Clay Laird being removed from the committee room

There was nothing secure about the Senate Transportation and Homeland Security Committee today. During public testimony on Senate Bill 358, Houston Republican Sen. Dan Patrick‘s anti-“sanctuary city” bill, a man was removed after making threats against committee members.

There was initially confusion over Clay Laird‘s testimony, because somehow he had been listed as against the bill. It became pretty clear that was a clerical error when he said he would come to the home of anyone that opposed the bill.

He asked Committee Chair John Carona, R-Dallas, “John, have you ever been to an execution?” Laird had: His mother was raped and murdered in the 1980s by a recently released convict, who was later executed (he did not claim the killer was an illegal immigrant.) His testimony went from moving to scary when he warned legislators that, if they didn’t support the bill, he would come “wherever you live […] I mean I’m gonna be knocking on your door.” Chillingly, he then asked Carona, “You run some properties?”

When Carona told him to wrap up and be cautious because his last comment sounded like a threat, Laird clarified that. “It’s not a threat, sir, it’s a promise written in blood. It might be yours, it might be mine,” he warned.

Carona put the committee into brief recess, had Laird removed from the room, and said he would be looking into pursuing charges for the threats made.

Patrick, by contrast, just put out a Tweet about this morning’s meeting: “Emotional testimony today from families who have had family members murdered by illegal aliens.”

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The Chronicle's first Culture Desk editor, Richard has reported on Austin's growing film production and appreciation scene for over a decade. A graduate of the universities of York, Stirling, and UT-Austin, a Rotten Tomatoes certified critic, and eight-time Best of Austin winner, he's currently at work on two books and a play.