Need a bondsman in Bexar County? Licensed Texas bondsmen available 24/7
Call 24/7
Generic avatar placeholder for booking record B202617140

Mark Anthony Martinez

Contact a Licensed Bondsman

Licensed Texas bail bondsmen · Available 24/7 · No obligation

Booking #B202617140 · April 28, 2026 Bexar County
Record updated April 29, 2026 at 01:38 AM
Offense Level
Misdemeanor, Class A
Age at Arrest
50
Arresting Agency
BCSO

Mark Anthony Martinez was arrested on April 28, 2026 in Bexar County, Texas by the BCSO and charged with Resisting Arrest (Misdemeanor, Class A).

⚠️ An arrest is not a conviction. Mark Anthony 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
How the bail bond process works in Bexar County. After a booking, a judge sets bond. A licensed Texas bail bondsman can post the full bond amount for a fee (typically 10%), and the defendant is released pending their court date. Bondsmen handle paperwork and coordinate with the jail directly.
Call a Bexar County Bondsman
Calls routed to licensed Texas bail bond agents  ·  Available 24/7  ·  No obligation to proceed
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.

Additional options

Licensed bail bondsmen and defense attorneys available 24/7 in Bexar County.

🔓 Request Bail Bond
⚖️ About This Charge
Offense
Resisting Arrest, Search, or Transportation
Classification
Class A Misdemeanor
Max Penalty
Up to 1 year jail + $4,000 fine
Resisting Arrest, Search, or Transportation under Texas Penal Code § 38.03 prohibits intentionally preventing or obstructing a peace officer from effecting an arrest, search, or transportation by using force against the officer or another person. Mere verbal refusal or going limp is generally not sufficient — active physical resistance is required. A standard resisting arrest charge is a Class A Misdemeanor (up to one year jail, $4,000 fine). Using a deadly weapon to resist elevates it to a Third-Degree Felony. It is not a defense that the arrest was unlawful, as long as the officer used no more force than necessary.
⚡ Potential Penalty Enhancements
If this condition applies… Charge escalates to Statute
Using a deadly weapon to resist Third-Degree Felony — 2–10 years prison, $10,000 fine § 38.03(b)
Officer sustains serious bodily injury during resistance Potential Aggravated Assault on a Public Servant charge added § 22.02(b)(2)(B)

Is something on this page wrong? Report a data issue and our internal review team will take a look. Reports are not published.

More Arrests for This Charge View all →
📝

See an Error in This Record?

If any details on this page are inaccurate, out of date, or should be removed, let our internal review team know. Reports are not published.

To request full removal instead, use our free removal form.
Important: An arrest is not a conviction. Mark Anthony Martinez 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.
Is this your record?
You may request free, immediate removal from our public index. Arrest records do not indicate guilt.
🔒 Request Removal