Serial Deck Guy Strikes Again, Canyon Lake And Converse Homeowners Left Holding The Bag

Across Comal and Bexar counties, a familiar story is playing out on back patios and in neighborhood group chats: half-built decks, wobbly posts and homeowners thousands of dollars lighter after hiring the same contractor. Neighbors in Canyon Lake and Converse say they handed over big deposits, watched a flurry of initial activity, then wound up staring at construction hazards instead of finished outdoor spaces.

Big Deposits, Barely Any Deck

In Converse, Shantel Brown says she paid roughly $5,200 in 2024 for a back deck and patio cover that was never completed. In Canyon Lake, Diane Michelle Brosnan told investigators she put $3,400 toward a $6,600 deck-and-awning job and ended up with her old deck torn down and off-center support posts that created a falling hazard.

Another homeowner, Mason Weems, said he paid $2,500 for a deck extension and metal roof and got about $270 worth of materials before the contractor “ghosted” him. Those details, along with the fact that the contractor is on felony probation in both Bexar and Hays counties and that his north San Antonio home was evicted last summer, were reported by KSAT.

Long Rap Sheet, Same Old Playbook

The contractor’s name is not new to local courts or crime reporters. Since 2014, he has been charged repeatedly with theft and was eventually sentenced to four years in jail for multiple theft convictions, according to reporting by the San Antonio Express-News.

Victims and prosecutors have described a pattern in which he cycles through different business names and sometimes presents himself as a law-enforcement officer or a veteran to land jobs. Neighbors looking at their unfinished decks say the latest complaints feel like a rerun of that history, just with new addresses and the same ending.

Police Call It Civil, Homeowners Call It A Headache

Several homeowners told reporters that when they reached out to law enforcement, deputies often advised them to take the matter to civil court rather than pursue criminal charges. In the words of KSAT, the cases were frequently treated as “a civil matter.”…

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