
Five men listed in recent Tarrant County jail records are facing a mix of sex offense and family violence allegations, with bonds that stretch from no bond at all to tens of thousands of dollars. The cases include an aggravated sexual assault of a child charge and a separate booking in which charges briefly disappeared from the public roster while the man was still shown as in custody. All of the cases remain open, and every defendant is presumed innocent unless and until a court rules otherwise.
Records show five suspects and bond totals
The jail roundup identifies Rajaraheel Khanzada with a total bond of $38,000, which includes a $30,000 sexual assault hold and an $8,000 count listed as continuous violence against the family. It shows Fernando Magana at $25,000 in bond tied to an alleged sexual assault and an assault causing bodily injury, family violence charge. The records list Justice Watkins at $12,500 on multiple counts that include an indecency with a child entry. Steven Lamb is recorded with a $461 local bond and a separate online solicitation hold that is marked as having no bond locally. Andres Renteria is shown as booked on December 3 on an aggravated sexual assault of a child charge with no bond set. These details were compiled from local jail records and reported by The Dallas Express.
The county roster and magistration process
Tarrant County’s public inmate search serves as the main clearinghouse for booking dates, charge descriptions, prisoner identification numbers, and bond amounts, and it is updated on a rolling basis as new arrests come in and magistration hearings are completed. County officials note that magistrate judges make case-by-case bond decisions and that an inmate can remain behind bars because of holds from other agencies even when a county bond has been posted. For official background on how bookings and bond information appear, the county directs the public to the Tarrant County Inmate Search.
Disappearing charges flagged in one listing
Reporters also flagged an oddity involving one of the names in the roundup. According to The Dallas Express, Khanzada’s sexual assault listing appeared in the jail roster on December 17, but a later check showed the charges no longer visible even though his record still showed him as in custody. The outlet reported that no public explanation accompanied the change. Discrepancies like that can stem from data updates, clerical corrections, or holds tied to other agencies. Anyone following these cases is advised to verify current charges through the magistration docket or directly with the arresting agency.
Legal context and next steps
The bond figures captured on the public roster reflect early decisions made at the magistration stage and can be raised, lowered, or otherwise changed as cases move into district court and prosecutors file formal charges. Serious felony allegations are sometimes listed with no bond at the county level while they await further review, and separate protective orders or outside-agency holds can also shape whether and when a defendant is released. For the official court calendar and the latest magistration information, the county points users to its inmate search and related magistration pages at Tarrant County Inmate Search.
Upcoming court dockets and prosecutor filings will determine which charges, if any, are formalized and what hearings are set next. Public court calendars and official jail records remain the most reliable way to track developments, and reporters will continue to watch those records for any changes in these cases.









