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Multiple plea outcomes and sentences recorded in 187th District Court docket

May 11, 2026 | Judge Stephanie Boyd 187th District, District Court Judges, Judicial, Texas


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Multiple plea outcomes and sentences recorded in 187th District Court docket
Judge Stephanie Boyd handled several plea and disposition matters in the 187th District Court calendar, accepting pleas and announcing sentences and supervision conditions in multiple cases.

In cause 2026CR005722 involving Andrea Miller, the court accepted Miller’s plea after confirming she had reviewed discovery and plea paperwork with counsel. The court found sufficient evidence, accepted a plea of true on the enhancement allegation, and entered a guilty finding. The court sentenced Miller to two years in prison suspended and probated for two years, ordered a $100 fine probated, 100 hours of community service restitution (50 hours satisfied upon completing parenting classes and the remainder tied to completing a felony-theft course), random UAs, TAP evaluation and follow-up treatment recommendations, and a no-contact order with an HEB store located at a specified address.

In 2024CR1943, the court found a violation of the terms of deferred adjudication for Isaac Chavez (a DWI-related condition reported as occurring in February 2026). After the parties confirmed a proposed agreement, the court adjudicated guilt and imposed a five-year prison sentence; the defendant waived appeal and the court recommended placement in a therapeutic community program.

Aaron Allen appeared with counsel and agreed to deferred adjudication on a possession charge (penalty group 2, 1–4 grams). The court reviewed admonishments and accepted a plea of no contest, deferred finding of guilt, and described terms that include deferred adjudication for two years, regular reporting, random UAs, a $1,000 probated fine, community service, treatment courses and employment requirements.

Pierce Pearson entered pleas across multiple cause numbers by video conference; the court accepted deferred adjudication to run concurrently for two years with a $1,000 probated fine, mental-health treatment at Randolph Air Force Base where applicable, monthly field visits for three months, and a limitation on possession of firearms off base. The court noted Pearson’s active-duty Air Force status and limited his right of appeal to pretrial motions already decided by the court.

The court repeatedly reminded defendants that, because these were felony dispositions, certain collateral consequences apply, including loss of firearm possession rights, and advised defendants to consult counsel about immigration consequences and other legal effects of their pleas.

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