Houston

Precinct 4 Deputies Arrest Wanted Robbery Suspect on FM 1960

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Published on February 17, 2026
Precinct 4 Deputies Arrest Wanted Robbery Suspect on FM 1960Source: Facebook/Precinct 4 Constable's Office

Harris County Precinct 4 deputies grabbed a man wanted on an active felony aggravated robbery warrant Monday in the 3000 block of FM 1960 Road, according to the constable’s office. During the stop, deputies, working alongside the Harris County Sheriff’s Office, also discovered the suspect had additional warrants tied to assault and harassment/stalking. Officials did not release the man’s name or say whether any new charges were filed after the arrest.

In a Facebook update, Harris County Constable Precinct 4 reported that deputies had located and detained the wanted suspect in the 3000 block of FM 1960 Road. The office urged residents to follow its page and download the C4 NOW mobile app for live alerts. The post included photos from the scene and a short recap of the arrest but did not provide booking details.

FM 1960 enforcement focus

FM 1960 has become a familiar backdrop for Precinct 4 enforcement work, with the constable’s office regularly posting arrest and traffic updates from along the busy corridor. Cuffed On FM 1960 recapped another recent arrest on the roadway and noted the constable’s ongoing push to clear wanted suspects from the area.

What aggravated robbery means in Texas

Under Texas law, aggravated robbery becomes a first‑degree felony when a robbery involves a deadly weapon or results in serious bodily injury, according to Texas Penal Code §29.03. A first‑degree felony can carry the possibility of decades in prison if prosecutors secure a conviction, although the exact charges and penalties depend on the evidence and how the case is handled in court.

What comes next

The constable’s post did not identify the suspect or indicate whether any fresh charges were filed, and those details typically surface later in arrest records or court filings. Local reporting has shown that investigators often rely on witnesses and phone data in FM 1960‑area cases; for example, Click2Houston detailed a January case in which a phone left behind at the scene helped identify a robbery suspect. The constable’s office asked anyone with information to reach out through official reporting channels.