Boggs was appointed to a fill a vacant seat on the
Las Vegas City Council on June 28, 1999. She was elected in
the Ward 2 primary election, receiving 70 percent of the vote. Under Nevada election law, a person can be elected to a position in a
primary election, without the need to run in a
general election if certain conditions are met. Boggs was a Republican candidate for the U.S. Congress in 2002, running against
Shelley Berkley in Nevada's First Congressional District. She lost, had she won she would have been the only Republican African-American female in the House. She was featured in a
Washington Post opinion piece by national columnist George Will. Among those who hosted fundraisers and/or meet-and-greets on her behalf included President George H.W. Bush, 41st President of the United States, Ambassador
Alan Keyes, U.S. Senator
Orrin Hatch and U.S. Congressman
John Boehner. On April 20, 2004, Boggs joined the
Clark County Commission. She was appointed to the position by
Governor Kenny Guinn to fill the seat for District F previously held by
Mark James. The allegations proved false. On June 5, 2007, Boggs was the subject of an arrest warrant over charges that she committed four
felonies related to her reelection bid in 2006. These warrants were quashed by the Chief Judge Kathy Hardcastle, of the Clark County District Court. The charges, according to Boggs and numerous commentators, were "political payback" rooted in her vocal opposition to a 40% pay raise for police officers in Las Vegas and because of her former service on the Board of Directors of Station Casinos, a non-union hotel corporation. She was originally sued in civil court by both the Police Protective Association and the Las Vegas Culinary Union. Both unions were key endorsers of the 2006 re-election effort of Clark County District Attorney David Roger. In 2008, two of the felony charges were dismissed by Judge Donald Mosley. In 2009, she accepted an
Alford plea to a single gross misdemeanor to resolve the case, maintaining her innocence throughout the ordeal. This sole misdemeanor was dismissed and expunged. As a resident of Texas, Boggs was elected unopposed as a precinct chair for the Bexar County Republican Party in 2016. After withdrawing her candidacy for a 2018 judicial race, she was unanimously appointed and served as Legal Counsel for the local Republican party in San Antonio. In May 2018, she beat three opponents and was elected the District 7 Trustee for the Judson Independent School District in Live Oak, Texas. She has been elected in two states - Nevada and Texas. == Legal career ==