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ALFANZO D JORDAN

Hamblen County · Booked Feb 1, 2025

Booking photo of ALFANZO D JORDAN, Hamblen County, Feb 1, 2025

Personal Information

RaceBlack
SexMale
LocationWHITESBURG

ALFANZO JORDAN was booked in Hamblen County on Feb 1, 2025 on 3 charges, including Haley’s Law and 2 other charges.

Charges (3)

Charge 1
PENDING

Haley’s Law

Original: AGGRAVATED CHILD ABUSE OR NEGLECT (HALEY'S LAW)

TCA § 39-15-402

Committing child abuse, child neglect, or child endangerment in an aggravated manner (such as using a firearm or weapon, causing serious bodily injury, or causing substantial risk of death) is a Class B felony punishable by 8-30 years in prison and/or up to $25,000 in fines. If the conduct involves extreme cruelty or results in death, it can be elevated to a Class A felony.

Penalty: Class B felony; 8-30 years; fine up to $25,000

Max Jail: 8-30 yearsMax Fine: $25,000
View full statute explanation
Bond:$15,000
Charge 2
PENDING

Nonsupport and Flagrant Nonsupport

Original: NON-SUPPORT/FLAGRANT NON-SUPPORT

TCA § 39-15-101

It is illegal for a parent or spouse to fail to provide financial support, food, shelter, clothing, or medical care to a minor child or disabled spouse when the person is able to do so and knows they have a legal duty—this is nonsupport, a Class A misdemeanor punishable by up to 11 months 29 days in jail and a $2,500 fine. Nonsupport becomes the more serious crime of "flagrant nonsupport" (a Class E felony punishable by 1–6 years in prison) if the person leaves the state to avoid support obligations or has been convicted of nonsupport before.

Penalty: Class A misdemeanor; 11 months 29 days; fine up to $2,500

Max Jail: 11 months 29 daysMax Fine: $2,500
View full statute explanation
Bond:$1,880
Charge 3
PENDING

Nonsupport and Flagrant Nonsupport

Original: NON-SUPPORT/FLAGRANT NON-SUPPORT

TCA § 39-15-101

It is illegal for a parent or spouse to fail to provide financial support, food, shelter, clothing, or medical care to a minor child or disabled spouse when the person is able to do so and knows they have a legal duty—this is nonsupport, a Class A misdemeanor punishable by up to 11 months 29 days in jail and a $2,500 fine. Nonsupport becomes the more serious crime of "flagrant nonsupport" (a Class E felony punishable by 1–6 years in prison) if the person leaves the state to avoid support obligations or has been convicted of nonsupport before.

Penalty: Class A misdemeanor; 11 months 29 days; fine up to $2,500

Max Jail: 11 months 29 daysMax Fine: $2,500
View full statute explanation
Bond:$1,475