Call him inmate 232573.

But he's better known as state Rep. Ron Reynolds, D-Missouri City, from Fort Bend County.

Rep. Ron Reynolds, D-Missouri City (Montgomery County Sheriff's Office)

Reynolds, 45, won re-election this week while he serves a yearlong sentence in the Montgomery County Jail.

He received 47,305 votes in his unopposed bid for a fifth term.

He was booked Sept. 7 after five misdemeanor convictions in 2015 for illegally using a middleman to drum up business for his law firm.

The lawmaker isn't required to resign from office because the cases are misdemeanors.

It's unclear how he will serve his constituents because the Legislature meets in 2019. Many county jails allow inmates to receive two or three days of credit for every day they serve.

Ron Reynolds' official Texas House photo (Texas House of Representatives)

Investigators found during an undercover investigation in 2012 that a chiropractic firm urged patients to hire Reynolds without meeting them after they were hurt in accidents, KHOU-TV reported. Investigators were accused of stealing evidence in unrelated cases, and prosecutors dropped the charges against Reynolds.

A year later, authorities arrested him and seven other attorneys, accusing them of being involved in a $25 million kickback scheme with the owner of two chiropractic clinics.

Reynolds spent three years appealing the conviction.

The State Bar of Texas says he is not eligible to practice law and suspended his license in 2016.