William Devere Thomas Jr.
Campbell County · Booked May 2, 2024

Personal Information
William Thomas was booked in Campbell County on May 2, 2024 on 3 violations, including Failure to Appear and 12 other charges.
Charges (13)
Failure to Appear
Original: CRIMINAL CAPIAS
It is illegal to knowingly fail to appear in court when you've been summoned, arrested with a court-ordered release condition, cited instead of arrested, or issued a criminal summons. Failure to appear is a Class A misdemeanor punishable by up to 11 months 29 days in jail and a $2,500 fine. A defense exists if you had a reasonable excuse for missing the court date.
Penalty: Class A misdemeanor; 11 months 29 days; fine up to $2,500
Theft of Property
Original: THEFT $1,000 - $2,500
It is illegal to take or exercise control over someone else's property without their permission with the intent to either permanently deprive them of it or withhold it long enough to substantially reduce its value or their enjoyment of it. This applies to any item of value.
Penalty: Violation
View full statute explanationServing Sentence
Original: SERVING TIME
Bail/bond Conditions Violation
Original: FAILURE TO APPEAR
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
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 explanationOffense of Financial Exploitation of Elderly or
Original: FINANCIAL EXPLOITATION OF ELDERLY/VULNER
It is illegal to knowingly financially exploit an elderly or vulnerable adult through deception, intimidation, threats, or force to gain unauthorized control over their property and deprive them of it. The statute does not specify a classification in the provided text, so penalties would be determined by the court.
Penalty: Violation
View full statute explanationTheft of Property
Original: THEFT $1,000 - $2,500
It is illegal to take or exercise control over someone else's property without their permission with the intent to either permanently deprive them of it or withhold it long enough to substantially reduce its value or their enjoyment of it. This applies to any item of value.
Penalty: Violation
View full statute explanationTheft of Property
Original: THEFT $1,000 - $2,500
It is illegal to take or exercise control over someone else's property without their permission with the intent to either permanently deprive them of it or withhold it long enough to substantially reduce its value or their enjoyment of it. This applies to any item of value.
Penalty: Violation
View full statute explanationViolation Tint Law
Original: VIOLATION TINT LAW
Drug Manufacturing/delivery/sale
Original: MFG/DEL/SALE/POSS CONT SUBSTANCE
It is illegal to knowingly manufacture, deliver, sell, or possess with intent to deliver a controlled substance. This is typically a Class E felony punishable by 1 to 6 years in prison and a fine up to $3,000, but the penalty increases to a Class A, B, C, or D felony depending on the type of drug and amount involved.
Penalty: Class E felony; 1-6 years; fine up to $3,000
Failure to Appear
Original: CRIMINAL CAPIAS
It is illegal to knowingly fail to appear in court when you've been summoned, arrested with a court-ordered release condition, cited instead of arrested, or issued a criminal summons. Failure to appear is a Class A misdemeanor punishable by up to 11 months 29 days in jail and a $2,500 fine. A defense exists if you had a reasonable excuse for missing the court date.
Penalty: Class A misdemeanor; 11 months 29 days; fine up to $2,500
Criminal Conspiracy
Original: CRIMINAL CONSPIRACY
Two or more people commit conspiracy when they agree that one or more of them will commit a crime and each person intends to help commit that crime. If someone in the conspiracy knows others in the group also conspired with additional people for the same crime, they're guilty of conspiring with all of them. A person can only be convicted of one conspiracy even if multiple crimes were planned together, and there must be proof of at least one overt act (a real step toward the crime) taken by someone in the conspiracy.
Penalty: Classification not specified
View full statute explanationHold Placed
Original: HOLD PLACED
