Thanks for visiting! Welcome to a new way to research case law. You are viewing a free summary from Descrybe.ai. For citation and good law / bad law checking, legal issue analysis, and other advanced tools, explore our Legal Research Toolkit — not free, but close.
Jermaine Craig Harris v. State of Texas
Citation: Not availableDocket: 11-09-00286-CR
Court: Court of Appeals of Texas; August 31, 2011; Texas; State Appellate Court
Original Court Document: View Document
Jermaine Craig Harris appeals the revocation of his community supervision, resulting in a 180-day jail sentence and a $2,000 fine. The State alleged that Harris failed to report to his probation officer on multiple occasions in 2008. Testimony indicated that Harris ceased reporting after March 26, 2008, stating he would not comply with probation conditions. The trial court found sufficient evidence to support the revocation based on Harris's failure to report, despite Harris arguing the evidence was insufficient for other alleged violations. The court noted that proving any single allegation by a preponderance of the evidence is adequate for revocation. Consequently, the court affirmed the trial court’s decision, ruling that no abuse of discretion occurred. The judgment was upheld, and the opinion was filed on August 31, 2011.