I
EVIDENCE COLLECTION:
In order to prove
criminal cases, it may become necessary for Deputies to collect and store
evidence at the Lake County Sheriff’s Office.
Evidence collected may be as small as a piece of paper or as large as
a motor vehicle.
Whatever the
case may be, it is the responsibility of the evidence technician to properly
file and store evidence for various cases.
It is important to note that not all property collected by the Lake
County Sheriff’s Office is for the sole purpose of pursuing a criminal case.
Many times the Lake County Sheriff’s Office is called upon to hold
items for safekeeping.
An
example of such a request may come from the Domestic Relations Court.
It is not uncommon for the Sheriff’s Office to receive an order from
a Judge, directing us to remove weapons (mainly firearms) from what the
court deems a “volatile home” anywhere in Lake
County.
Many cases, whether they be criminal or civil in nature, remain in
evidence until released by a Judge or Prosecutor.
This process alone may take many years to complete.
2008
Statistics:
-
(480) total
cases were processed through the Lake County Sheriff’s Office Evidence Room.
-
(895) items
of evidence were processed as a result of those 474 cases.
-
(138) cases
were sent to the Lake County Crime Lab for forensic analysis.
-
(267) is the
# of items that were sent to the Lake County Crime Lab for forensic
II
SORN/CCW:
S.O.R.N.:
In recent
years there have been laws/provisions made to the ORC in regards to sex
offenders who are either incarcerated or have been released from prison.
Sheriffs’ Offices throughout the State of Ohio have been tasked with the important
responsibility of tracking sex offenders.
The responsibility involves registering offenders in the following
manner:
-
Tier I
offenders register once a year for 15 years.
-
Tier II
offenders register every 180 days for 25 years.
-
Tier III
offenders register every 90 days for life.
Deputies
assigned to this detail must keep updated records of offenders, where they
reside, where they work, and even where they go to school.
It is also the responsibility of these Deputies to notify residents
and local schools when a registered sex offender moves into their community.
These notifications are almost always made in the form of mass
mailings which is supported by the taxpayers of Lake
County.
2008 Statistics:
-
(424) Yearly
registrations were completed for sex offenders in Lake
County.
-
(71) Tier I
Sex Offenders were registered in 2008.
-
(118) Tier
II Sex Offenders were registered in 2008.
-
(235)
Tier III Sex Offenders were registered in 2008.
-
(15)
Changes of address were made for Tier III Sex Offenders 2008.
-
(89)
Residential verifications were made of registered offenders in 2008.
-
(4)
Reports were submitted regarding failure to register which resulted
in (4) separate warrants being issued.
All
(4) warrants were served and parties
arrested.
-
(17)
Parties were preregistered as Sex Offenders before heading to prison.
-
(3)
Sex Offenders that failed to notify change of address, were arrested
in other states and returned to Ohio
for prosecution.
-
In properly
documenting the moves of registered sex offenders there were 3,588 offender
notifications made
throughout various communities in
Lake
County
for 2008.
-
Notifications resulted in a mail cost of $968.76
-
As of
12-31-2007, there were (167) sex offenders/predators registered and residing
in
Lake County.
This number
is up (74) from last year.
There are an additional (92) sex offenders/predators registered
through this office who
are currently in prison.
CCW:
As with sex offender
registrations, Sheriffs’ Offices throughout the State of
Ohio
have been given the statutory responsibility of issuing concealed weapons
permits.
Permits may be issued
on a permanent/renewable basis or on a temporary/emergency basis.
Registrations involve the verification of an applicants mandated
firearms training and the completion of a criminal background investigation.
Deputies must also issue a physical permit which is subject to
revocation if the CCW law is not followed by the permit holder.
What is important to note is that anyone may apply for a CCW permit
in their home county or in an adjacent county.
Not all CCW permit applicants who have registered in
Lake
County
are residents of this county.
2008 Statistics:
-
(1681) New
CCW permits were issued through the Lake County Sheriff’s Office.
This number is up (486) from
2007 and up (774) from 2006.
-
(740) CCW
previous licenses had been renewed in 2008.
This is a new statistic which represents the first batch
of renewals since the inception of the CCW
law.
-
(38) CCW
permits had been suspended.
This number is down (7) from 2007.
-
(33) CCW
permits had been denied.
This
number is down (3) from 2007.
-
(4) CCW
permits had been revoked.
This
number is down (8) from 2007.
A total of (75) certified letters were mailed for the suspended,
revoked, and denied CCW permits.
Each mailing is $5.32 for a total cost of $399.00.
III
ISSUANCE OF COURT ORDERS:
Lake County Sheriff’s
Deputies are responsible for the issuing of different orders from the Lake
County Courts of Common Pleas.
These orders are in the form of indictments, domestic violence protection
orders, civil stalking orders, warrants on indictment, and civil/criminal
subpoenas
The Lake County
Sheriff’s Office will also deliver papers from other county courts as long
as the recipient of those papers resides in
Lake
County.
2008 Statistics:
-
(336)
Summons’ on Indictment issued.
-
(319)
Stalking/Domestic Protection Orders issued.
-
Service was
made on (2708) orders.
-
Service was
could not be made on (365) orders.
SHERIFF’S SALES:
For 2008,
the Lake County Sheriff has continued to see a rise in the area of Sheriff’s
Sales.
With the exception of
replevins, all other categories are on the rise.
2008 Statistics:
-
Foreclosures:
1,342 (up 228
from 2007 and up 458 from 2006)
-
Writs:
159 (up 27 from 2007 and up 55 2006)
-
Executions:
46 (down 7 from 2007)
-
Replevins:
28 (down 7 from 2007)
IV
FUGITIVE EXTRADITIONS/WARRANTS:
Whether an arrest warrant has been issued by a grand jury or through a
probable cause hearing, it is the responsibility of the Lake County
Sheriff’s Office to locate and apprehend those individuals.
In many cases people flee prosecution at which point they become
fugitives.
Regardless if
someone has fled 1 mile or 3000 miles, it is our responsibility to apprehend
these individuals and bring them back to Lake
County
for their day in court.
Many
fugitives leave the State of
Ohio
figuring they can simply blend in with society to avoid prosecution.
Some feel the further they travel the better off they are.
This is not the case.
Fugitive extraditions require coordination not only logistically, but
financially.
The Lake
County Sheriff’s Office is always looking at ways to save taxpayers money in
order to bring fugitives back to Lake
County
for their necessary court hearings.
Outside of having L.C.S.O. Deputies bring fugitives back to
Ohio, which may be
costly, assistance from the U.S. Marshall’s Office, Prisoner Transport
Services and TransCor may be needed.
Based on the amount of prisoner transports the U.S. Marshall’s Office
completes across the country daily, they are able to bring fugitives back
from a far away state much cheaper than the L.C.S.O.
The same holds true for Prisoner Transport Services and TransCor,
which are private prisoner transportation companies.
By using the U.S. Marshall’s, TransCor, and Prisoner Transport
Services, we have saved the taxpayers thousands of dollars annually.
We no longer have to pay Deputies to travel to far away locations,
which would include the cost of meals, hotel accommodations, and air fare.
Exceptional cases aside, Deputies from the L.C.S.O. mainly handle
extraditions that do not require an overnight stay.
2008 Statistics:
-
(20)
Extraditions were completed by the Lake County Sheriff’s Office.
-
(1)
Extradition was completed by TransCor at a cost of $1,101.15
-
(10)
Extraditions were completed by the
U.S.
Marshalls at a
cost of $8,176.23
-
(7)
Extraditions were completed by PTS of America at a cost of $8,747.32
*NOTE:
The above arrest numbers represent out of state extraditions.
This year alone, fugitives were extradited from Michigan, California,
Texas, Florida, Georgia, Indiana, Nevada, Virginia, New York, Kentucky,
Connecticut, Tennessee, Pennsylvania and various other Federal Institutions
located throughout the United States.
The Lake County Sheriff’s Office currently holds about 835
outstanding arrest warrants.
This number is slightly down from last year, but is considered low,
considering the fact that warrants are received here at the Sheriff’s Office
on a daily basis.
Communication
and coordination with other local, state, and federal police agencies is key
to having successful criminal apprehensions when pursuing fugitives.
The Lake County Sheriff’s Office is always seeking innovative ways to
locate fugitives.
Thanks to
technological advances and an outstanding rapport with other police
agencies, fugitive apprehensions were very successful for 2007.
2008
Statistics:
-
(1528)
Warrants were received at the Lake County Sheriff’s Office.
This number is down
(187) from 2007.
-
(912)
warrants were served.
This
number is down (119) from 2007
-
(279)
warrants were recalled or returned to the court for dismissal.
This number is down (44) from 20007
V
COURT HOUSE SECURITY:
With public safety being
paramount, there have been numerous changes in the security procedures at
the various Lake County Common Pleas Courts in the past few years.
One item in particular is the way we track and prohibit contraband
from entering into the Lake County Court House and the Lake County Juvenile
Detention Facility.
By tracking
our progress we are able to fairly evaluate what might be missed if we were
not diligent in our duties.
The
following numbers represent what was barred in 2007:
-
(208) Items
of contraband were barred in January of 2008.
-
(152) Items
of contraband were barred in February of 2008.
-
(186) Items
of contraband were barred in March of 2008.
-
(149) Items
of contraband were barred in April of 2008.
-
(182) Items
of contraband were barred in May of 2008.
-
(114) Items
of contraband were barred in June of 2008.
-
(121) Items
of contraband were barred in July of 2008.
-
(142) Items
of contraband were barred in August of 2008.
-
(162) Items
of contraband were barred in September of 2008.
-
(230) Items
of contraband were barred in October of 2008.
-
(236) Items
of contraband were barred in November of 2008.
-
(233) Items
of contraband were barred in December of 2008.
TOTAL:
2,115 items
*NOTE:
Contraband has been determined to be any weapon, item that may be
used as a weapon, or item not permitted into the court house by a Judge’s
order.
VI
PRISONER TRANSPORTS:
It is the responsibility
of the Deputies from the Court Services Division to complete all prisoner
transports to and from court, hospitals, and the various prisons throughout
Ohio.
The L.C.S.O. also assists the U.S. Marshal’s Office in transporting
prisoners they have housed at the Lake County Jail to the Federal Court
Houses in Cleveland and
Akron.
It should be noted that the U.S. Marshal’s Office reimburses the Lake
County Sheriff’s Office for all of their prisoner transports.
2008 Statistics:
-
(657) Prisoner to court transports.
-
(76) Prisoner escorts
to probation.
-
(206) Prisoner
Transports for the U.S. Marshal’s.
$13,115.27 was reimbursed back to the
Lake County Sheriff’s
Office for these transports.
-
(82) Transports that
involved going to prisons.
-
64) Prisoner
medical transports.
-
(4) Prisoner transports
for GED Testing.
Respectfully submitted,
Lt. Jeffrey A. Sherwood
2007 Annual Report