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 Post subject: Hot On the trail of bail jumpers
 Post Posted: Tue 22 Apr 2008 09:25 
 
A story from our local paper. Ran front page and was very well done.

Sunday, April 20, 2008
By JOHN BRANTON, Columbian Staff Writer

Derek Morrison was hacking from walking pneumonia and had been up for about 60 hours when he delivered a fugitive sex offender to the Clark County Jail a few weeks ago.

Days earlier, the licensed bond recovery agent had driven 1,200 miles practically nonstop, from Vancouver to Arvada, Colo., west of Denver, where he found and handcuffed the man, 24-year-old Cory Robert Fellows.

“Running on vapor” by that time, Morrison put his prisoner in the back seat and began the 17-hour drive back to Vancouver.

Only 15 minutes from the Clark County Jail, he made a mistake.

It was about 4:30 in the afternoon of March 28. Morrison stopped his dusty blue 2002 Toyota Camry to let his prisoner use a restroom at a Burger King in Cascade Park.

What he didn’t know was that his prisoner had gotten the key to his handcuffs.

Moments later, he was gone.

The story of how Fellows was lost, found, lost and then found again gives a glimpse into the complex and challenging world of bail bondsmen — and the bail bond recovery agents they hire when things go wrong.

The target

Fellows had been convicted in Oregon of third-degree rape, first-degree theft and forgery. Charged in Clark County with second-degree assault for holding a pair of scissors to a girlfriend’s temple, he was convicted of third-degree assault in a plea bargain.

Scorning court appearances and probation terms, he allegedly moved from state to state, finding new girlfriends and defrauding them.

“He was really good at what he did and how he did it,” said Mike Thornton of A+ Bail Bonds in Vancouver, who has been working with Morrison for 12 years. “He did it very smoothly and didn’t think he’d get caught.”

In late October, Fellows was in custody at the Clark County Jail on a fugitive warrant, alleging that he’d fled Oregon while on probation for third-degree rape.

With his bail set at $50,000, Fellows convinced his mother, Donna Boyle of Battle Ground, to sign a deed of trust and use her home as collateral for the bond and any expenses incurred to its backer, American Surety Co.

In the Vancouver office of A+ Bail Bonds, Thornton agreed to post a $50,000 bond, and Fellows was released from custody. Four months later, the problems began.

The timeline

Feb. 21: Fellows fails to appear in court, violating the terms of the bail bond.

If recovery agents working for A+ can’t bring Fellows back in 60 days, the company might have to forfeit the $50,000 bail. he owner of A+, former police officer Tom Loos, could go to court to try to get the money back from Boyle, but it would be an expensive process.

It’s time for Thornton to bring in Morrison and get to work.

Feb. 24: Thornton speaks with Boyle. She says she doesn’t know where her son is, just that he was scared of going back to jail.

Feb. 25: The agents hit the streets. They get doors slammed in their faces by the mother’s neighbors.

“They were saying, ‘He’s a nice kid, and you should leave him alone,” Thornton said later.

Feb. 26: The agents find someone who’d heard that Fellows is driving a family member’s green pickup and a motorcycle, and saying he was heading to Colorado.

Early March: A week or more has gone by when Thornton makes the next breakthrough.

“I Googled his name and, sure enough, there was a Web site that said, ‘Got scammed by Cory Fellows,’” he said.

A link led to RX7club.com, where four people complained of rip-offs, some related to vehicle parts.

“I e-mailed each and every person,” Thornton said later. “Half of them were former girlfriends.”

Still at the computer, Thornton discovers that Fellows has an active MySpace.com page that claims he was from the Breckenridge, Colo., area about 75 miles west of Denver.

At Zumiez, a hip young folks’ clothing store in Vancouver, Thornton learns that Fellows is an avid snowboarder.

He sniffs around on Mount Hood and e-mails wanted fliers with photos of Fellows to every ski resort and police department in the greater Denver area.

March 20: Thornton gets an e-mail from Officer Mark Kelley in Dillon, Colo.

A woman who lived in Dillon had told police Fellows dated her for awhile, ripped her off and left her hanging.

The officer says that Fellows’ new flame was named Megan, whereabouts and last name unknown.

With only the first name, “I searched thousands of profiles” on MySpace, Thornton said.

No luck.

March 26: Officer Kelley unearths the right Megan profile and e-mails a link to Thornton. The profile includes a comment by a man who turns out to be Megan’s brother.

That comment includes his — and presumably Fellows’ girlfriend Megan’s — last name.

Thornton puts the names together. He gets a hit in the Denver suburb of Arvada, Colo.

March 26, 9:30 p.m.: The journey begins.

Morrison and a buddy, Todd Hicks, load up the Camry and start driving toward Colorado.

It’ll be a virtually nonstop trip; no restaurants or motels, just convenience stores.

“I’d be pumping the gas, and Todd would go in and get the munchies,” Morrison said.

As Morrison and Hicks drive, Thornton is still working back in the office. He logs in to a skip-tracing database that private investigators and bond agents use.

He types in Megan with her last name and learns she has worked as a waitress at a barbecue joint near Arvada. He calls the manager.

Megan no longer works there, the manager says. But he knows Fellows is her boyfriend, and he’s sized him up as a freeloader.

The manager also happens to be a friend of Megan’s sister

March 26, 11:30 p.m.: Two hours into the trip, Morrison gets a call from Thornton with the exact address where Megan and Fellows are staying in Arvada.

The address came courtesy of the restaurant manager.

March 27, night: Racing against time and fearing Fellows might bolt again, Morrison arrives in Arvada, meets with the restaurant manager and shows him his badge and bail-bond paperwork.

The manager puts in a phone call to Megan’s sister and asks her to go outside without alerting Fellows. After learning what was happening, the sister agrees to let Morrison in and arrest Fellows.

“When I pulled out my badge, you could see his face drop,” Morrison said. “His shoulders kind of dropped, like he had no place to run, no place to hide, he was done.”

Well, not quite.

March 28, afternoon: Hundreds of miles later and barely 15 minutes from jail, Fellows makes his move and is on the lam again.

“You couldn’t print what I was thinking then,” Morrison said as he recalled the moment a few weeks later. “I was upset, but I was tired more than anything else.”

The agents still didn’t know how Fellows got the key to his handcuffs off Morrison’s key ring before the bathroom stop at the Burger King near Southeast Mill Plain Boulevard and Chkalov Drive.

At the time, they did know this: Fellows was gone, and they wanted him back.

“We went through back yards, hedges, fences, Dumpsters, everywhere within at least a 10-block radius,” said Thornton, who also helped out.

March 28, evening: Two hours later, with darkness approaching, “we figured out a scam,” Thornton said.

They enlist the help of a young woman to call Boyle, Fellows’ mother, and pose as Megan. She pretends to be worried, and says she wants to speak with her boyfriend.

Boyle tells her Fellows had just called, saying he’d escaped and needed his mother to break into Morrison’s Camry and retrieve Fellows’ laptop.

On a second call, Boyle gives the fake Megan the phone number Fellows had called her from. It came back to a pizza joint a couple of miles north.

Driving quickly to the restaurant, Thornton spots Fellows “nonchalantly walking out.”

Thornton, beefy and 6-foot-2, isn’t carrying handcuffs, but he tackles Fellows anyway and holds on as he struggles.

An elderly couple ask if they can help, and Thornton asks them to call Morrison’s cell phone.

Minutes later, Morrison arrives with the handcuffs and it’s over.

March 28, night: Moaning with fatigue, Morrison walks to the Clark County Jail with Thornton and they deliver Fellows into official custody.

But the surprises aren’t over.

During a search of Fellows during booking, a custody officer says, “You want to see something scary?”

He shows them the handcuff key.

A pause to reflect

The agents say their expenses, in gas, food and pricey online services, cost about $2,000.

How much will Morrison make for the job? That remains to be seen, he said.

Typically, the agents said, they’re hunting five or six people at a given time. About 10 percent of the folks they bail out fail to make their court appearance, and they catch all but a few.

While Morrison carries a concealed .40-caliber semiautomatic pistol, the last time he had to pull it out was several years ago, when a man threatened to bash his head in with a piece of lumber.

“I could probably count on one hand the times I’ve used physical force,” he said.

At 38, he says he’s getting too old for this type of stuff. But you can tell he sometimes enjoys his often grueling job.

“It has its moments,” he said.

Thornton, 35, is more enthusiastic.

“It’s a kick in the pants,” he said. “It’s the thrill. The money’s just a bonus. We just put our nose to the pavement. You have to think like (the bail jumper) in a way.”

Police in Dillon and Arvada, meanwhile, said they’re investigating allegations about Fellows’ deeds there and plan to seek warrants for his arrest. On April 7, deputy prosecutors in Clark County obtained a warrant for Fellows’ arrest, charging that he failed to register as a sex offender.

Fellows wasn’t in the Clark County Jail on Friday and his whereabouts are unknown.

A mother’s view

Boyle told The Columbian she has another opinion of her son’s capture by the agents.

She says the agents went too far when they posted wanted fliers in her neighborhood, with her son’s photos, telling everyone he’s a sex offender.

The relationship was consensual, and the girl claimed to be older than she was, she said.

Boyle said she arrived home one night and the agents appeared suddenly at her car window, flashing badges.

“It scared me,” she said. “It was like, ‘What?’ I didn’t know who they were.”

And she feels the agents went too far in the way they reminded her she’d signed that deed of trust to her home, to bail Fellows out of jail.

“They told me that one night that I would be on the street within a week. They didn’t have to be that drastic to me,” she said.

And she defended her son, who declined to speak to The Columbian on advice of an attorney.

“I have good kids,” she said. “He’s trying to start over.”

Link: http://www.columbian.com/news/localNews/2008/04/04202008_Hot-On-the-trail-of-bail-jumpers.cfm?emilStry=1


Last edited by Caz on Tue 22 Apr 2008 09:28, edited 1 time in total.

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 Post subject: Bond agents operate stealthily, with significant latitude
 Post Posted: Tue 22 Apr 2008 09:27 
 
This is a blurb that was included in the story.


As bond recovery agent Derek Morrison burned up the highways toward Colorado, his partner in the hunt for Cory Robert Fellows, Mike Thornton, was working the phones and computer in the office of A+ Bail Bonds in Vancouver.

The challenge: to find the exact address in Arvada where Fellows was staying and catch him before he moved again.

It was the kind of scenario that unfolds night and day in Washington and some other states, mostly unknown to the public.

Little understood by most law-abiding folks, bond recovery agents are empowered by old laws and modern-day contracts that people sign when they’re bailed out of jail, or when they bail someone else out.

The contracts are as hard-edged as any car deal or bank loan. Collateral is often involved and, when you sign the bond agreement, you agree to pay 10 percent of the bail.

If you fail to appear in court as scheduled, the contract allows bond recovery agents to find you and arrest you, any time, any place.

Agents may notify police in the area where they’ll be working, as a courtesy and for public safety.

But they sometimes don’t need search warrants to go uninvited into a home. And they don’t need police to put a bail jumper in handcuffs and haul him or her away.

“As many people as they take into custody, we don’t have a lot of contact with them,” said Sgt. Tim Bieber with the Clark County Sheriff’s Office. “They pretty much go out and do their job and don’t cause problems for us.”

He added, “They have an incredible amount of flexibility that we don’t have, in terms of search and seizure laws.”

Unlike police, bond agents bring bail jumpers in front of judges without expense to taxpayers.

Whoever signed the bond contract typically ends up paying the 10 percent, plus any expenses incurred in tracking the jumper down — such as hiring Morrison.

—John Branton


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 Post Posted: Tue 22 Apr 2008 10:01 
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You are right, this is a well done story, it put a professional light on Bail Enforcement Agents

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 Post Posted: Tue 22 Apr 2008 13:46 
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My SISTA and I know Derek M. . . . and always DAMN FINE JOB Lil brother !!!!

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 Post Posted: Tue 22 Apr 2008 17:16 
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I helped run some of that intel 8) . I also heard some of those words that weren't printable :shock: . Derek is a great guy!! Speaking of which, I hope he is finally better. He was still sick the last time I talked to him :( .

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 Post Posted: Tue 22 Apr 2008 19:01 
 
Right on. Glad to see folks workin together. His office is across the street from me so we get to hang out plenty. Just had to throw that up there and share the love. :P U guys gotta check the link and let me know what you think about that picture they took of him. lol


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 Post Posted: Tue 22 Apr 2008 19:18 
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Image

now this is a wicked kewl pic! AND AWESOME FREE ADVERTIZING!
CAZ ~ thank you for posting this here. I snagged it and posted on another forum where D hangs out . . . proud to call him "brother"

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 Post Posted: Tue 22 Apr 2008 21:37 
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Yep, good advertising and nobody could id him if they had to from the pic :wink: . I only wish that I could have known he was coming and gotten to Arvada to meet up with him during the few minutes he was here. There is more to this case, so he may be back. We'll see how things progress...

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 Post Posted: Wed 23 Apr 2008 09:41 
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and now . . . the downside to the story . . . I spoke with D lastnite and since this article hit the paper his wife was given a two week notice at her job. She had taken the couple of days off that he would be gone and her bosses did not appreciate the reason . . . Hopefully they will see the bigger picture and have a change of heart. We all need to keep them in our prayers.

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 Post subject: Re: Hot On the trail of bail jumpers
 Post Posted: Sun 19 Jul 2009 13:05 
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I just wanted to bump this up given the second apprehension of this scum bag in PA.

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