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SWAT called in after bondsman locates skip
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Author:  KARMA [ Sat 26 May 2007 16:17 ]
Post subject:  SWAT called in after bondsman locates skip

05/26/2007
Lorain drug bust yields pot, counterfeit money
JENNIFER BRACKEN , Morning Journal Writer

LORAIN, OH. -- A drug dealer was put behind bars yesterday after police searched his Hamilton Avenue home, where they found more than they bargained for.
Charles Hartman, 30, a mid-level drug dealer who was on the run for nearly two years, was removed from his home as neighbors and visitors at the American Legion across the street watched.


Sgt. Roger Watkins said the Lorain SWAT team raided 237 Hamilton Ave. shortly after 2 p.m. yesterday after a bail bondsman found Hartman at the address.

Police were called to the home after Hartman, who has been known to possess weapons, barricaded himself in the house. Officers were cautious as they busted down the door.

Inside the home, officers found a marijuana growth operation.

It took four officers to remove a 40,000- pound hydraulic shop press, tailored to create bricks of marijuana, from the home. One brick of marijuana was about the size of a Rubik's Cube and weighed 5 pounds, Watkins said. Several bricks of marijuana were found packaged and ready for sale.

In addition, approximately 10 marijuana plants were found growing upstairs. Watkins estimated they recovered several thousand grams of marijuana and about an ounce of a ''cocaine-like'' substance.

Watkins said this was the second hydraulic press of that size he has seen in his career as a narcotics officer.

Approximately $2,200 was seized and several sheets of counterfeit money were confiscated from the residence. Watkins said the Secret Service will be notified about the counterfeit money for additional charges.

Five loaded weapons were also found inside the home. Watkins said Hartman admitted that the guns were his.

A refrigerator-sized safe was also removed from the home via a flat-bed tow truck. Watkins said they will need to secure a separate search warrant before it is opened.

Yesterday, Hartman was charged with trafficking in marijuana, possession of marijuana, three counts of having weapons under disability and possession of drug paraphernalia.

''The amount of evidence was amazing,'' Watkins said. ''This was a significant urban grow with guns and possible cocaine and counterfeit money. It was an operation with currency and marijuana in different stages of growth.''

Lorain police Animal Control Officer Mike Mattei removed three Rottweilers from the home. Hartman will likely face additional charges for the deplorable conditions the dogs were subjected to.

Inside the home, the windows were boarded up and a stack of shingles blocked the back door. Investigators found the home's other doors to be reinforced with steel.

Watkins said it is likely Hartman, who was born and raised in Lorain, kept a low profile because he was wanted in other drug trafficking cases.

In July 2005, Hartman was indicted on charges of trafficking cocaine and possession of drug abuse paraphernalia. After being freed on bond, police busted Hartman again after they found a marijuana growth operation in his Tacoma Avenue home. He was indicted in November that same year on charges of cultivation of marijuana, possession of drug paraphernalia, permitting drug abuse, trafficking in marijuana and having weapons under disability.

In June 2006, he was indicted for possession of cocaine and marijuana. Hartman failed to appear for his pretrial hearings on all three cases and a warrant was issued for his arrest.

Watkins said Hartman faces a number of years in prison if convicted because the majority of charges against him are felonies.

Author:  Kathy [ Sat 26 May 2007 22:47 ]
Post subject: 

WOW. Thank goodness this bondsman did it right and called LE. He is safe, they are safe, and very happy (I'm sure) at making such a great bust.

Author:  tsuggs [ Mon 28 May 2007 12:51 ]
Post subject: 

So,

Why was this guy still out on bail when he picked up 2 new cases. I would have revoked the bond on the first case and surrendered him while he was in custody on the new charges.

Author:  SpanielPI [ Mon 28 May 2007 13:16 ]
Post subject: 

M-O-N-E-Y ! G-R-E-E-D !

Author:  AWOBB [ Fri 01 Jun 2007 12:39 ]
Post subject: 

tsuggs wrote:
So,

Why was this guy still out on bail when he picked up 2 new cases. I would have revoked the bond on the first case and surrendered him while he was in custody on the new charges.


Tony,

Because some of these counties here in Ohio are J-O-K-E-S... for you to revoke bonds in some counties here. You have to write to the courts an ask to be taken off the bond. Then they send you a court notice in the mail which it maybe for two or three weeks from the time you put in for your request. Hell, when you go to the hearing an try to revoke the bond, the judge might not grant it all. I have one right now that I'm trying to get off of it and defendant broke in to the indemnitor's house in the middle of the night an beat her. But again I can't revoke the bond until I go to the court date they gave me to revoke it. If the judge let's me. It's all a bunch of Crap how some of these counties work here.

Author:  tsuggs [ Sun 03 Jun 2007 12:00 ]
Post subject: 

Geeez,

If we bail someone and they pick up a new case that they are arrested for, we can go straight to the jail where they are being held and do a "paper" surrender. All we have to do is tell the jail, in writing that we are surrending the defendant, that they already have in custody.

The jail then adds the charges and bail amount that we had bail them on, to their new charges and bail, as a separate case.

Most of the courts will on their own deny bail or at least set it very high if a defendant picks up new charges while out on bail on a pending case.

Makes sense to me. :idea:

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