MILLERSBURG — A Millersburg man on last week admitted to selling drugs, passed off as Xanax, to a confidential informant. Darrin Brodie Neville, 22, of 4775 County Road 400, pleaded guilty in Holmes County Common Pleas Court to two counts of trafficking in drugs. In exchange for his guilty plea, a third charge of trafficking in drugs and three counts of trafficking in counterfeit controlled substances were dismissed. Neville is next scheduled to appear in court for sentencing on May 2, at which time he faces up to two years in prison. Similarly charged initially, Sara Lynn Miller, 23, of 568 Wooster Road, Apt. A, Millersburg, initially had pleaded not guilty to three counts of trafficking in drugs and three counts of trafficking in counterfeit controlled …show more content…
If treatment in lieu of conviction is granted and both Millers successfully complete the program, charges against them will be dismissed. In the case of Neville, the charges stem from incidents on July 10, 11 and 12. That's when he allegedly sold Buspirone, an unscheduled drug used to treat anxiety and panic disorders, to an informant working for the LEAD Task Force, according to Commander Joe Mullet. Because he reportedly sold the drug as Xanax, which is a Schedule IV drug, he was charged for offering to sell the illegal drug and actually selling the counterfeit product, said Mullet. Because it wasn't until the pills were analyzed in a lab they were found to be counterfeit, the informant continued to conduct business with Neville and the Millers, to whom Neville referred the informant, said Mullet, noting all transactions were discontinued after the substance was found to be
-Summary Timothy Mitchell, father of 5 and a residence of Sault Ste Marie who is trying suing the Sault Ste. Marie Police Services Board. His claim is that during an arrest one of the officers, Keating who was detaining him had used unnecessary force. Mitchell had been struck by Keating near his left upper abdomen. During his hims time at the police station Mitchell claimed that Keating said “abuse, provocative and demeaning comments” and that Keating also pushed him from behind while sitting on a bench in a cell and as he left Keating he gave a “rude and abusive gesture to Mitchell”.
It is important to determine if the acts were separate because the defendant is only eligible for enhancement if the defendant has three prior convictions for a violent felony, serious drug conviction, or both. 18 U.S.C. § 924(e)(1). The time spent in between the two transactions was sufficient enough to make the conscious decision to engage into another illegal drug sale. The court determined that the sales constituted as single occasional because the undercover officer who Letterlough sold the drugs to did not arrest him after the first sale. Letterlough states that because the officer failed to arrest him after their transaction, some responsibility should fall on the officer, but requiring law enforcement to do so could interfere with sting operations and undercover
MILLERSBURG — Two evaluator say he is not guilty by reason of insanity, now it’s up to a judge to make a final finding in the case against a Millersburg man who allegedly wrote threatening letters to three deputies and a judge while incarcerated in the Holmes County Jail in December. Rhett Neville, 43, of 10489 Township Road 262, previously entered a plea of not guilty by reason of insanity in Holmes County Common Pleas Court to four counts of intimidation. Since, Neville has undergone psychiatric evaluations and two doctors have expressed opinions he should be found not guilty by reason of insanity. The consistency of the two evaluations, according to court discussions has brought the case to a point where defense attorney Andy Hyde said
Stacey McAlpine who helped Danny Heatley, a former Senator forward rebuild his career after a deadly car crash was charged with a lawsuit for defrauding his clients, Danny Heatley and Chris Philips and laundering the proceeds of the crime. In a statement by the lawsuit, Stacey McAlpine provided Danny Heatly with emotional support and advice during his recovery after the accident. At that time friendship flourished and Danny Heatley trusted and relied on Stacey. In the lawsuit filed at the court, Danny Heatly said that Stacey McAlpine represented him in his career as an NHL player before becoming his business adviser on a salary of $30 million a year.
On Friday March 30th Philip Malloy was suspended. He was sent to the assistant principal 's office twice that week. According to Harrison High student handbook that results to a suspension. Philip was sent to the office for creating a disturbance in Ms. Narwin homeroom. According to the memo Philip was humming during the National Anthem.
The petitioner’s original bond was revoked after evidence that he was intimidating the witness and after the petitioner screamed and shouted racial slurs at the magistrate judge as well as spit on his face. This behavior furthered supported that Charles Sell was suffering from a delusional disorder. The district court concluded that the decision to involuntarily medicate Charles Sell to restore his health and competence is constitutional. The courts also concluded that the drugs administered must not have any negative effects. They also stated that drugs used were medically appropriate for Charles Sell and it gave him the right to due process and protected his fifth and sixth amendment right to a fair trial.
On 04/19/2018 at approximately 20:04 hours I, Deputy Keith Lloyd, along with Deputy Fred Corley were dispatched to 1299 E 119th Street, Mulvane, Sumner County Kansas for an unknown disturbance. The call was transferred from Mulvane PD who advised they could only hear that a male and his son were arguing. At approximately 20:34 hours Deputies arrived at 1299 E 119th Street. Upon arrival I made contact with a white male who was I recognized as Jarid Miles Branine from previous encounters. I asked Jarid what was going on and he stated he and his father got into an argument and his mother called the cops fearing the two were going to get into a fight.
I believe Justice O’Connor’s plurality opinion of Jennifer Troxel et vir. V. Tommie Granville (802-803) was an example of a “good opinion.” The piece was both well-written and backed by appropriate precedent; O’Connor cited Meyer and Stanley v. Illinois, supra, observing, “[The] interest of parents in the care, custody, and control of their children [is] perhaps the oldest of the fundamental [due process] liberty interests recognized by this Court” (802). He additionally emphasized that the Court had not found Granville an unfit mother, nor had the Troxels accused her of being one when the case began. I find the majority opinion of Robin Joy Shahar v. Michael Bowers to be an example of a “bad opinion” for several reasons.
As a rule Georgia provides more lenient treatment for first-time offenders, §42-8-60 (a) (1997), the trial court withheld judgment on a sentence or impose any limit jail, and instead require that Moncrieffe completed five years of probation, then his charge would be removed
§§ 846, 841(a)(1) and 841(b)(1)(A)(ii). Specifically, with respect to venue, Tyler Summers, as co-conspirator, arranged for the packaging and delivery of the controlled substance from Syracuse, NY to Toledo, Ohio, as indicated in DEA Investigator Anne Andrews’ case notes. The defendants and co-conspirator Summers engaged in communication while the parties were located in Ohio and Syracuse, respectively, and said communication was conducted for the purpose of arranging the delivery and exchange of the aforementioned controlled
As a parole board member, I would like to release offender Smith under specific conditions. Before I discuss the conditions, I simply need to give a little summary of the offender violations he committed. Mr. smith was arrested for forcible rape and aggravated assault to his girlfriend. Offender Smith and his girlfriend at the time were both high off cocaine or PCP. She didn 't want to engage in sexual relations with him, so Mr. Smith got extremely upset and punched her and ruthlessly assaulted her.
Tommy McCartney is the high school student. He works forty hours per week and save $6000. He wishes to have a car and he decides to use his saving money to buy one. He finds the car that he like. It is the used yellow Camaro.
The Christopher Vaughn case is a popular case in which ballistics and blood spatter aided in solving. Vaughn pleaded not guilty in court, and the defense stuck to the case that it was a murder-suicide case involving his wife. Paul Kish, a blood spatter expert assigned to the case, said that the evidence found at the crime scene did not correlate with Vaughn’s story. Vaughn’s blood was found in many different places; the center console, on his wife’s shorts, on the front and back of her seatbelt, and on the carpet between her shoes. Vaughn’s original statement did not mention the blood present on the seatbelt.
Summary of the Incident Only eleven days into his new job as a New Jersey State Police trooper, Justin Hopson witnessed an act by his training officer that would challenge his moral convictions and change his life forever. During a traffic stop in March 2002, Hopson watched his partner arrest a woman for drunk driving who had not even been behind the wheel. Throughout the court proceedings in this case, Hopson chose not to violate his principles, and refused to validate his partner’s version of events surrounding the arrest. From that point forward, Hopson was targeted by fellow officers in an effort to silence him about this event, and other alleged police misconduct.
On the final visit, the Complaint says, he was given 120 pills of Oxycodone, even though had been discharged from a mental health and addiction treatment facility three days before. He had spent a week as an inpatient for anxiety and panic