Norms Impact
MAGA Candidate Outed as New Owner of Epstein Property
A candidate for statewide tax oversight used an LLC to acquire Epstein’s Zorro Ranch, then challenged its valuation by invoking the property’s “notoriety” to drive taxes down.
Feb 15, 2026
Sources
Summary
Texas comptroller candidate Don Huffines purchased Jeffrey Epstein’s Zorro Ranch in Santa Fe County, New Mexico, through an LLC tied to him and his family. The purchase intersects directly with a candidate for statewide fiscal oversight seeking reduced tax valuation based on the property’s “notoriety.” The practical consequence is a public test of whether officials and voters will tolerate political power-seeking alongside efforts to minimize taxes on a site linked to documented survivor allegations.
Reality Check
This conduct normalizes a corrosive precedent: a politician seeking control over public finance while simultaneously benefiting from aggressive tax minimization on a notorious property, undermining public confidence in impartial fiscal administration. Nothing in the record suggests a clear federal crime—there is no stated bribe, kickback, or coercive official act implicating 18 U.S.C. § 201 or honest-services fraud under 18 U.S.C. §§ 1341, 1343, 1346—but it collides with the core governance norm that tax administration must be insulated from private self-interest. When a comptroller candidate markets “DOGE Texas” discipline while using reputational harm as a basis to cut a multimillion-dollar assessment, we should treat it as a warning about how power can be leveraged to erode equal treatment under the tax system.
Detail
<p>Businessman Don Huffines, 67, a former Texas state senator and current candidate for Texas comptroller, purchased Jeffrey Epstein’s Zorro Ranch in Santa Fe County, New Mexico. Records obtained by the Santa Fe New Mexican show the property was sold in 2023 for an undisclosed amount to San Rafael Ranch LLC, which the paper connected to Huffines and his family through public-records requests.</p><p>The ranch, including a 26,700-square-foot mansion, was first listed for sale in July 2021 at $27.5 million. For tax year 2023, the property was assessed at $21.1 million, and San Rafael Ranch LLC filed a protest seeking a lower valuation, citing the property’s “notoriety” and the sales price; the county assessor later set the value at $13.4 million. In 2024, the address was renamed from 49 Zorro Ranch Road to 49 Rancho San Rafael Road.</p><p>Huffines’ campaign spokesperson said the property was bought at public auction and that proceeds benefited Epstein’s victims.</p>