Turmoil Strikes McNair Family Amid Houston Rodeo Celebrations

Turmoil Strikes McNair Family Amid Houston Rodeo Celebrations

RFF Editor4 min read

Every March, Houston surrenders itself to the Livestock Show and Rodeo at NRG Stadium -- the same turf where the NFL's Houston Texans do battle on Sundays. The Texans franchise, built from nothing by the late Bob McNair and his wife, Janice, has fused itself into the DNA of this city, its identity tangled up with rodeo dust and Friday night lights. But on March 7, 2024, while tens of thousands of Houstonians packed the fairgrounds for another night of barrel racing and deep-fried everything, something far less festive was going down a few miles away. At the corporate offices of McNair Interests, nestled on the manicured grounds of the Houstonian Hotel, three McNair siblings made their move -- yanking their brother Cary from the CEO chair in one swift, coordinated strike. The family empire had just cracked open for everyone to see.

Armed guards, marked lists, and locked doors

Employees showed up that morning expecting spreadsheets and coffee. What they got was a scene out of a corporate thriller: armed security personnel in bulletproof vests stationed at the doors, clutching printed lists of employee names and photographs -- some of them marked with X's. A vehicle nobody recognized sat parked in the HR director's reserved spot. Inside, executive assistants were shaken, one whispering, "They won't let us in." When pressed on who "they" were, the answer landed like a brick: "The security guards."

The building hummed with dread. Staffers whose names were unmarked on the lists got waved through. Those with X's next to their faces were turned away at the door. Rumors of a potential violent incident rippled through the hallways. Even the employees who made it inside found no answers -- management appeared just as blindsided as everyone else. Some were sent home. Others sat at their desks in a fog of uncertainty. By midday, the news arrived: Cary McNair was out as CEO of McNair Interests, replaced by Stephen Johnson, a name that meant nothing to virtually anyone in the building.

The culture that Cary built

Under Cary's watch, McNair Interests had cultivated something rare in the world of billionaire family offices -- genuine loyalty. Employees described a workplace that felt less like a corporate machine and more like an extended family. Cary himself was known as a leader driven by integrity and faith, someone who held to his values even when doing so made him unpopular. That reputation had earned him a workforce that showed up not just for the paycheck but for the person signing it.

Cary McNair and his wife posing together at a Houston social event

Cary McNair and his wife at a Houston gathering (Photo: Houston CityBook)

But beneath the surface, the McNair family fault lines had been spreading for months. In November 2023, Cary filed for guardianship of his mother, Janice McNair, citing concerns about her health following a stroke she suffered in 2020. (Read more here) He later withdrew the request, but the damage was already done -- the filing ripped the lid off divisions that had been quietly festering among the siblings. By March 2024, those divisions had hardened into something irreversible.

On the day of the takeover, Janice reportedly revoked powers of attorney that had previously granted others the ability to act on her behalf. Insiders say that decision was orchestrated by Cary's siblings -- Cal, Melissa, and Ruth -- who allegedly convinced their mother to transfer control of the family trust into their hands. That single maneuver gave them the leverage to remove Cary and install themselves in leadership positions, despite having no track record running the family's sprawling business interests or its portfolio of international projects.

Four siblings, four very different orbits

The McNair children have never operated on the same wavelength. Cal McNair, born on October 24, 1961, in Houston, Texas, was the one groomed from childhood for the spotlight -- specifically, the owner's suite at NRG Stadium. He stepped into a high-profile leadership role with the Houston Texans after his father's death. Cal reportedly earned a bachelor's degree from the University of Texas at Austin, where he walked on to the Longhorns football team for a year but never saw game action. Following in his father's footsteps, Cal became one of the first employees of Bob McNair's company, Cogen Technologies, in 1987.

Cary, the oldest brother, operated in a different lane entirely. He ran the broader McNair Interests investment portfolio, steering the family's diverse business ventures -- commercial real estate projects, energy and oil investments -- along with overseeing the McNair Medical Institute.

The sisters, Ruth and Melissa, occupied less central roles in the business empire, living generously off their trust funds.

The family dynamics reportedly grew thornier after Cal married Hannah Hartland, a polarizing figure who has sought to carve out a prominent role within the Texans organization. Her relationship with the rest of the McNair family is reportedly nonexistent, with her primary focus appearing to center on public appearances and cultivating notoriety.

Cal McNair and Hannah Hartland photographed together at a public appearance

Cal McNair and Hannah Hartland (Photo: Houston CityBook)

The lawsuits start flying

The three siblings wasted no time locking down their gains. On June 5, 2024, Cal, Melissa, Ruth, and the family trust filed a lawsuit against Cary, his son, and other executives, alleging mismanagement. Cary fired back, claiming the lawsuit was nothing more than retaliation for his earlier guardianship filing on behalf of their mother. While much of the turmoil had stayed behind closed doors, a local news report dragged the family's internal war into the open for all of Houston to watch.

A dynasty with cracks in the foundation

For decades, the McNair name carried weight in Houston that went beyond football. Bob McNair, born on January 1, 1937, in Tampa, Florida, spent more than 50 years as one of the city's most prominent businessmen, sportsmen, and philanthropists. He was the founder, senior chairman, and chief executive officer of the Houston Texans. Janice McNair, born on September 30, 1936, in Myrtle Beach, South Carolina, co-founded the franchise alongside him and assumed ownership after Bob's death in 2018. Unity, trust, philanthropy -- those were the words people reached for when they talked about the McNairs.

That vocabulary does not apply anymore. Employees who once felt secure now navigate a workplace thick with suspicion. Family grievances that were once whispered about over dinner have spilled into courtrooms and boardrooms. The McNair saga is a blunt reminder that inherited wealth does not come with inherited harmony -- and that even the most carefully constructed dynasties can unravel when the people inside them stop trusting each other. Houston is watching, waiting to see what becomes of one of its most powerful families and the vast empire they are now fighting over.

#cal-mcnair #cary-mcnair #houston-texans #nevada #nfl
Share

Related Stories