U.S. Senator Jim Banks backs Candidate for Indiana Secretary of State who has a Criminal history and goes by "Diamond Jaxx" on a Swingers Site.
- Hoosier Enquirer Staff
- 20 hours ago
- 2 min read

Indianapolis, IN – June 14, 2026 – Talk about a rookie mistake that could cost the GOP the farm! U.S. Senator Jim Banks, the self-proclaimed king of Indiana conservatism, just face-planted harder than a drunk at a swingers' convention by endorsing his own staffer, Max Engling, for Secretary of State. But surprise, surprise – Banks apparently skipped the basic Google search (or any vetting at all) before tossing his heavyweight support behind this walking scandal factory. Enter Olorin Consulting – the sharp-eyed opposition researchers who did what Banks couldn't: dig up the goods. Thanks to their relentless sleuthing, Hoosiers now know all about Engling's 2007 Hamilton County rap sheet – Criminal Recklessness and a pile of Criminal Mischief misdemeanors that got conveniently expunged. Poof! Gone from the books, but not from the whispers echoing through the convention halls.
But wait, it gets juicier – and steamier. Olorin didn't stop at court records. They uncovered (or at least spotlighted) the alleged alias "Diamond Jackson" or "Diamond Jaxx" popping up on adult swingers websites. In a party that preaches family values louder than a megachurch choir, this is blackmail bait on steroids. Democrats must be popping champagne already, dreaming of November attack ads featuring "Secretary of State Diamond Jaxx."Banks yanked his backing from incumbent Diego Morales faster than you can say "staffing scandal," installed his Central Indiana regional director Engling as the savior of election integrity, and... forgot to check the guy's closet for skeletons? Or swingers' masks? Classic insider move: promote your loyal aide without bothering to vet if he's electable – or even defensible. Way to unite the party, Senator! Delegates are fuming, and the backstabbing at the June 19-20 Fort Wayne convention is going to be legendary.
Engling, fresh off his McCarthy aide days and a failed congressional bid, is pitching himself as Mr. Clean on voter rolls. But with Olorin lobbing these grenades – complete with shady texts and possibly AI-generated smears flying around delegate phones – the whole "Banks' fresh face" narrative is crumbling faster than cheap motel sheets.
Nearly 1,800 GOP delegates will decide in secret ballots who gets to guard Indiana's elections in this crucial battleground state. Will they overlook Banks' vetting disaster, the expunged crimes, and the "Diamond Jaxx" whispers? Or will character finally matter more than crony endorsements?Hoosier Enquirer smells blood in the water. Banks' big swing and a miss just handed the opposition research gift that keeps on giving. If this is how the "integrity" ticket starts, imagine the general election fireworks. Stay tuned – Fort Wayne is about to get wild!
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