Articles Tagged with North Carolina Criminal Defense

Attorney J. Bradley Smith answering the question: “What are the long term effects of being convicted of a crime?”

Police in Salisbury, NC say that a convicted felon has escaped a minimum security prison in the area and is currently on the lam. Authorities say that they have locked down several schools in the area as a preventative measure and believe the man, Jonathan Dixon, has already broken at least two laws in the few hours since he managed to break free.

 

Barbed Wire Charlotte DWI Lawyer North Carolina Criminal AttorneyAuthorities say that the 27-year-old Dixon was found missing on Monday when guards at the Piedmont Correctional Facility performed a nightly bunk check. Dixon was evidently accounted for at the first bunk check, which happened at 11 p.m. but had managed to slip away before the 4 a.m. bunk check.

 

Police officers say that almost immediately after breaking out of the prison, Dixon walked next door to a North Carolina Department of Transportation storage shed and broke into it. Officials say that Dixon got away with a DOT uniform and jacket, apparently with the name “Haywood” written on it. Though it’s hard to believe, Dixon has only been out of prison for a few hours and has already managed to rack up at least two additional criminal offenses: the escape itself and the theft.

 

Authorities say that Dixon may also have been responsible for another breaking and entering in the area. Another storage facility in the same part of town was also broken into that evening. Though nothing was taken, officials say they found a boot print that matched the type of shoes inmates at the Piedmont Correctional Facility are issued.

Continue reading

Attorney J. Bradley Smith answering the question: “What are the long term effects of being convicted of a crime?”

Three teenage boys in Tobaccoville, North Carolina are now facing serious criminal charges after police say they received a tip that the trio had burned an opossum alive and videotaped the attack.

 

Opossum Charlotte DWI Lawyer North Carolina Criminal Defense AttorneyAuthorities say they received a tip last month that 18-year-old Kalob Hubbard and two other young men, a 17-year-old and a 15-year-old, recorded an attack on an opossum that ultimately died after being set on fire. Police investigators say that the attack took place in late October or early November and that a video of the incident was posted by one of the teens on Instagram.

 

Hard as it is to believe, by making the video publicly available on the Internet the boys appear to have provided the police with precisely the evidence they need to arrest and charge them with animal cruelty. Police say that now that the boys have been arrested and charged the video has since been taken down and will only be shown again if necessary during the criminal trial, with the sheriff’s office maintaining a copy as evidence.

Continue reading

Attorney J. Bradley Smith answering the question: “What happens if I am convicted of a DUI or DWI in North Carolina?”

A 28-year-old from Iowa City, Iowa recently set records after being arrested for drunk driving. The record was not the number of times he’d been arrested, but was instead the amount of alcohol in his system.

 

Beer Bottle Tops Charlotte DWI Lawyer North Carolina Criminal Defense AttorneyLevi Carter was arrested for driving drunk last Friday at around two in the morning. A passenger tipped off the police to Carter’s intoxication after the two drove off the road and crashed into a street sign. The woman called the cops saying that she’d been injured and needed the assistance of law enforcement.

 

When cops arrived, the woman told officers that when she at Carter’s home she found him pacing around his basement talking to people that were not there. Carter was unable to hold himself upright and smelled strongly of booze. When police approached Carter he claimed that he was not intoxicated, saying that he had only had two Bud Lights to drink all evening.

 

Despite his protestations, Carter was unable to perform a standard eye test or any other aspect of the routine field sobriety tests. Cops then got out a Breathalyzer machine and had Carter give a breath sample. The first reading registered a 0.467 BAC. The subsequent tests appear to have broken the machine, with the results only coming back as “HI.” The stunned police officers slapped Carter in handcuffs and took him to jail to sober up. Carter has unsurprisingly been charged with operating a vehicle while intoxicated.

Continue reading

Attorney J. Bradley Smith answering the question: “Are breath test results always accurate?”

In an odd drunk driving case out of Charlotte, a judge in Mecklenburg County recently accepted a plea deal for a driver only several hours after another judge rejected the identical deal.

 

Beer Can Tops Charlotte DWI Lawyer North Carolina Criminal Defense AttorneyThe plea deal involved a sad case where a passenger was killed in the car driven by Bairon Sandoval. The accident took place last February and Sandoval was initially charged with felony death by vehicle, DWI and lacking a valid driver’s license. His criminal defense attorney was able to reach a deal with prosecutors who agreed to reduce the charge to involuntary manslaughter in exchange for Sandoval serving between 10 and 20 months behind bars.

 

Sandoval had admitted that he and several friends had spent the evening drinking in a bar prior to driving home with a friend, 20-year-old Tatiana Rivera. Rivera was killed and two other innocent victims were injured in the accident that occurred after Sandoval ran into a tree near the intersection of Tyvola and Old Pineville Roads. Police officers tested Sandoval’s blood and determined his BAC was 0.10 percent, slightly higher than the state’s 0.08 percent legal limit.

 

Given that the plea deal had been reached between the prosecutor and Sandoval’s attorney, all that remained was to have a judge sign off on the deal, something that is typically only seen as a formality. Such deals are commonplace and save both sides significant time and money, reducing the risks that are inherent in a criminal trial. Despite the deal already being in place, one judge initially disagreed with the plea arrangement, saying that he was not willing to sign off on such a light sentence given that Sandoval’s drunk driving had directly led to another person’s death.

Continue reading

Contact Information