A former McKinney ISD athletic trainer accused in a child sex abuse case has been booked back into the Collin County Jail, according to jail records.
Collin County jail records show Lindsey Elizabeth Post, 36, was booked into custody on April 17. Records reviewed by The Dallas Express list charges including indecency with a child by sexual contact, a second-degree felony carrying a listed bond of $150,000, and violation of bond/protective order, a Class A misdemeanor carrying a listed bond of $25,000.
Jail records reviewed by The Dallas Express included an “Offense: N/A” entry without further explanation. The Dallas Express reached out to the McKinney Police Department and her attorney, Jeremy Rosenthal, for comment on why Post was back in county custody, but did not receive a response.
The booking marks another development in a case previously reported by The Dallas Express in January, when Post was arrested on charges of sexual assault of a child and improper relationship between educator and student.
Authorities alleged at the time that McKinney ISD reported concerns involving “inappropriate text messages and/or conduct” between Post and a student at McKinney North High School, prompting a law enforcement investigation.
Court records reviewed by The Dallas Express show criminal cases involving Post remain pending in Collin County’s 366th District Court, including Case No. 366-81749-2026, styled The State of Texas vs. Lindsey Elizabeth Post. Records indicate the case was filed by indictment on April 2 and is assigned to Judge Tom Nowak. An appearance is scheduled for April 29.
Separate Collin County records also show a magistration proceeding involving Post was opened on April 18 and later marked closed.
Additional reporting has indicated Post was arrested in March while out on bond and accused of two counts of indecency with a child by sexual contact, along with violating a protective order imposed as a bond condition, according to Texas Scorecard.
Public records reviewed by The Dallas Express do not, by themselves, specify the circumstances that led to Post’s latest return to custody. It was not immediately clear whether the April 17 booking stemmed from a new arrest, a bond revocation, or another court process.
