A controversial Texas court case from 2021 is suddenly back in the spotlight, and it is creating major political heat ahead of a high-profile judicial election.
Critics are targeting Travis Kitchens, a Republican judge in Polk County, after old sentencing details involving convicted offender Eli Binnion resurfaced online in May 2026.
The case involved the sexual assault of a 14-year-old girl.
In 2021, Binnion was sentenced to 180 days in jail, along with 10 years of probation and mandatory sex offender registration. Because he had already spent years behind bars awaiting trial since 2018, the remaining jail time reportedly dropped to around 100 additional days after credit for time served.
That sentencing outcome is now fueling outrage across social media and political circles, especially after reports revealed prosecutors had pushed for a much harsher 15-year prison sentence.
More to the story than viral posts suggest
While many online reactions frame the case as a simple “six-month sentence,” the full timeline is more complicated.
Court records show Binnion also received a separate 3-year prison sentence after assaulting another inmate while in custody awaiting trial. Supporters of Judge Kitchens argue that key context, including years already spent jailed before sentencing, is being ignored in viral criticism.
Still, opponents say the final punishment in the child assault case itself sends the wrong message, especially in crimes involving minors.
Election-year controversy explodes
The timing could not be worse for Kitchens.
As the judge campaigns for re-election in 2026, critics are using the case to question his handling of serious sex crimes and accuse the justice system of going soft on offenders.
The backlash has quickly become partisan, with political opponents amplifying the case online as voters prepare to head to the polls.
Bigger debate over sentencing
The controversy highlights a broader national argument over how courts calculate punishment, especially when defendants spend years in pretrial detention before a final sentence is handed down.
For many voters, though, the legal details are being overshadowed by one emotional question: was justice truly served?
That question is now following Judge Kitchens straight into election season.
Transparency notes
Published: May 11, 2026. No major post-publication update has been logged.
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