Judge Stephanie Boyd set bond at $3,500 for Lacey Schrock on a protective‑order violation case and ordered GPS monitoring and a no‑contact provision.
The state advised the court it had not located the complainant for a recent follow‑up and explained that earlier concerns dated to February 2023. The defense presented family testimony and argued for a personal recognizance bond; the court said it could not legally grant PR bond in the circumstances but stated that if it could it would. Instead the judge ordered GPS monitoring to be applied at the jail, asked that GPS fees be waived when possible, and directed the parties to specify the locations and persons covered by the order in the written motion.
The court warned Schrock against any direct contact with the complainant or the complainant’s family, said the order covered calls and texts, and noted that violations would prompt pretrial violation proceedings. The court also explained trial options and the legal difference between a bench and jury trial, and the defendant said she preferred a jury trial.
Ending
The court set a plea‑deadline and asked the attorneys to confer on a jury trial date; it also directed the clerk and the jail to coordinate GPS placement so the defendant can report for work the next morning if possible.