Crookston Booking: Lopez Held on Probation Violation

Abigail Nicole Lopez
Abigail Nicole Lopez

Crookston Booking: Lopez Held on Probation Violation

POLK COUNTY (trfnews.i234.me) — Abigail Nicole Lopez was booked in Crookston on June 22, 2026.

A June 23 jail roster lists a felony-level probation violation as her controlling charge.

The public entry does not identify the original case or the alleged probation condition.

Booking Record Lists Felony Violation

Lopez appears on the Northwest Regional Corrections Center roster for Polk County.

The facility is located in Crookston and serves several counties in northwestern Minnesota.

The entry gives Lopez’s booking date and labels the matter as a felony probation violation.

It does not include an arrest report, court complaint, or detailed account of the allegation.

The roster also does not state whether bail was set.

No future hearing date appears in the public entry.

Abigail Nicole Lopez booking photo
Abigail Nicole Lopez booking photo from the June 23 NWRCC jail roster.

What a Probation Violation Means

A probation violation claim does not create a new conviction by itself.

It alleges that a person failed to follow one or more court-ordered conditions.

Those conditions vary based on the original case and the court’s order.

Minnesota law allows a court to review the claim and decide whether further action is needed.

A defendant may receive written notice and a hearing on the alleged violation.

The person may speak at the hearing and may have legal counsel.

The court may continue probation, add sanctions, or order an earlier sentence to take effect.

Those options depend on the original case and the evidence presented.

Minnesota law also says revocation should be a last resort when rehabilitation has failed.

Public Information Remains Limited

The jail roster is a snapshot of custody information on the date it was prepared.

It may change after a release, transfer, hearing, or new court order.

The roster does not show whether a judge has ruled on the alleged violation.

It also does not explain what conduct led to the booking.

Readers can review the official NWRCC inmate roster.

Minnesota’s probation revocation law is available through the Minnesota Revisor of Statutes.

A booking record does not prove the listed allegation.

Any final finding must come through the court process.

I’m Chris Harper reporting for TRF News.

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