Norms Impact
MAGA Superintendent Who Put Bibles in Schools Faces Porn Investigation
When a top state education official brings explicit material into a closed-door government meeting, public oversight hinges on whether he preserves evidence and submits to lawful scrutiny.
Jul 28, 2025
Sources
Summary
Oklahoma Superintendent of Public Instruction Ryan Walters is under investigation after board members say a pornographic video appeared on a TV in his office during a closed-door Board of Education meeting. The state’s legislative leaders are pressuring the top K–12 education official to surrender relevant devices for scrutiny. The episode converts an official proceeding into a potential evidence-preservation dispute over government transparency and misuse of public office.
Reality Check
Normalizing a public official’s ability to deny, deflect, and refuse transparency after explicit content appears during an official proceeding invites a template for hiding misconduct and eroding our right to accountable government. If investigators find evidence was deleted, concealed, or devices were withheld, the exposure shifts from embarrassment to potential criminal liability under federal obstruction statutes such as 18 U.S.C. § 1519 and § 1505, as well as any applicable Oklahoma laws governing obstruction or destruction of public records. Even if no criminal intent is proven, the conduct described—explicit content in a closed-door meeting followed by blanket denials and hostility toward scrutiny—shreds core governance norms of evidence preservation, candor, and non-abuse of office.
Media
Detail
<p>Oklahoma Superintendent of Public Instruction Ryan Walters is facing calls for an investigation after Board of Education members reported seeing a pornographic video on a TV in Walters’s office during the closed-door portion of a Board of Education meeting last week.</p><p>NonDoc reported that board member Ryan Deatherage noticed the video while a parent discussed an appeal of a district transfer denial. Deatherage said the video showed “multiple nude women” and a “chiropractic table.” Board member Becky Carson, who also had a view of the screen, said she initially questioned what she was seeing before identifying nipples and pubic hair. Both described the footage as “retro” and said it did not depict intercourse.</p><p>Carson said she confronted Walters, told him to turn off the TV, and that Walters acknowledged seeing it while fumbling to shut it off.</p><p>State legislative leaders, including Republican House Speaker Kyle Hilbert and Republican Senate President Pro Tempore Lonnie Paxton, publicly called for an investigation and urged Walters to unlock and turn over relevant devices. Walters, his spokesperson, and a statement posted by Walters on X denied the allegations.</p>