http://www.klas-tv.com/Global/story.asp?S=6128520
Mark Sayre, Investigative Reporter
I-Team: Renegade 'Bounty Hunters' Injure Local Man
Feb 23, 2007 07:04 PM EST
"I just can't believe a law would allow anybody to come in your home like that," said Steve Brereton.
Imagine people coming into your home in the middle of the night and spraying mace at you. It happened to one local man. He called police looking for help only to find out that no law had been broken.
What happened is the result of how Nevada's laws pertain to bounty hunters.
The terror inside the home is revealed on 911 tapes of the incident obtained exclusively by the Eyewitness News I-Team. Steve Brereton first calls 911 just after 11 p.m. on Jan. 4th from his home near Sahara and Nellis.
Read more on NRS 697.325, the Nevada law that allows the bounty hunters to forcibly enter a home.
911 call transcript:
Steve Brereton: This is Steve Brereton. I need Metro here…pronto.
Metro 911: What is the emergency?
Steve Brereton: I have some... 3 a******* who broke into my house.
When Steve Brereton called 911 he had no idea what was happening inside his home.
911 call transcript:
Metro 911: Do you know what color clothes they have on.
Steve Brereton: Yeah, all black.
Metro 911: Do you see weapons?
Steve Brereton: Yeah, I see them.
Metro 911: What do they have?
Steve Brereton: One clown right here put his 9 millimeter against my chest!
Brereton had been upstairs in bed with his 7-year-old granddaughter nearby. His sister-in-law heard a knock and cracked open the front door.
“By the time I come down the stairs they were in my house right here," said Brereton. At the door was local bail enforcement agent or “bounty hunter” Rob Suckoll and his associates.
You may remember Suckoll from his high-profile arrest in 2005 in El Salvador. He spent two months in jail -- accused of violating immigration laws while trying to bring a man back to Las Vegas. Today Suckoll owns Budget Bail Bonds.
Suckoll was inside the home looking for Richard Brereton, who is a client who had skipped bail. Steve Brereton is Richard's father. “They were asking about Richard. Richard doesn't live here,” Steve Brereton said.
(Rob Suckoll agreed to respond to Eyewitness News after he saw this story. Click here for his side of the story)
Under Nevada law bounty hunters are legally able to make forced entry into any home to arrest a client (NRS 697.325). The only requirement is that they must call police in advance and notify them of the address.
In this case, Brereton's call to 911 connected 43 seconds after 11 p.m.
911 call transcript:
Metro 911 computer: 23 hours, Zero minutes, 43 seconds.
Steve Brereton: Yes, this is Steve Brereton.
The notification call from the bounty hunter connected one second earlier, the bail agent is giggling as she tries to explain the name of the street is Sesame.
Metro non-emergency call:
Call transcript:
Metro 911 computer: 23 hours, zero minutes, 42 seconds.
Metro: Metro police, Officer Spencer.
Bail Agent: Hi this is Brenda with Budget Bail Bonds.
Metro: Yeah?
Bail Agent: We are attempting an arrest at 2*** Sesame Drive.
Metro: I'm sorry…2***, what?
Bail Agent: Sesame Drive.
Metro: Stephanie?
Bail Agent: Sesame, like Sesame Street.
Simultaneously, on the 911 line, the chaos inside Brereton's home is being recorded. Brereton and the bail agents are exchanging words.
911 call transcript:
Steve Brereton: You come down in my house and you got me upstairs when I was sleepin'
Bail Agent: We are not leaving until…
Steve Brereton: Yeah, right, you are not leaving until Metro gets here.
Bail Agent: That's fine.
Steve Brereton: Hey, Metro get over here or I am going to kick somebody's a**!
Brereton then calls 911 a second time nine minutes later.
911 call transcript:
Metro 911: Steve, I have that officers are en route. What's going on? Has anything changed or escalated since you called us?
Steve Brereton: Yeah, they just sprayed my granddaughter and I with mace.
Brereton then requested -- and Metro dispatched -- a Medicwest ambulance. The incident report shows "3 people maced." The bounty hunters told police the mace was self-defense because they thought Brereton was going to get a gun. He denies has ever had any weapons in the house.
“When bail enforcement agents behave out of control there needs to be regulation to stop that,” said Allen Lichtenstein, attorney for the Nevada American Civil Liberties Union.
Lichtenstein says innocent people are caught up in bounty hunter cases all too often. “No contract gives a bail enforcement agent the right to mace somebody or to use force against a third party,” Lichtenstein said.
Metro police left Brereton's home without so much as taking a report. A department spokesman says no laws were broken so no report was necessary. Brereton was only able to file a "voluntary statement" on the incident by going to a Metro substation.
Lichtenstein disagrees with police. “The idea that they would not take a report is absolutely outrageous,” he said. Metro declined an on-camera interview about this incident.
Rob Suckoll also declined an on-camera interview. Suckoll told the I-Team by phone he would not comment on the advice of his attorney. Suckoll’s attorney also did not return a call.
Steve Brereton is still in disbelief about what happened that night. "I just can't believe a law would allow anybody to come in your home like that," Brereton said.
According to a report by the "American Bail Coalition" -- bounty hunting is outlawed in seven states including Illinois, Florida and Oregon. Eleven states -- including Nevada -- require a license. To get that license in Nevada bounty hunters must go through a background check and 80 hours of training.
Email your comments to Investigative Reporter Mark Sayre.