Entitled Democrat judge complains she was MANHANDLED by Texas rodeo staff who refused to let her access VIP area after giving her $9,000 freebie… and suggests she is victim of racism

An entitled county judge claims she was manhandled by Texas rodeo staff who refused to let her access a VIP area without a $425 ticket after giving her $9,000 of free hospitality.
Harris County Judge Lina Hidalgo and five guests attended country singer Megan Moroney’s concert at the Houston Rodeo on Tuesday night.
The Democrat and her guests were barred from accessing the venue’s dirt floor because they had not paid $425 to access the premium area and the show was sold out, rodeo staff told KTRK.
Hidalgo decided to try and enter the area anyway and claims she was grabbed, shoved and threatened by security staff, prompting the Latina official to cry racism.
‘I’ve always been [on the floor], never needed a wristband,’ she told the news outlet. ‘At some point, they said it was, you know, that these are paid seats. I said, “Okay, I will pay for them.”‘
Rodeo staff say Hidalgo was asked multiple times to return to the venue’s county suite before she was asked to leave. Hidalgo claims she was escorted out of the stadium like herded cattle, but the rodeo claims she left without an escort.
The venue also said that Hidalgo’s team requested and were granted nearly $9,000 worth of free floor tickets for shows on the three previous nights.
The judge, however, in a scathing letter to the rodeo chairman, claimed she has ‘never accepted anything inappropriately or used my role to personally enrich myself even though many others have.’
Hidalgo also suggested that she would not have been treated this way if she were a ‘male county executive’ and singled out white men, claiming they have ‘felt emboldened to treat others, particularly Hispanics with physical force.’
Harris County Judge Lina Hidalgo, seen at the Houston Rodeo last month, claims she was manhandled by rodeo staff on Tuesday
Hidalgo, circled, and her five guests where barred from accessing the dirt floor at the rodeo because they did not have $425 VIP tickets for the sold-out Megan Moroney show
‘I have never felt so unempowered as a woman as I did yesterday,’ she said in her letter to rodeo chairman Pat Mann Philips.
She brought up the rodeo’s ‘male leadership’ and how she has dedicated herself to fighting against ‘good ol boys clubs.’
‘I wonder, if I had been a male county executive, would they have reacted the same way? Would they have thrown a male Harris County executive’s guest with their young daughter and son out of the Harris County stadium? Would they have gone up to a male guest’s children and yanked them out of a seat?’ she wrote.
She added that she wants rodeo leadership to know that ‘constituents of color and women, like me, deserve to be physically safe and to be treated with dignity.’
She then doubled down on the assertion in a Wednesday interview with KTRK.
‘I don’t know what it is, but it’s not the spirit of the rodeo, it’s not the spirit of this community, and frankly, it makes me even more afraid for people in our community who are not white-passing,’ she told the outlet.
Hidalgo, as county judge, is the ex officio director of the rodeo and has a seat in the county suite.
She attended Tuesday’s show with West University Place Mayor Susan Sample, the mayor’s two children, and the parents of a US Air Force sergeant who passed away on December 31. All of her guests were permitted in the county suite.
Hidalgo shared these clips on social media, claiming they show rodeo staff ‘escorting me out of Harris County’s stadium against my wishes.’ She claims she was grabbed, shoved and threatened by security staff
The rodeo claimed Hidalgo’s team requested and were granted nearly $9,000 worth of free floor tickets for shows on the three previous nights. This photo shows a placard, food and drink she was presented in the county suite during one of the aforementioned visits
Hidalgo, in a letter to the rodeo chairman, claimed she has never needed a ticket to access the floor area and believed the section was for ‘friends of rodeo leaders or for rodeo leaders or such.’ She is seen walking on the rodeo floor with Chairman Pat Mann Philips last month
Hidalgo tried to bring her guests down to the floor area which charges $425-a-ticket.
Rodeo staff claimed the group was turned away and redirected back to their luxurious suite.
But Hidalgo, in her letter to the chairman which she shared online, alleged that at first staff permitted Sample’s children to enter the area if they stood in the back.
She claims staff then ‘proceeded to block the kids and mom from entering, grabbed me, shoved me, and threatened to arrest me,’ she wrote.
Hidalgo claims she offered to leave if it would mean that her guests could stay on the floor, but staff removed her guests anyway.
She further claimed Sample’s daughter was heckled by a crowd member and that instead of addressing the situation, a rodeo staff member told them: ‘Well, I told you to leave.’
The judge also shared an audio recording that she captured on her cell phone in which she can be heard telling staff: ‘You heard they manhandled me, so are you saying that’s OK?’
Rodeo officials have denied Hidalgo’s account of events.
Houston Livestock Show and Rodeo Chairman Pat Mann Philips, Harris County Judge Lina Hidalgo and Rodeo President and CEO Chris Boleman at a hat toss event in February 2026
Hidalgo wrote a scathing letter to the rodeo chairman, alleging she was manhandled and suggested that she would not have been treated this way if she were a ‘male county executive’
‘I have always been allowed on the dirt based on the county’s relationship with the rodeo, regardless of wristband. Nobody has ever told me I needed a special pass to access the dirt. I don’t remember I or my guests ever wearing one and pictures show that,’ Hidalgo wrote in her letter.
She said she believed the VIP area was for ‘friends of rodeo leaders or for rodeo leaders or such.’
Hidalgo, in a series of social media posts, said she is speaking out about the incident because it poses questions about rodeo staff’s treatment of patrons.
‘This is not about a wristband or a ticket or a concert. It is about the mentality of some people and the way they treat others,’ she wrote.
‘If this is how they treat me — by virtue of my position the Ex-Officio Director of the rodeo, landlord, because NRG stadium belongs to Harris County and leases to the rodeo, how do they treat everybody else?’
Houston Livestock Show and Rodeo President and CEO Chris Boleman issued a statement following the incident. It read: ‘On March 10, during the sold-out Megan Moroney concert, Judge Lina Hidalgo attempted to access the dirt area without a valid chute seat ticket.
‘Additionally, she attempted to bring several guests, also without chute seat tickets. Rodeo security advised that dirt access is limited to chute seat ticket holders only, a premium ticket priced at $425, and the group was directed back to their ticketed seating.’
Hidalgo is no stranger to public scrutiny and made headlines last year with a soul-baring Vogue piece about her husband, personal injury attorney David James, emptying his life savings to treat her depression.
Hidalgo shared on her one year anniversary that she and her husband, personal injury attorney David James, had split after ‘life took a turn that made us see things differently’
Hidalgo announced their split in December 2025 with a lengthy Instagram post that initially appeared to celebrate the couple’s union
She then announced their separation on their one-year wedding anniversary in a bizarre and lengthy Instagram caption under a photo of her awkwardly kissing James that initially appeared to celebrate her union, only to announce its conclusion.
‘Our wedding day was the best day of my life so far. Perhaps because my life with David has been incredible. It’s been over half of my adult life—full of joy, new experiences, major changes, important lessons, incredible friendships, success, companionship, support, growth, and deep love,’ she wrote.
‘This year, life took a turn that made us see things differently.’ Hidalgo continued, ‘So, very much unexpectedly, this day of our anniversary, David and I are separated. It’s not what either of us wanted. It is what we confidently, though painfully, feel is best.’
Hidalgo was elected as a Harris County judge in 2019, and said she was inspired to take office by Donald Trump’s first presidency.
She earned a reported $190,000 in 2023, and has made headlines during her time on the bench as a rising Democrat star in Texas, including speaking at the 2024 Democratic National Convention.
In August, video footage captured the moment she shocked a public meeting by shouting over other elected officials and speaking at breakneck speed.
The manic moment came as Hidalgo put forward a proposal to raise taxes to fund free childcare and early education in a November ballot in Harris County, which ultimately fell short as her colleagues did not back it.
Hidalgo wrote in her Vogue article about her mental health challenges that one of the causes of her depression was concerns over ‘natural disasters in Texas.’
She said that thanks to therapy she learned how to experience ‘sadness, worry, or exhaustion over friends’ illnesses or natural disasters in Texas or various work challenges.’


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