A Texas judge, who has been described as “rogue” and an activist by the Houston Police Officers’ Union, remains under fire after she set bond for the second suspect charged with capital murder in the death of Harris County Deputy Fernando Esqueda.
Judge Hilary Unger of the 248th District Criminal Court in Harris County set bond at $3 million for Ronnie Palmer on Thursday, according to a court document shared by the Harris County Deputies’ Organization (HCDO). Palmer has been in jail since July with no bond on that charge until now.
In addition to the capital murder charge, he is also facing two counts of aggravated assault with a deadly weapon in Esqueda’s death. Bond for those charges is set at $50,000 each.
Unger’s controversial move comes one day after the other suspect in Esqueda’s murder, Dremone Francis, was released from jail after he posted the $1 million bond set in November 2024.
The HCDO criticized Unger on Wednesday when Francis was released from jail, and came after her again on Thursday when she set bond for Palmer.
“If you were outraged yesterday, just wait for what Judge Hilary Unger did today. A bond was set for Ronny (sic) Palmer, who is charged with murdering Deputy Fernando Esqueda. We are now beyond outraged, this is a disgrace,” the organization wrote on X.
HCDO also shared the court document showing where Unger set Palmer’s bond for the charge of capital murder of a police officer at $3 million. Texas law allows for bond denial in capital murder cases.
Though Palmer remains in jail as of Thursday, he now has the opportunity to post bail and return to the streets.
Following blowback from the community, a defense attorney told FOX 26 Houston on Thursday that Unger was not involved in setting bond for Francis, despite the Houston Police Officers’ Union and the HCDO saying that she was.
“They made it very difficult for the judge because she is not the one who had set the bond,” said Cheryl Irvin. “The bond was set and nobody objected to it from the district attorney’s office from the previous administration.”
Unger, who is up for re-election in 2026, is known for letting repeat offenders out on bond and ran her election campaigns on prioritizing “alternatives to incarceration with an eye towards rehabilitation, a reduction in recidivism, and an increase in community safety,” according to her campaign website.
“This is not an isolated case. Judge Unger has a history of prioritizing criminals over victims, undermining law enforcement, and making our streets more dangerous,” the police union said. “If we don’t stop judges like her now, we will continue to see repeat offenders and violent criminals emboldened by a system that refuses to hold them accountable.”
Fox News Digital has reached out to the Harris County District Attorney’s Office and the 248th District Court for comment.
The post Democrat judge sets bond for second man accused in Texas deputy’s murder after first suspect posts bail appeared first on Fox News.