Houston

FM 1960 Meltdown Has Harris County Man Nabbed On Terroristic Threat Rap

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Published on June 26, 2026
FM 1960 Meltdown Has Harris County Man Nabbed On Terroristic Threat RapSource: Facebook/Mark Herman, Harris County Constable Precinct 4

Harris County Precinct 4 deputies arrested an adult man late Thursday after a disturbance along the 7700 block of FM 1960 Road East, according to a live update from the constable’s office. The suspect was taken into custody at the scene, where deputies say they uncovered multiple outstanding misdemeanor warrants and tacked on an additional charge of terroristic threat. The initial online update did not include the man’s name, bond, or booking information.

What the precinct posted

In a live update from Constable Mark Herman’s Office, officials said Deputy Krieg had one adult in custody in the 7700 block of FM 1960 Road East. The suspect was booked on a terroristic threat allegation while deputies found multiple outstanding misdemeanor warrants during the encounter. The post noted the arrest happened on scene and highlighted the agency’s reliance on its social media feeds and its C4 Now app to push out real-time alerts.

Terroristic threat under Texas law

Under Texas law, a “terroristic threat” involves making threats of violence with the intent to cause fear, disrupt public services, or influence government activity. Penalties can range from misdemeanors to felonies depending on who or what is targeted and how serious the impact is, as outlined in Texas Penal Code §22.07. Prosecutors ultimately decide how to classify any allegation after reviewing the facts and evidence collected by investigators.

How Precinct 4 communicates

Precinct 4 regularly pushes out short “PRECINCT 4 LIVE” posts on social media to keep residents in the loop about arrests, traffic problems, and other unfolding incidents. Hoodline has been tracking those quick on-scene updates, including a recent Cypresswood road-rage arrest that also resulted in a terroristic threat charge. These fast hits often land online long before formal booking records and prosecutor filings show up in county databases.

What comes next

The precinct’s first public update on the FM 1960 case did not list the suspect’s name, bond amount, or booking number. Those details typically appear later in Harris County jail records or in paperwork filed by the district attorney’s office. For non-emergency questions or tips, the agency directs residents to its published contact numbers and to the C4 Now app, both listed on the official Constable Pct. 4 site.

Anyone with information or video related to the disturbance on FM 1960 is asked to call the precinct’s non-emergency line or send a tip through the C4 Now app. In an emergency, residents should still call 911. This story will be updated if the constable’s office or county records release additional booking or court details.