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Justin Eric Santos arrest record - Travis County

Justin Eric Santos

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Booking #2609699 · April 06, 2026 Travis County
Record Updated April 15, 2026 at 04:47 PM
Bond Amount
$30,000
Offense Level
Felony, 3rd Degree
Age at Arrest
34
Offense #
NONE
Facility
Travis County Correctional Complex
Court
331

Justin Eric Santos, age 34, was detained on April 6, 2026 in Travis County, Texas by the Travis County Sheriffs Office, and processed at Travis County Correctional Complex under booking number 2609699. The case carries offense number NONE and is assigned to the 331 court. Bond was set at $30,000 (Surety-Bail Bond).

Justin Eric faces a charge of Evading Arrest, a third-degree felony. Texas Penal Code § 12.34 sets the punishment for a third-degree felony at 2 to 10 years in prison and a fine of up to $10,000. The offense is governed by Texas Penal Code § 38.04. For a full breakdown of how evading arrest cases are charged and penalized in Texas, see our Evading Arrest charge guide.

In the past 30 days, OpenArrest logged 81 Evading Arrest bookings in Travis County — about 2.6% of the 3,110 bookings recorded there — ranking it the 9th most common charge during that period.

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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.
⚖️ About This Charge
Offense
Evading Arrest or Detention
Classification
Third-Degree Felony
Max Penalty
2–10 years in prison + up to $10,000 fine
Evading Arrest or Detention under Texas Penal Code § 38.04 occurs when a person intentionally flees from a peace officer who is lawfully attempting to arrest or detain them, and the person knows the officer is trying to do so. On foot, it is a Class A Misdemeanor (up to one year jail). Using a vehicle to flee — even briefly — elevates the charge to a State Jail Felony. If the flight causes serious injury or death, the charge becomes a Third or Second-Degree Felony respectively. A prior evading conviction also elevates the current charge.
⚡ Potential Penalty Enhancements
If this condition applies… Charge escalates to Statute
Using a vehicle to evade State Jail Felony — 180 days–2 years, $10,000 fine § 38.04(b)(1)
Prior conviction for evading arrest State Jail Felony regardless of method § 38.04(b)(1)
Using a vehicle + serious bodily injury to another Third-Degree Felony — 2–10 years, $10,000 fine § 38.04(b)(2)(A)
Using a vehicle + death of another person Second-Degree Felony — 2–20 years, $10,000 fine § 38.04(b)(2)(B)
More Arrests for This Charge View all →
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Important: An Arrest is NOT a Conviction. Justin Eric Santos 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.
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