignoring state and federal regulations. In accordance with state law, the TSSB should review our findings and refer this matter to me for further legal action.

EPIC City is a 402-acre master-planned community near Josephine, Texas, spanning Collin and Hunt Counties.  Materials describe housing (single-family, townhomes, multifamily), a mosque, schools, parks, senior living, and retail.  The project vehicle, Community Capital Partners, LP (CCP), has been described in EPIC’s promotions as created by EPIC, with EPIC as the beneficiary of project profits.

In March, Paxton opened a consumer-protection probe and served a Civil Investigative Demand (CID) on CCP, the vehicle formed to develop EPIC City.  The March 25, 2025 press release highlighted EPIC’s own promotional statements that CCP was “created by EPIC” and that EPIC is the “only beneficiary of profits” from the project.

Two days later, on March 27, Gov. Greg Abbott announced that the TSSB would investigate EPIC and “affiliated entities for potential failures to comply with applicable state and federal securities requirements, including protections against fraud.”  In the same press release, Abbott said he sent a letter dated March 26 requesting EPIC “cease and desist funeral service operations.”  He also said that “a dozen state agencies” were investigating “serious legal issues” concerning the potential illegal activities involving the alleged purchase of Texas property by “foreign adversaries ... taking place at EPIC.”

On April 14, 2025, Paxton expanded his investigation, demanding communications from Plano, Richardson, Wylie, and Josephine due to alleged local support for the project.  The requests sought emails and records referencing EPIC, EPIC City, and CCP.

Sen. John Cornyn (R-Texas) also asked the Department of Justice to open a federal civil rights probe into EPIC City, as highlighted in his April 11, 2025 letter to the assistant attorney general for the DOJ’s Civil Rights Division.  In the letter and subsequent press release, Cornyn expressed concern over the potential for religious discrimination that might “violate the constitutional rights of Jewish and Christian Texans, by preventing them from living in this new community and discriminating against them within the community.”  Cornyn continued,

Religious-based discrimination is a constitutional violation as well as a federal rights violation.  Appropriate steps should be taken to ensure that this community does not run afoul of these obligations.  It may also be appropriate for an investigation to explore whether the proponents of the proposed development are abiding by existing federal and state prohibitions on the enforcement of Sharia law.

The DOJ closed its investigation with no charges, after developers affirmed that the community would be inclusive and marketed under the Fair Housing Act.  However, the decision did not touch the state’s ongoing consumer protection and securities inquiries.

CCP marketed $80,000 shares to accredited investors with “each share purchased [guaranteeing] one lot in EPIC City” with a stated 15% discount, an arrangement that is central to Paxton’s investigation.

Under the Texas Securities Act and the Supreme Court’s Howey test, a “security” includes an investment contract, money invested in a common enterprise with an expectation of return that depends on the managerial efforts of others.  Promising that a discounted $80,000 “share” secures a right to buy a developed lot later signals an expected economic gain that hinges on the developer entitling land, installing infrastructure, and delivering lots.  The arrangement fulfills the investment-contract definition used by Texas and federal law.

Anti-fraud rules would also apply.  If EPIC/CCP’s “share” is treated as an investment contract, it is a security under the Texas Securities Act (TSA).  Once the “share for future lot right + discount” is characterized as a security, certain rules apply.  Before any security is offered or sold in Texas, it must be registered or notice-filed — or the sale must qualify for an exemption — and the issuer must provide truthful, non-misleading disclosures.  Even if an exemption applies, material misstatements or omissions about permitting status, ownership, timelines, lot deliverability, or the use of investor funds can trigger anti-fraud liability.  Paxton’s Oct. 14 statement characterizes the alleged conduct as securities law violations.

The share pitch also heightens the expectation of profit: a guaranteed right to buy a finished lot at a fixed discount functions as a return mechanism that depends on CCP/EPIC obtaining approvals, building infrastructure, and delivering lots.  Investor upside (the discount and potential appreciation) stems from the promoter’s efforts, not the investor’s — classic Howey elements recognized by Texas courts.

Finally, context matters: As of mid-2025, public reporting shows no issued construction permits, raising materiality concerns for any marketing that implies near-term delivery of “developed lots.”  That gap between promotional claims and on-the-ground progress is precisely what securities regulators scrutinize under anti-fraud provisions.

Therefore, the specific potential material flashpoints in EPIC’s marketing/investor pitch are related to

  • Deliverability/Timing: Saying a share guarantees the right to a developed lot implies that the developer can obtain approvals, install infrastructure, and deliver lots on a timeline.  If permits/plat approvals weren’t in hand (or were far off), that’s material.

  • Economics: A 15% discount and advertised per-lot price ranges anchor investor return expectations.  If cost inputs, financing, or timelines were speculative or changed materially, failing to update buyers can be an omission.

  • Use of Proceeds/Structure: Who actually benefits (e.g., the relationship between EPIC and CCP), how funds are escrowed/spent, and contingencies if lots are delayed or never delivered — all are core disclosure items in a securities offering.  If the marketing glossed over these or suggested protections that didn’t exist, that’s classic anti-fraud territory.

Amy “Mek” Mekelburg — an activist and founder and editor-in-chief of RAIR Foundation USA — argues that EPIC City will become a “sharia-controlled enclave.”  

She says she has tracked the project since its inception and highlighted a promotional EPIC City video on X in which Muslim leaders describe the community as the “epicenter of Islam in America.”  According to Mekelburg, her pinned post of that video drew over 7 million views before X removed it.  She points to EPIC’s 76,000-square-foot Islamic complex — “one of the largest in Texas” — as evidence of growing influence and calls EPIC City “a massive, sharia-adherent residential and commercial enclave ... a deliberate blueprint for a self-contained Islamic community, built around sharia principles and insulated from public oversight.”

According to the Dallas News, “Yasir Quadhi, resident scholar at EPIC,” said “the only laws the community will enforce will be Texas and federal ones.  They are not seeking to impose religion on anyone.”

Separately, House Bill 4211 — ceremonially signed by Gov. Greg Abbott in September 2025 — “creates a framework for regulating entity-owned residential arrangements,” addressing ownership structures cited in EPIC City and EPIC Ranches, according to Texas Scorecard.  

Abbott said the measure is intended to prevent using religion “as a form of segregation,” framing the debate around both religious freedom and the right to contract, and pledging to ensure that Texas law prevents “discriminatory compounds” from being built.

Loading recommendations...

联系我们 contact @ memedata.com