KENNETH C BELL , KENNETH CHARLES BELL , KENNETH C BELL , KENNETH JR BAIL , KENNETH BELL JR , KENNETH C BELL
Davidson County · Booked Apr 4, 2025
Personal Information
KENNETH BELL was booked in Davidson County on Apr 4, 2025 on 2 felonies, 3 misdemeanors, including Burglary (Felony) and 4 other charges.
Charges (5)
Theft of Property
Original: Theft of Merchandise - $1,000 or less (Misdemeanor)
[The statute text provided is incomplete and contains primarily definitions without a complete description of all illegal conduct or penalties. A complete explanation cannot be provided without the full statute language.]
Penalty: Classification not specified
View full statute explanationSexual Battery
Original: SEXUAL BATTERY, WITHOUT CONSENT (Felony)
Sexual battery is unwanted sexual contact (touching of intimate parts or clothing covering intimate areas) accomplished through force, coercion, fraud, or when the victim is mentally incapacitated, mentally defective, or physically helpless. This is the less severe sexual offense not involving penetration. Conviction carries 1 to 6 years in prison and fines up to $3,000.
Penalty: Class E felony; 1-6 years; fine up to $3,000
Indecent Exposure
Original: INDECENT EXPOSURE (Misdemeanor)
It is illegal to intentionally expose your genitals, buttocks, or to engage in sexual acts in public or on someone else's property where you reasonably expect others will see it and be offended, or where you do it for sexual gratification. It is also illegal to invite a child into your home and expose yourself or masturbate in front of them, or to masturbate in your own home intending a child to be present. This is a Class A misdemeanor punishable by up to 11 months and 29 days in jail and a fine of up to $2,500. Certain aggravated circumstances can increase the penalty to a Class E felony (1-6 years in prison).
Penalty: Class A misdemeanor; 11 months 29 days; fine up to $2,500
Criminal Trespass
Original: TRESPASS (Misdemeanor)
It is illegal to enter or stay on someone else's property without their permission. You violate this law if you go onto or remain on property knowing the owner did not consent to your presence, though consent is assumed for businesses open to the public. A violation is a Class C misdemeanor punishable by up to 30 days in jail and a $50 fine. You have a defense if you reasonably believed you had permission, your presence didn't significantly interfere with the owner's use, and you left immediately when asked—but only if the owner did not post visible "no trespassing" signs or purple paint marks at entry points.
Penalty: Class C misdemeanor; 30 days; fine up to $50