A Bryan man will go to prison after admitting to firing a gun twice during a six month period last year. A plea agreement between 20 year old Jacobee Stockton and the Brazos County district attorney’s office also includes admitting to unlawful carrying of a weapon, felony and misdemeanor possession of marijuana, and failing to identify himself. The five year sentence is for Stockton firing 14 shots at a home in Benchley in December 2023. Three shots entered the house and missed hitting two people. In June of 2023, Stockton fired a gun at a moving vehicle where nothing was struck. A Bryan man who admitted to possessing with the intent to sell cocaine more than two years ago is now headed to prison. The Brazos County district attorney’s office says 39 year old Thomas Gongora Jr. violated multiple conditions of being placed on probation for four years. Prosecutors say earlier this month, Gongoria was sentenced to eight years. The probation revocation also took into account, Gongora violating community supervision in prior criminal cases. News release from the Brazos County district attorney’s office regarding Thomas Gongora Jr. On November 5, 2024, Judge John Brick sentenced Thomas Gongora, Jr., to eight years in prison for violating his probation for Possession with Intent to Deliver cocaine. The defendant was placed on probation on May 22, 2023. Gongora’s charges stem from a traffic stop on June 29, 2022, by the College Station Police De-partment. In that incident, an officer with the College Station Police Department witnessed Thomas Gongora Jr. perform a drug ex-change in a gas station parking lot. The officer subsequently stopped Gongora’s vehicle for a traffic violation, requested a K-9 unit and, after a positive indication, searched the vehicle. Officers located cocaine and methamphetamine in a backpack that Gongora admitted to owning. At the probation revocation hearing on November 5, 2024, the court heard evidence that Gongora had violated multiple conditions of probation, that he never submitted to a drug test, performed community service, or completed a drug education course. The court also heard evidence that Mr. Gongora had been placed on community supervision in prior cases, and had violated his conditions then as well. Statement from assistant district attorney Mark Stahman: “The defendant repeatedly failed to follow our courts’ instructions and repay our community for the damage he caused. This sentence reminds our probationers that their efforts to give back to our community are meaningful.”