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Three Men Booked in Collin County on Child Sex Offense Charges

Three men booked at the Collin County Detention Facility within 16 days face felony sex offense charges involving children, with bonds up to $200,000.

Marcus Williams2 min read
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Three Men Booked in Collin County on Child Sex Offense Charges
Source: dallasexpress.com

Michael Demond Wilson was booked into the Collin County Detention Facility on March 16 on a second-degree felony charge of indecency with a child, the first of three men facing child sex offense allegations in a 16-day span.

Two days later, Jose Alex Diaz-Diaz was booked on a charge of sexual assault of a child, also a second-degree felony. David Alejandro Trevino followed on April 1, facing the same charge as Wilson: indecency with a child involving sexual contact. Bond amounts across the three cases ranged from $80,000 to $200,000, according to Collin County Sheriff's Office booking records. All three cases involve allegations; each man is presumed innocent until proven guilty.

The cases are in the early stages of the county's criminal justice system. No court dispositions, grand jury actions, or plea filings have been made public. Those steps typically emerge through indictments and docket filings as cases advance through Collin County district courts.

Arrests like these direct families, educators, and school counselors toward a network of county-specific resources built for this moment. The Children's Advocacy Center of Collin County operates two campuses: one at 2205 Los Rios Blvd. in Plano, reached at 972-633-6600, and a second at 1701 Heritage Drive in McKinney at 972-633-6700. The center offers forensic interviews, therapy, and victim advocacy free of charge, working alongside law enforcement and Child Protective Services to reduce additional trauma for children who come forward.

Texas law makes child abuse reporting a mandatory obligation for every resident, not only teachers or healthcare workers. Suspicion alone satisfies the legal threshold. The Texas Child Abuse Hotline at 1-800-252-5400 takes calls 24 hours a day. When a child faces immediate danger, 911 is the right first call. Non-emergency suspicions can be filed online through the Texas Department of Family and Protective Services. RAINN's National Sexual Assault Hotline, 800-656-4673, offers confidential support around the clock for survivors and adults seeking guidance.

Behavioral changes can signal abuse before a child discloses it directly. Sudden withdrawal from trusted adults, age-inappropriate sexual language or behavior, unexplained physical complaints, and new anxiety around a specific person are among the warning patterns that child-protection professionals ask adults to document and report rather than dismiss or defer. The CACCC encourages anyone with concerns to call before feeling certain.

The three cases now await grand jury review in Collin County, where prosecutors will determine whether to issue the indictments that formally advance each toward trial.

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