The controversy started back in early 2016, when Jeffrey Handy, CEO of Three Expo, announced that the company would once again hold an eXXXotica Expo in Dallas, as it had the previous August, at the city-owned Kay Bailey Hutchison Convention Center—and almost immediately, religio-conservatives were up in arms about it. These included the Dallas Women's Foundation, which claimed that various exhibitors at the expo "contribute to the sex trade industry" and would be detrimental to the effort to stop human trafficking.Also on board with the anti-eXXXotica campaign was Ray Lee Hunt, the billionaire oilman son of thrice-married oil millionaire/moralist H.L. Hunt, who owned more than 30 acres in downtown Dallas, including the Hyatt Regency hotel, Union Station, and the Reunion Tower, considered Dallas' tallest and most recognizable landmark. To say Hunt had a significant influence over Dallas politics would be an understatement. And then there's Hunt's wife, Nancy Ann, who chaired the organization This link (www.newfriendsnewlife.org) is not approved. Submit this link for approval, which claims to "restore[] and empower[] formerly trafficked girls and sexually exploited women and their children"—and which wrote an "Open Letter to the Citizens of Dallas," wherein the group, besides also claiming the convention would violate the City's Adult Zoning Code, described eXXXotica as "arguably little more than a traveling strip club, adult book store, and promoter of the sex trade."With all that monied opposition, the Dallas City Council flew into action. …and then things took a turn