The Full Story Behind the Lucien Tujague Jr. Fraud Allegations

By the time Trevor and Brandy Bachmeyer realized what had happened to them, the damage was already catastrophic. One member of the family was fighting for his life in a hospital ICU. Their finances were in freefall. And the man they allege sold them a poisoned home was not offering help, he was preparing a lawsuit.

This is the story that the website lucientujaguejrreview.com was built to tell. It is a detailed, document-heavy account of what the Bachmeyer family describes as one of the most devastating real estate fraud cases in recent Texas history, a saga involving hidden toxic mold, structural collapse, venomous wildlife inside the walls, a $900,000 court judgment, and an ongoing attempt to seize the family’s income and assets. Every claim comes from the site’s own published materials, court records, photographs, and personal statements, and readers should note that this remains an active legal dispute in which Lucien Tujague Jr. has obtained a significant judgment against the site’s operators.

THE PURCHASE: AUGUST 2020

It began in the summer of 2020. The Bachmeyer family, Trevor, a cancer survivor and entrepreneur who had previously rebuilt his life from Stage 3B cancer and financial ruin, and his wife Brandy, purchased a property at 100 New Dominion Dr., Royse City, Texas. The seller was Lucien Tujague Jr., described on the site as a prominent figure in the Texas real estate market and a member of the RREAF executive team.

According to the family, Tujague presented the property as professionally built and move-in ready. They signed the papers believing they were securing a safe home for their family — a fresh chapter after years of hardship. What they allege they actually purchased was something far more dangerous.

DAYS ONE THROUGH THIRTY: THE UNRAVELING BEGINS

The problems, according to the site’s detailed timeline, became apparent almost immediately. Within days of moving in, the family discovered the property was filled with construction debris, mud, and trash. Aggressive wasp nests were found swarming inside the structure. Mice and insects were entering through holes and cracks in the walls. The yard — which Tujague had reportedly described as newly completed — was assessed by independent experts to require at least $68,000 in repairs alone.

Text messages from Tujague, dated August 22, 2020, and published on the site, allegedly show him acknowledging the condition of the property and promising to “finish the house and fix his damage.” He also reportedly offered a 10-year credit for all Homeowners Association fees, stretching through 2030, as a gesture of goodwill. The family says this promise was either defective or deliberately constructed as a future legal trap — a point they return to in their FAQ section.

Over the following weeks, the situation worsened. Photographs posted on the site’s evidence page — dozens of them spanning multiple years — show severe structural damage including walls physically cracking apart, foundations showing visible stress fractures, and what the family describes as deliberate cosmetic concealment of underlying defects. Perhaps most alarmingly, the family states that rattlesnakes and scorpions were entering the home through gaps and holes in the walls — a direct consequence, they argue, of the structural failures that Tujague had hidden beneath fresh coats of paint.

THE TOXIC MOLD: A HIDDEN HEALTH CATASTROPHE

Between September 2020 and June 2021, the family’s account takes a medical turn that would prove life-altering. Independent testing conducted on the property, the results of which are among the documents published on the evidence page, allegedly confirmed the presence of deadly black mold throughout the house — mold that the family contends was deliberately concealed beneath new paintwork before the sale.

The consequences for Trevor Bachmeyer were severe. Prolonged exposure to the toxic environment, they allege, directly contributed to a serious deterioration of his lung health. He was ultimately forced to undergo emergency thoracic surgery — a major operation involving the chest cavity — and spent time in the ICU recovering. The family states that this outcome was a direct result of living in a home that Tujague knew was contaminated.

In their FAQ section, they address the question directly: “The husband was forced to undergo life-saving thoracic surgery to remove a mass, a severe condition that was significantly exacerbated by prolonged exposure to the toxic black mold throughout the house.”

The site also references Trevor’s broader medical history for context — he had previously survived Stage 3B cancer, a battle that left him with reduced lung capacity and a heightened vulnerability to respiratory hazards. The family argues this background made the concealment of the mold not merely negligent but, in their view, potentially life-threatening in a uniquely foreseeable way.

NINE MONTHS OF BROKEN PROMISES: JUNE 2021

For approximately nine months — from the initial discovery of defects in August and September 2020 through to June 2021 — the family says they attempted to resolve the situation directly with Tujague. The site describes a pattern of unanswered calls, ignored messages, and unfulfilled promises of repairs. Despite the seller’s alleged initial acknowledgment of the problems, no meaningful remediation was ever carried out.

Experts brought in to assess the full scope of the damage reportedly estimated that structural repairs alone would cost at least $500,000 — a figure that, combined with the yard repairs and ongoing medical costs, represented a total financial catastrophe for the family.

By June 2021, with no repairs made and health conditions worsening, the Bachmeyers say they had no choice but to retain attorneys and file a formal legal complaint against Tujague for fraud and misrepresentation.

THE COUNTERATTACK: A $900,000 LAWSUIT

What happened next is the element of this story the family describes as the most shocking. Rather than engaging with the fraud allegations or offering to remediate the property, Tujague — in August 2021, just weeks after the Bachmeyers filed their lawsuit — filed a counter-suit against them. The allegation: defamation.

The family’s FAQ section explains their account of what followed: “He managed — through lobbying and hiring high-profile attorneys — to get the couple ordered to pay nearly one million dollars in damages to him.” The resulting $900,000 default judgment is referenced across multiple pages of the site, and court records appear to support its existence.

The site further alleges that Tujague and his associates then moved to use the HOA fee credit — the one he had originally offered as a goodwill gesture — as a legal mechanism to initiate foreclosure proceedings on the property. The family contends that the “non-payment” cited as grounds for foreclosure related to HOA fees that should have been covered by the 10-year credit Tujague himself had promised, suggesting the offer was either intentionally designed to create a future loophole or was simply never properly executed.

In August 2025, court documents referenced on the site show an order was issued to seize Trevor Bachmeyer’s income and websites as part of the enforcement of the judgment.

THE TURNOVER ORDER: DOMINION ASSET DEVELOPMENT, LLC

The Bachmeyer Family Statement page adds a final and deeply personal layer to the account. The family reveals that the creditor now enforcing the $900,000 judgment is an entity called Dominion Asset Development, LLC — and that the enforcement action has progressed to what is described as an “Application for a Turnover Order.”

Under this application, the family states that the court is being asked to seize their social media revenue and equipment, personal assets including vehicles and watches, and assets held within legally formed trusts and LLCs. Trevor, who describes having built what he calls a “$20 Million Dollar Empire” through entrepreneurship and online content following his cancer survival, says the seizure is designed not merely to collect a debt but to eliminate his ability to generate income and maintain a public voice.

“They are not merely seeking to collect a debt,” the family writes in their statement. “They are attempting to destroy our capacity to work, humiliate our victory, and undo legal protection.”

The statement emphasizes Trevor’s history as a cancer survivor operating with one lung and frames the legal campaign against them as corporate vengeance rather than legitimate debt collection.

THE WEBSITE: A PUBLIC DOCUMENTATION CAMPAIGN

The site itself — lucientujaguejrreview.com — was built as a deliberate act of public disclosure. It hosts a structured archive of what the family presents as their complete evidentiary record: photographs of structural damage and mold testing results, copies of legal filings and court orders, personal text message exchanges with Tujague, medical documentation, and a chronological timeline spanning from the August 2020 purchase to the present day.

The site also includes a submission form inviting other individuals who believe they have experienced similar fraud at the hands of real estate developers to come forward and share their stories, with the stated goal of protecting future buyers.

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