Posts Tagged ‘warren county jail’

WedMay15

Embezzler to judge: Let me out in 30 days

Posted by rrichardson May 15th, 2013, 1:36 pm Post a Comment

Sheila McLaughlin reports:

Darren Courtney’s scam was elaborate.

The former legal officer for Fujitec opened up accounts with local banks in the names of phony law firms to swindle more than $150,000 over three years from his Mason-based employer.

Former Fujitec legal officer Darren Courtney of Mason was sentenced to 90 days in the Warren County Jail for embezzling more than $150,000 from his employer.

Former Fujitec legal officer Darren Courtney of Mason was sentenced to 90 days in the Warren County Jail for embezzling more than $150,000 from his employer.

But when it came time for sentencing in a Warren County courtroom, Courtney thought 90 days in jail was too much time.

After getting a plea deal with prosecutors, he tried to strike another deal with the judge.

Courtney asked if he could get out of jail in 30 days if he paid Fujitec the $5,000 the judge ordered by then. He said he didn’t think he could stand being away from his three sons for 90 days.

Judge Donald Oda II gave a firm “No” in return.

“That’s part of your accepting responsibility, paying the price and that includes you being away from your children,” Oda said. “It’s an unfortunate fact for your children because they didn’t do anything. But for you, that’s part of this. You are going to do the 90 days in jail.”

Oda had allowed Courtney to leave the Warren County Jail for work on the 90-day sentence. He also sentenced him to electronically monitored house arrest for six months after Courtney is released.

Oda threatened to send Courtney to prison for 36 months if he doesn’t start paying the $5,000 to Fujitec. That amount represented the company’s insurance deductible on their claim to get the money that Courtney stole.

He will be on probation for three years after his sentence is completed.

Courtney pleaded guilty to one felony charge of aggravated theft in March. In exchange, felony charges of aggravated theft, telecommunications fraud and tampering with records were dismissed.

Authorities said Courtney created fake claims from around the country and would then have Fujitec issue checks to the phoney law firms who were supposedly representing the claimants in efforts to settle those claims.

Courtney lost his job at Fujitec after the thefts, from 2010 through February 2013, were discovered.

His attorney, Jim Hardin, said Courtney has since started his own construction, carpentry and contracting company and also works for Office Depot. He’s also trying to obtain a Realtor license so he can work as a property manager, Hardin said.

Courtney will lose his law license because of the felony conviction. His case must be reviewed by the Ohio Supreme Court’s disciplinary system before that happens.

Oda hammered that point home before Courtney was taken to jail.

He noted that Courtney had not only violated violated a position of trust at Fujitec, he did the same to his fellow legal professionals.

“It goes without saying. You are not to be practicing law any more at all,” Oda said.

Reporter Rachel Richardson contributed

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TueJan29

Sheriff: Warren jail needs more space

Posted by rrichardson January 29th, 2013, 8:32 pm Post a Comment
Warren Co. Jail

Male prisoners watch TV to pass the time in their pod at the Warren County Jail. The Enquirer/ Tony Jones

Paul McKibben reports:

Warren County’s jail is overcrowded and needs to expand, Sheriff Larry Sims said Tuesday.

Capacity at the jail on Justice Drive is 280 – 214 male and 66 female.

Last year the jail’s average population was 276 inmates, a 6 percent increase from 2011. The jail was at or above capacity 132 days in 2012, more than one-third of the year.

The average amount of time an inmate stayed at the jail also increased slightly, by about a day for male and female inmates.

County commissioners on Tuesday were reluctant to immediately agree to build an addition. They plan to re-activate a jail committee to study the problem.

Warren County is among the most fiscally prudent local governments in the region. The Enquirer reported in December that the county was one of only nine in Ohio and the only one in Southwest Ohio with no general obligation-limited tax debt. Commissioners prefer to pay cash for capital projects rather than borrow.

“If we throw money at this right now, all of the problems in the world could be fixed,” Commissioner Dave Young said. “But before I start talking about committing a lot to bricks and mortars, I need to understand how we did get from here to here. What changed?”

Sims said no one factor is to blame. He said it could be a combination of population, the economy and busier courts. In 2011, the General Assembly enacted new sentencing guidelines.

Warren County Prosecutor David Fornshell said his office’s felony caseload last year increased by 12.5 percent. He said some judges are sentencing people to jail time when they have the option of sending them to prison.

Commissioners paid cash for an expansion of the jail in 1996. Two years ago, the sheriff’s office renovated the jail, including adding the ability to double bunk. That increased the jail’s capacity from 197 to 280 inmates. Sims said there is no where else to place bunks.

Warren County in the past sent inmates to Butler County. But today, Sims said after the meeting, Butler County requires a minimum of 50 inmates because it has to open another portion of its jail to justify staffing.

Sims said the county has little choice but to expand the jail. He didn’t know how much space is needed or how much it would cost.

Warren County isn’t alone with a crowded jail. Hamilton County officials have been grappling with overcrowding since budget woes forced the county to shut down its 822-bed Queensgate jail in 2008.

Two sales tax initiatives dedicated to building a new jail have failed and the county can’t afford to build one. Still, commissioners continue to work to solve the problem.

Reporter Sharon Coolidge contributed.

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ThuJun7

Escaped Warren Co. inmate found in Kings Mills

Posted by rrichardson June 7th, 2012, 12:40 pm Post a Comment

Keith Jim BoyerWarren County Sheriff’s deputies found Thursday morning a West Chester man who didn’t return to the county jail following his work release Tuesday evening.

Deputies and a canine unit searched the bank of the Little Miami River in the Kings Mills area after receiving a tip about 27-year-old Keith Jim Boyer’s whereabouts. He was arrested without incident shortly after 6 a.m.

Boyer was returned to the jail. He was charged with escape, a felony.

Mason Police arrested Boyer on March 24 on a warrant for failure to appear on a theft charge.  He had been in the Warren County Jail since his March arrest, but was granted work release.

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MonApr16

Ex-welfare worker indicted for fraud

Posted by rrichardson April 16th, 2012, 4:14 pm Post a Comment

Rebecca Butcher Paul McKibben reports:

A former Warren County employee faces 45 years in prison after authorities say she took thousands of dollars in welfare and Medicaid money.

Warren County grand jurors indicted Rebecca L. Butcher, 51, of Lebanon on 19 counts. The charges are theft in office, theft and tampering with records. County, state and federal officials announced the indictment Monday.

Butcher worked for the county for 28 years. She will be arraigned Wednesday. She’s currently in the Warren County jail.

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TueApr3

Man arrested for threatening Kings students with gun

Posted by rrichardson April 3rd, 2012, 3:54 pm Post a Comment
David Kurilko

David Kurilko / Provided

Paul McKibben reports:

A man with a gun threatened two Kings High School students Tuesday morning as they sat in a parked car near the school, police said.

The man, according to police, approached the two students on Church Street in Kings Mills – near the high school but not on school property – and complained the students were playing their car stereo loudly.

Warren County Sheriff’s deputies arrested David Kurilko, 23, at his home on Church Street shortly after the incident, which occurred at approximately 7:30 a.m.

Neither of the teenage boys – a junior and senior at Kings High School in Warren County – were injured.

The boys told a teacher when they arrived at the school and police were alerted immediately, said Kings Superintendent Valerie Browning.

“We had the situation under control, and the student body was safe and secure during the incident with many not even knowing the situation occurred,” she said.

School operations were not affected, Browning said.

Kurilko was charged with one count of aggravated menacing and is being held at the Warren County Jail.

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WedMar28

Second trial date set in Mason child rape case

Posted by rrichardson March 28th, 2012, 10:42 am Post a Comment
Jorge Velasquez
Jorge Velasquez: Warren County Jail

A new trial date has been set for a Mason man accused of sexually assaulting and raping his girlfriend’s 9-year-old daughter.

Jorge Velasquez, 33, will stand trial for a second time April 19-20 in Warren County Common Pleas Court.  His first trial in February ended in a mistrial when the jury could not reach a unanimous verdict.

Velasquez is charged with one count of rape of a child.  In his first trial, prosecutors added a lesser charge of gross sexual imposition.  He pleaded not guilty to both charges.

Prosecutors say Velasquez, the longtime boyfriend of the girl’s mother, digitally penetrated the girl’s vagina.  The alleged incident happened in Mason between August 2006 and December 2006, according to prosecutors.

Velasquez took the stand in his own defense during the first trial.  Both he and the girl’s mother testified that the girl, now 14, fabricated the accusations to retaliate against Velasquez for preventing her from seeing an adult boyfriend.

The rape charge, a first-degree felony, carries a penalty of up to life in prison.

Velasquez has been held at the Warren County Jail on a $500,000 bond since his Nov. 29 arrest.

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ThuApr28

Wild ride through Mason brings charges for Symmes Twp. man

Posted by rrichardson April 28th, 2011, 7:17 pm Post a Comment

Roger Carroll Jr. A Symmes Township man who led Mason police on two high-speed police chases, wreaking havoc and knocking down trees, electrical wires and street signs before crashing in March, was indicted on four charges this week.

Roger Carroll Jr., 26, was indicted by a Warren County grand jury Friday on a charge of failure to comply with the order or signal of a police officer, unauthorized use of a motor vehicle and two charges of operating a vehicle under the influence. The indictments were released Monday.

According to a police report, Carroll took the keys and sports utility vehicle of his live-in girlfriend without her permission the evening of March 25.

At about 11:30 p.m. that night, Mason Police Officer Aaron Yeary stopped the vehicle outside of the Mason Pub for a traffic violation. Carroll, who does not have a valid driver’s license, told the officer his girlfriend would come and drive the vehicle home, according to the report.

The officer cited Carroll for the traffic violations and driving under a suspended license and warned him not to drive, according to the police report.

Several hours later, at around 2:30 a.m. on March 26, Carroll was allegedly seen leaving a Mason business at a high rate of speed.

Yeary – the same officer who issued the traffic citations to Carroll earlier that evening – stopped the vehicle at Reading and Tylersville roads. When Carroll, whom the officer says appeared intoxicated, saw Yeary approach on the passenger side of the vehicle, he accelerated the SUV, according to police.

Carroll allegedly drove a quarter of a mile down Tylersville Road at more than 70 mph, said Assistant Prosecutor Gary Loxley.

As the pursuit passed Willow Lane, officers say the vehicle Carroll was driving crossed lanes and crossed back over on two wheels before striking a curb and coming to rest on all four wheels.

When the SUV stopped, Carroll allegedly took off on foot and police were forced to use a Taser to apprehend him, according to the police report.

As a result of the chases, the SUV was totaled and four trees, three street signs, a light post and a fire hydrant were taken out, police say.

Carroll was taken to the Warren County Jail, where he allegedly tried to conceal a cell phone in his buttocks.

Carroll is being held in the Warren County Jail under a $35,000 bond. He is scheduled to be arraigned on Wednesday in Warren County Common Pleas Court.

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