Norris had ruled in October that Edwards…
November 1826 CE
Norris had evicted the immigrant, angering many of the colonists.
Later that month, another new immigrant was arrested and ordered to leave the country after refusing to purchase a merchant license before trading with the native tribes.
On November 22, 1826, local militia colonel Martin Parmer and thirty-nine other Edwards colonists enter Nacogdoches and arrest Norris, Sepulveda, and the commander of the small Mexican garrison, charging them with oppression and corruption.
Haden Edwards is also arrested for violating his expulsion order but is immediately paroled, possibly as a ploy to disguise his own involvement in the plot.
A kangaroo court finds the other men guilty, removes them from their positions, and bans them from ever holding another public office.
The court disbands after appointing a temporary alcalde.
The actions benefit Parmer personally; several weeks earlier, after Parmer killed a man in a dispute, Norris had issued a warrant for Parmer's arrest.
With Norris removed from office, the arrest warrant is voided.
Throughout the fall, Benjamin Edwards had tried to gather support from the Edwards colonists for a potential armed revolt against Mexican authority.
Largely unsuccessful, he had approached the nearby Cherokee tribe for assistance.
Several years earlier, the tribe had applied for title to the lands they that occupied in northern East Texas.
They had been promised but never given a deed from the Mexican authorities.
Benjamin Edwards had offered the tribe clear title to all of Texas north of Nacogdoches in exchange for armed support for his plans.