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William Cawley Morris

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Booking #B202614581 · April 11, 2026 Bexar County
Record updated April 11, 2026 at 01:33 PM
Offense Level
Misdemeanor, Class A
Age at Arrest
63
Arresting Agency
BCSO

William Cawley Morris was arrested on April 11, 2026 in Bexar County, Texas by the BCSO and charged with Evading Arrest (Misdemeanor, Class A).

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

ℹ️
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What happens after an arrest?
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
Evading Arrest or Detention
Classification
Class A Misdemeanor
Max Penalty
Up to 1 year in jail + $4,000 fine
Evading Arrest or Detention under Texas Penal Code § 38.04 is committed when a person intentionally flees from a peace officer attempting a lawful arrest. On foot, it is a Class B Misdemeanor. If the person uses a vehicle, the charge becomes a State Jail Felony (180 days–2 years). If there is a prior conviction for evading arrest, or a third party suffers serious injury or death, the offense escalates to a third-degree or second-degree felony. High-speed pursuits often result in additional charges.
⚡ Potential Penalty Enhancements
If this condition applies… Charge escalates to Statute
Evading using a motor vehicle State Jail Felony — 180 days–2 yrs, $10,000 fine § 38.04(b)(1)
Prior evading arrest conviction + motor vehicle Third-Degree Felony — 2–10 yrs prison § 38.04(b)(2)(A)
Third party suffers serious bodily injury Third-Degree Felony — 2–10 yrs prison § 38.04(b)(2)(B)
Third party killed during pursuit Second-Degree Felony — 2–20 yrs prison § 38.04(b)(3)
Pursuit involves emergency vehicle in crash May add additional charges (criminally negligent homicide, etc.) § 49.08

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