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Anthony Perez

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Booking #2609483 · April 04, 2026 Travis County
Record updated April 04, 2026 at 04:37 PM
Charge
Offense Level
Felony, 2nd Degree
Age at Arrest
31
Offense #
A260931676
Facility
Travis County Jail
Arresting Agency
Austin Police Dept
Court
CAFA

Anthony Perez was arrested on April 4, 2026 in Travis County, Texas by the Austin Police Dept and charged with Burglary (Felony, 2nd Degree). Anthony was booked at Travis County Jail.

⚠️ An arrest is not a conviction. Anthony is presumed innocent unless and until proven guilty in a court of law. This record is sourced directly from Travis County official public booking data and may not reflect subsequent legal proceedings or outcomes, including dismissals, acquittals, or expungements.

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1
Booking — The arrested person is processed at the jail. Bond is set by a judge, usually within hours.
2
Post bond — A bail bondsman posts the full bond for a fee (typically 10%). You don't pay the full amount.
3
Release — Most people are released within hours of bond being posted. The bondsman handles all paperwork.

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⚖️ About This Charge
Offense
Burglary
Classification
Second-Degree Felony (habitation) / State Jail Felony (building)
Max Penalty
2–20 years + $10,000 fine (habitation, standard)
Burglary under Texas Penal Code § 30.02 occurs when a person enters a habitation, building, or vehicle without consent and with the intent to commit a felony, theft, or assault — or actually commits those offenses while inside. Burglary of a habitation (home) is a Second-Degree Felony (2–20 years) and elevates to a First-Degree Felony if the intent was to commit a felony other than theft. Burglary of a non-residential building is a State Jail Felony. No actual theft or violence is required — unauthorized entry with criminal intent is sufficient for conviction.
⚡ Potential Penalty Enhancements
If this condition applies… Charge escalates to Statute
Burglary of a habitation with intent to commit felony other than theft First-Degree Felony — 5–99 years or life § 30.02(d)
Burglary of a habitation (theft or misdemeanor intent) Second-Degree Felony — 2–20 years, $10,000 fine § 30.02(c)(2)
Burglary of a building (non-habitation) State Jail Felony — 180 days–2 years, $10,000 fine § 30.02(c)(1)
Habitual felony offender (2 prior felony convictions) Enhanced to 25 years to life § 12.42(d)

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Important: An arrest is not a conviction. Anthony Perez is presumed innocent unless and until proven guilty in a court of law. This record is sourced from official Travis County public booking data and may not reflect subsequent legal outcomes.