Judge Boyd Revokes Supervision, Sentences Timothy McCormick Johnson to Six Years

187th District Court (Judge Stephanie Boyd) · October 27, 2025

Get AI-powered insights, summaries, and transcripts

Subscribe
AI-Generated Content: All content on this page was generated by AI to highlight key points from the meeting. For complete details and context, we recommend watching the full video. so we can fix them.

Summary

Following a motion to revoke community supervision, Judge Boyd found a violation true, revoked community supervision and sentenced Timothy J. McCormick Johnson to six years in prison with credit for completed inpatient treatment and time served where appropriate.

The court held a motion-to-revoke hearing in State v. Timothy J. McCormick Johnson. The defendant was the subject of a motion alleging violations of his community-supervision conditions. The defendant admitted (pleaded true to) the main violation (evading arrest) and the court received colloquy and argument from both sides.

Defense counsel asked the court for continued supervision and treatment alternatives, noting prior ISF placement and substance-abuse treatment history. The probation officer had recommended ISF again; the court noted that ISF had previously been ordered and that the defendant nonetheless committed a new offense.

After hearing from the defendant and counsel, Judge Boyd found the violation true, granted the state’s motion, revoked community supervision and sentenced the defendant to six years in prison. The court ordered credit for any time served and for successfully completed inpatient treatment. The judge also ordered no contact with specified persons and limited living arrangements (no residence with minors) where applicable.

The court advised the defendant of the limited right to appeal the revocation and emphasized that the sentence was a felony judgment. The court instructed counsel about the appellate certification and concluded with admonitions about post-release resources and compliance.

Timothy J. McCormick Johnson will be remanded according to the sentence and returned to the custody and incarceration process per the court’s order.