Video has emerged of a woman claiming to be a teacher and therapist in Denton promoting the exploration of sexuality among children while representing the county’s public health department at an LGBTQ Pride event.

Caught on film at Denton’s “Pridenton” festival on June 9 at Denton’s Town Square and publicized by local journalism outfit Current Revolt, the exchange occurred at a booth run by the Denton County Public Health Department.

The woman on the video, whose name is not known but who identifies herself as a licensed therapist and sex educator, was working the county public health department’s booth at the Pridenton festival.

In the undercover footage obtained at the event, she described efforts to educate children at the private Koan School, a non-profit K-12 institution that operates on a 15-acre farm near Denton.

“I work with [age] 4 through high school,” the woman in the video says. “But it’s at a progressive private school called the Koan School so they’re pretty progressive.”

The woman provided the person recording with a package of educational material that included over a dozen condoms, an HIV testing kit, and manuals for utilizing both the condoms and the testing kit.

In the video, the man receiving these materials claims that he is collecting condoms to give to his 13- or 14-year-old cousins, and the woman can be heard agreeing with the idea, implying that getting a variety of condoms would help his cousins “figure out what they like.”

The Human Rights Campaign, a major LGBTQ activist organization known for driving engagement between the movement and corporate giants such as Bud Light and Target, also ran a booth at the event.

A Human Rights Campaign employee was also recorded at the booth seemingly agreeing to the suggestion that anyone who refers to transgender people by a name or pronoun other than that they have chosen should be fined. Similar measures have been enforced in Canada and Britain but cannot be implemented in the U.S. due to the First Amendment’s protection of free speech.

A City of Dallas gender transition protocol recently obtained by The Dallas Express similarly provides for punishment of failure to use non-biological pronouns, up to and including termination of public employees.

At Pridenton, the Human Rights Campaign was reportedly lobbying festival attendees to oppose Texas Senate Bill 12, which was passed by the legislature late last month and bars drag shows or other sexually oriented performances from being conducted in front of children.

The Dallas Express has chronicled multiple incidents surrounding private efforts to expose children in North Texas to such content.

Recently, three apparent members of a local Antifa group, the Elm Fork John Brown Club, were indicted in Tarrant County for alleged violence against protesters at a drag show marketed to parents and children of all ages. The suspected Antifa members were also sued in civil court by the alleged victims, as previously reported by The Dallas Express.