Judge Stephanie Boyd of the 187th District Court presided over a plea hearing in case 2025CR008245 on the state's charge of possession of a controlled substance, penalty group 1. Oscar Orozco Narano, the defendant, entered a no-contest plea and the court accepted the plea and found him guilty.
The state was represented by Megan Galloway. The court confirmed that defense counsel had reviewed discovery and that an interpreter, Cesar Chavez (license number 22039), had translated the documents and proceedings into Spanish for the defendant. Defense counsel confirmed they had discussed defenses and plea documents with their client.
The court explained the rights being waived by pleading and the possible punishment for a state jail felony, then accepted the parties' stipulation of testimony and admitted the state's exhibits. Orozco Narano said, "No contest." Defense counsel asked the court to "just ask the court to follow the agreement." The court stated it would follow the agreement and sentenced Orozco Narano to 145 days in the Bexar County Jail and imposed a $1,000 fine, giving credit for time served and ordering time and fines to run concurrently.
The court also confirmed that by pleading to a felony, Orozco Narano was subject to the statutory ban on owning or possessing weapons or ammunition and reviewed the defendant's waiver of appeal. The court noted that the only items eligible for appeal were written pretrial motions that had been filed, heard and ruled upon.
After imposing the sentence the judge addressed the defendant directly, urging better decisions going forward and excused the defendant from the courtroom.
Charges, documents and the plea were handled in English with Spanish translation; the record reflects that the defendant confirmed he understood the documents and admonishments in Spanish. The proceedings relied on stipulated testimony and police reports rather than live witness testimony, and the court explicitly accepted the state's exhibits and attachments into evidence.
No additional motions were pending on the docket at the time of the plea, and the court confirmed discovery compliance by the state.