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Home/Shelby County/Porcha L Adams

Porcha L Adams

Shelby County · Booked Feb 6, 2026

Booking #26200672

Personal Information

Date of BirthMar 18, 1996 (age 29 at booking)
RaceBlack
SexFemale
Height5'5"
Weight140 lbs
HairBrown
EyesBrown

Porcha Adams was booked in Shelby County on Feb 6, 2026 on 1 felony, including Aggravated Assault and 2 other charges.

Charges (3)

Charge 1
FELONY D

Aggravated Assault

Original: Charge Code: 30043 Charge Description: AGGRAVATED ASSAULT

TCA § 39-13-102

Aggravated assault is assault committed with a deadly weapon (a firearm or anything designed to cause death or serious injury) or assault that causes serious bodily injury (substantial risk of death or permanent damage); this is a Class D felony (2 to 12 years in prison, up to $5,000 fine), but can be elevated to a Class C or B felony depending on aggravating circumstances like the severity of injury or use of weapons.

Penalty: Class D felony; 2-12 years; fine up to $5,000

Max Jail: 2-12 yearsMax Fine: $5,000
View full statute explanation
Charge 2
PENDING

Reckless Endangerment

Original: Charge Code: 23014 Charge Description: RECKLESS ENDANGERMENT W/DEADLY WEAP

TCA § 39-13-103

Reckless endangerment is when someone acts recklessly in a way that puts another person in immediate danger of death or serious injury. This happens when a person is aware of a serious risk but ignores it anyway—for example, firing a gun into a crowd or driving dangerously fast through a populated area. A basic conviction is a Class A misdemeanor punishable by up to 11 months and 29 days in jail and/or a fine up to $2,500. The offense is enhanced to a Class E, D, or C felony (1-15 years in prison) if the reckless conduct involves using a deadly weapon or firearm.

Penalty: Class A misdemeanor; 11 months 29 days; fine up to $2,500

Max Jail: 11 months 29 daysMax Fine: $2,500
View full statute explanation
Charge 3
PENDING

Reckless Endangerment

Original: Charge Code: 21013 Charge Description: RECKLESS ENDANGERMENT-DEADLY WEAPON

TCA § 39-13-103

Reckless endangerment is when someone acts recklessly in a way that puts another person in immediate danger of death or serious injury. This happens when a person is aware of a serious risk but ignores it anyway—for example, firing a gun into a crowd or driving dangerously fast through a populated area. A basic conviction is a Class A misdemeanor punishable by up to 11 months and 29 days in jail and/or a fine up to $2,500. The offense is enhanced to a Class E, D, or C felony (1-15 years in prison) if the reckless conduct involves using a deadly weapon or firearm.

Penalty: Class A misdemeanor; 11 months 29 days; fine up to $2,500

Max Jail: 11 months 29 daysMax Fine: $2,500
View full statute explanation

Booking Details

Booking #26200672