Bruce Allen was booked into Shelby County Jail on February 23, 2026, on a domestic assault charge as part of a massive law enforcement operation that resulted in arrests spanning from murder to traffic violations across Memphis and surrounding areas.
Allen, who has one prior booking in Shelby County according to jail records, was charged with misdemeanor domestic assault. The Class E felony carries a maximum penalty of one to six years in prison and fines up to $3,000 under Tennessee Code Annotated § 39-13-111.
The domestic assault charge places Allen among an extensive list of co-defendants processed the same day, indicating coordinated police activity across multiple incidents throughout the county.
Among the most serious charges filed were first-degree murder counts against Javarion Ford, who also drew firearm during dangerous felony charges. Multiple suspects were booked on aggravated assault charges, including Rodney Mcgowan, Allen Mccloud, and Octavious Wells.
The sweep also netted several individuals on drug-related charges. Kentrell Harris was booked for drug manufacturing, delivery, and sale alongside aggravated criminal trespass. Deterion Garrett drew similar drug charges plus drug paraphernalia possession.
Traffic violations featured prominently in the day's arrests. Allen Mccloud accumulated the most extensive list of driving-related charges, including DUI, driving on suspended license, reckless driving, and no proof of insurance. Daniel Campbell was booked on multiple DUI counts along with reckless driving charges.
Domestic violence cases appeared repeatedly throughout the booking records. William Fleming, Terika Copher, Stein Williams, Darrick Marr, Veronica Stewart, Frederick Gwynn, Antonio Wadley, Ashley Tate, Tyree Crews, Wayneshia Dickerson, Jermya Mccaston, Tameka Curry, John King, Bernard Stewart, Tarecka Vanhook, Quathion Reese, and Gabrielle Mcneil all drew domestic assault charges alongside Allen.
Several suspects were charged with probation violations, suggesting ongoing supervision by the court system. Jonathan Boyce accumulated an extensive list of charges including multiple robbery counts, burglary, and theft of property violations paired with repeated probation violations.
Theft-related charges appeared across numerous cases. Timothy Thompson, Lamar Moore, Lexis Eckles, Gabrielle Crutcher, Hollisa Seals, Dykeesha Hogan, Tammica Mitchell, Jonathan Harris, Richard Felsenthal, Daneshia Kimble, Brylan Sullivan, and Adrian Morris all drew various theft charges ranging from merchandise to property theft.

Sex offender registry violations were filed against Ozene Nelson, Thaddeus Taylor, and Spencer Henderson, indicating failures to comply with state registration requirements.
The booking data shows no other arrests were processed in Shelby County on the same day, suggesting the coordinated operation represented the primary law enforcement focus for February 23.
Several suspects accumulated multiple charges within single incidents. Hamdi Iysheh was booked on DUI, reckless driving, evading arrest, and eight separate reckless endangerment counts plus speeding. The extensive charge list suggests a high-speed chase or prolonged dangerous driving incident.
Weapon-related charges appeared in multiple cases. Malik Gowdy drew unlawful weapon possession charges alongside aggravated robbery, while Ladarrius Matthews was charged with unlawful weapon possession and probation violation. Willie Hammond was charged with unlawful weapon possession along with reckless endangerment and vandalism.
The domestic assault charge against Allen represents the less serious end of the spectrum compared to co-defendants charged with murder and aggravated assault. However, domestic violence charges carry significant legal consequences and often result in protective orders and mandatory counseling requirements.
Court dates and bond amounts were not immediately available through booking records. Allen's case will likely proceed through Shelby County General Sessions Court for initial appearances before potential advancement to Criminal Court depending on prosecution decisions.
The coordinated nature of the arrests suggests ongoing investigations across multiple jurisdictions within Shelby County, with charges spanning violent crimes, property offenses, traffic violations, and drug-related activities.
