Several plea agreements, sentencing and supervision decisions were resolved in the court session, including deferred adjudications, community-supervision conditions and a grant of early termination for probation.
Key outcomes
- Christopher Perez: The court accepted a plea and entered deferred adjudication with terms described by the judge as 7 years of community supervision, a $2,000 fine, an affirmative deadly-weapon finding and conditions that include restitution if owed to the complainant, 250 hours of community-service restitution, parenting classes and no contact with the complainant. The judge ordered regular reporting, random UAs, field visits and a 30-day Bexar County condition; proof of employment was required within 45 days.
- Devin Berry: The court accepted a plea to deferred adjudication; the state recommended a three-year supervision term, a $1,500 fine and 120 hours of community service restitution with TAP evaluation and reporting conditions; the court set standard supervision terms and testing requirements.
- Brian Adam Sanchez: The court accepted pleas in two cause numbers and granted deferred adjudication; the cases were ordered to run concurrently. The record includes restitution of $60 to the Bexar County laboratory in one cause, TAP evaluation and MRT, intensive supervision and 150 hours of community-service restitution (which may be satisfied by education or trade-school completion).
- Cameron Scott: The court granted early termination of probation, effective Aug. 8. The court advised the defendant to continue reporting through that date to allow time to notify the complainant and complete outstanding reporting conditions.
- Restitution matter (Mister Carrillo): For a restitution hearing, the state said it could not prove any remaining restitution amount; the court found no restitution was owed and directed that probation be terminated satisfactorily as of that day.
Conditions and common features: Several deferred adjudications included TAP evaluations, random urine analyses, community-service restitution, and no-contact orders. Judges repeatedly warned defendants that the court could impose the full range of punishment if probation was revoked and reiterated that plea bargains carried waiver-of-appeal provisions for most non-preserved pretrial motions.
These dispositions will be reflected in the minute orders and probation records; defendants given deferred adjudication remain under supervision until the specified terms or until the court modifies the orders.