Personal Information
Renee Mason was booked in Davidson County on May 24, 2024 on 2 felonies, 5 misdemeanors, including Bail/bond Conditions Violation and 6 other charges.
Charges (7)
Bail/bond Conditions Violation
Original: FAILURE TO APPEAR (Misdemeanor)
When setting bail for someone arrested for child abuse, stalking, elderly abuse, or domestic violence crimes, the magistrate must carefully review the facts and consider the defendant's danger to others and flight risk before deciding if bail is appropriate and how much it should be.
Penalty: Violation
View full statute explanationBail/bond Conditions Violation
Original: FAILURE TO APPEAR (Misdemeanor)
When setting bail for someone arrested for child abuse, stalking, elderly abuse, or domestic violence crimes, the magistrate must carefully review the facts and consider the defendant's danger to others and flight risk before deciding if bail is appropriate and how much it should be.
Penalty: Violation
View full statute explanationBail/bond Conditions Violation
Original: FAILURE TO APPEAR (Misdemeanor)
When setting bail for someone arrested for child abuse, stalking, elderly abuse, or domestic violence crimes, the magistrate must carefully review the facts and consider the defendant's danger to others and flight risk before deciding if bail is appropriate and how much it should be.
Penalty: Violation
View full statute explanationAccessory After the Fact
Original: ACCESSORY AFTER THE FACT (Felony)
Someone is guilty of being an accessory after the fact—a Class E felony punishable by 1-6 years in prison and up to $3,000 in fines—if after a felony is committed, they know the criminal committed it and intentionally hide the criminal, help them escape, or warn them about arrest. An attorney providing legal help is not guilty under this law.
Penalty: Class E felony; 1-6 years; fine up to $3,000
False Reports
Original: Dead Body – Failure to Report Discovery (Misdemeanor)
It is illegal to make false reports to police about crimes or emergencies knowing the information is false, or to lie to police in response to their questions about crimes with intent to obstruct their investigation. This includes intentionally reporting false bomb, fire, or emergency threats knowing it will cause emergency response, frighten people, or close public places. Violations regarding false crime reports are Class D felonies (2-12 years and up to $5,000 in fines), while false emergency reports are Class C felonies (higher penalties).
Penalty: Class D felony; 2-12 years; fine up to $5,000
Accessory After the Fact
Original: ACCESSORY AFTER THE FACT (Felony)
Someone is guilty of being an accessory after the fact—a Class E felony punishable by 1-6 years in prison and up to $3,000 in fines—if after a felony is committed, they know the criminal committed it and intentionally hide the criminal, help them escape, or warn them about arrest. An attorney providing legal help is not guilty under this law.
Penalty: Class E felony; 1-6 years; fine up to $3,000
False Reports
Original: Dead Body – Failure to Report Discovery (Misdemeanor)
It is illegal to make false reports to police about crimes or emergencies knowing the information is false, or to lie to police in response to their questions about crimes with intent to obstruct their investigation. This includes intentionally reporting false bomb, fire, or emergency threats knowing it will cause emergency response, frighten people, or close public places. Violations regarding false crime reports are Class D felonies (2-12 years and up to $5,000 in fines), while false emergency reports are Class C felonies (higher penalties).
Penalty: Class D felony; 2-12 years; fine up to $5,000