Showing posts with label bond. Show all posts
Showing posts with label bond. Show all posts

Monday, December 31, 2007

Bail Bondsmen Have a Dangerous Job

Bail bondsman David Dunn said he was a split second from kicking in an apartment door when his partner yelled.

"She's got a gun,” Carol Franklin said.

The woman inside the apartment turned and aimed at Franklin.

Franklin, who stood outside a window looking into the apartment, threw herself to the ground. Halfway down, she heard the gun's bang, she said. The rifle blast missed.

The bail bondsmen were at the Yukon apartment to detain Vicki Sanders, 45, who had skipped an Oklahoma County District Court appearance. Sanders had a signed bond through Abraham's Bail Bonds in Oklahoma City.

Sanders was shot and killed Monday night by Oklahoma Highway Patrol troopers after a nearly six-hour standoff.

Dangers of bounty hunting
The danger of the job is nothing new to Dunn, but the reality of how close he came to losing his life hit hard as he went home Monday night, he said.

"You can try and avoid death ... and I've had near misses,” Dunn said. "But to have one like that, it's nothing but good luck and the grace of God. It really does make you stop and think about everything you do out there.”

Grace of God and the help of a good friend such as Carol Franklin, Dunn said.

"The thing that scared me the most was when I looked through the window knowing that my partner was about to kick the door in and she's sitting there aiming a rifle at the door,” Franklin said. "At that point my fear wasn't for myself, my fear was that I was about to lose my partner if I didn't do something quick.”

Franklin said she normally doesn't go to the back window or door. She's usually the one kicking in the door. Had she not been at that window, Dunn likely would have been killed, she said.

Bail jumper
Sanders' mother, Patsy McFadden had co-signed the bond, Dunn said.

Although not needed lawfully to enter a residence where a known bail jumper lives, Dunn and Franklin obtained written permission from McFadden to kick the door in, Dunn said.

McFadden, who told the two bondsmen that Sanders was bipolar and off her medication, said there were no weapons in the home, Dunn said.

They first tried a ruse.

"Carol knocked on the door, said some kids were throwing rocks at Sanders' car,” Dunn said. "That didn't work. She wouldn't answer the door.”

Franklin walked around to the side of the downstairs apartment to a window that was open about 8 inches with the blinds pulled down, she said.

She peered in through the window and saw the armed woman on the couch. She yelled to David, and the woman spun and fired, Franklin said.

Franklin said and she and Dunn called Yukon police.

A short time later, the Oklahoma Highway Patrol arrived with its tactical team.

The two bondsmen watched from nearby as troopers sent in a robot, then fired tear gas and flash bangs.

Franklin said she thought the armed woman may have shot the robot. There was a hail of gunfire and the ordeal was over.

"It's sad because she may have been ill,” she said. "But she wasn't going to go to court, and she wasn't going to come out of the apartment.”

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Monday, November 05, 2007

Illegal Immigrants Filling County Jails

Illegal immigrants are taking roost in three Panhandle jails and causing crowding issues.

Ochiltree County is making plans to deal with extra inmates in part because of illegal immigrants who have committed state crimes. Immigration and Custom Enforcement place holds on illegal immigrants, making it difficult for them to bond out of jail.

Ochiltree Sheriff Terry Bouchard said a proposed agreement between Ochiltree County Jail and the Dallam-Hartley County Jail will allow the county to ship inmates to the bi-county jail at $40 per day per inmate.

Moore and Carson County both ship inmates to other jails but would have their crowding issues relieved if illegal immigrants could bond out.

"We've managed to stay under (capacity) so far, but we want some kind of safety mechanism in case we run over," Bouchard said.

Ochiltree' 32-bed facility is 51 years old and typically runs an average of 26 inmates.

This week the county had nine inmates with ICE holds placed on them.

"When immigration places a hold on that person, the bondsmen don't want to bond them," Bouchard said. "If they do bond out, ICE will pick them up."

Ken Knowles, owner of Central Bail Bonds, which covers about 90 counties, said it ultimately depends on whether local jails will work with the bonding companies and the credibility of the inmate.

"I know some of these smaller jails due to the overcrowding and the overpopulation of immigrants, if these people have jobs and are somewhat stable, they will cut them loose on our bond," Knowles said. "We do post bonds on them if the credibility is there."

Ochiltree won't be stuck with illegal immigrants for inmates indefinitely. After they serve for the state crime, Bouchard said they are picked up by ICE.

Moore County Jail has six inmates at the Dallam-Hartley County Jail and still has 58 inmates in its 62-bed facility.

Corrections Officer Christie Rex said most of the 11 inmates with ICE holds have misdemeanor charges against them.

"If they were able to bond on those charges, my jail wouldn't nearly be as full. That would help us," Rex said.

Most of the jail officials did agree that ICE was punctual about picking up inmates once they had resolved their state issues.

Carson County Sheriff Tam Terry has two inmates staying with Armstrong County to help ease crowding at his 24-bed facility. Terry's nine inmates with ICE holds all face first-degree felonies.

"They are here and I can't get rid of them," Terry said. "If five of them were able to make a bond, that would help us out."

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Thursday, September 27, 2007

Woman Charged With Acting as Bondsman

A High Point woman faces numerous charges for allegedly taking property from a man while presenting herself as a bail bondsman.

Tiffanie A. Brack, 25, of 1146 Wayside Drive, was arrested Monday and charged with obtaining two parcels of land, a 2006 Land Rover and estimated $34,000 from William A. Sapp, no age or address given, according to warrants filed at the Guilford County Magistrate’s office.

Warrants state Brack presented herself as a licensed bondsman, when in fact she has never been a licensed bondsman in North Carolina.

She is charged with four counts of obtaining property under a false pretense and is being held on a $150,000 bond.


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