SIX PLEAD GUILTY IN 21ST JUDICIAL COURT

  

 Six persons plead guilty to felony offenses and received terms raning from probation to prison terms in the 21st Judicial District Court, according to Julie Renken, District Attorney, and heard by Judge Reva L Towslee Corbett.

Darlene Patricia Grave, Age 35, of Brenham, plead guilty to Criminally Negligent Homicide from August 17, 2010, and had her probation revoked and sentenced to fifteen months in the Texas Department of Criminal Justice, fined $1500, court cost and court –appointed attorney fee.

Sharon Kaye Schltz, Age 41, of Navasota, plead guilty to Possession of a Controlled Substance from March 28, 2011, and had her probation revoked, and was sentenced to ten months in the TDCJ, fined $1000, court cost and court-appointed attorney fee.

Callie Mae Maxwell, Age 27, of Lyons, plead guilty to Burglary of a Building from October 24, 2005, and had her probation revoked, and was sentenced to eight months in the TDCJ, fined $750, court cost, court-appointed attorney fee, and $125 restitution.

John Howard, Age 23, of Brenham, plead guilty to Evading Arrest/Detention Using Vehicle from July 12, 2015, and was sentenced to ten years in the TDCJ, probated for five years, a $1500 fine, court cost, $50 Crime Stoppers fee, 200 hours of community service restitution, drug/alcohol evaluation and treatment, and provide DNA and urinalysis samples.

Kendahl Main, Age 35, of Brenham, plead guilty to Credit Card Abuse from July 16, 2015, and was sentenced to two years in the TDCJ, probated four years, a $1500 fine, court cost, $50 Crime Stoppers fee, 160 hours community service restitution, drug/alcohol evaluation and treatment, court-appointed attorney fee, and provide DNA and urinalysis samples.

Edward Crump, Age 20, of Giddings, plead guilty to Posseession of a Controlled Substance from August 18, 2014, and was sentenced to four years deferred adjudication probation, $1500 fine, court cost, $180 lab fee, 120 hour of community service restitution, $50 Crime Stoppers fee, drug/alcohol evaluation and treatment, drug offender education program, and provide DNA and urinalysis samples.

 

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6 Comments

  1. 15 months for negligent homicide but 10 years for running from the cops. I’m hoping there was more to the second case that was not published. If not our system has failed us again.

      1. It’s ten years probated for five so basically if yall read the whole thing you’d see he didn’t get anything..

        1. If that’s the case then how can the case below that be given 2 years and probated for 4 years?

          1. “X years, probated for Y years”

            X is the exposure, the maximum sentence IF you screw up.

            Y is the probation term, how long you have to not screw up.

    1. Criminally Negligent Homicide is usually for an “at-fault” car wreck that doesn’t involve alcohol or something like that. Looks like she was on probation and didn’t make it.

      Hope that Howard kid sees that if you don’t do probation, you go to prison like the three others.

      And seriously, just read. It says “probated for 5 years.”

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