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Clerk calls docket; multiple defendants noted in custody and some pleas expected
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Summary
During a district-court docket call, the clerk read case names, warned absent parties that warrants could issue, noted at least four defendants were in custody, and recorded that at least one case would result in a plea that morning.
The court's clerk called the docket and read a series of case names, warning that absent defendants could face warrants if they did not identify themselves. "When I call the docket, Stan, let me know you're here. Otherwise, I'm gonna assume you're not here and a warrant may be issued for your arrest," the clerk said.
The clerk read names including Ricardo Adamas (noted "in custody"), Miguel Dominguez, Miguel Angel Dominguez, Eugene Brown (noted "custody"), Juan Reyes (noted "custody") and several others. A participant responding during the roll call said, "He just called me. He's downstairs in," and later indicated in one exchange that a case "will be a plea this morning." The transcript records at least four defendants explicitly marked as in custody during the call.
There were no formal rulings or motions recorded in the excerpted docket call. Deputy Mejia was identified by name in the transcript during the roll call. The exchanges were procedural: the clerk confirmed appearances, noted custody status where applicable, and recorded that some cases would proceed by plea. The docket call then continued through the remaining listed names.
The transcript does not include a sitting judge's name or a calendar date within the spoken text. (A separate normalization note provided the name "Judge Stephanie Boyd 187th District" for reference; that name does not appear in the quoted transcript segments and was not used as a speaker attribution.)

