Friday, October 20, 2006
Dog News Conference Results Article
http://the.honoluluadvertiser.com/article/2006/Oct/20/br/br2871530649.html
DOG LEGAL PROCEDDINGS STAYED!!!!
Sources close to the Duane "Dog" Chapman legal case tell TMZ that the Mexican courts have put a stay on further legal proceedings in the bounty hunter's matter. Meanwhile, the reality star's legal team is gathering more evidence as to his actions while in Mexico, and sources tell TMZ that when the evidence is presented, the Mexican court is expected to rule "favorably." Chapman's saga began last month when he was arrested along with two cohorts, including his son Leland, in Mexico on charges of illegal detention and conspiracy in connection with his apprenhension of convicted rapist and Max Factor heir Andrew Luster. (Bounty hunting is a crime in Mexico.) The Mexican government wanted Chapman extradited to face the charges, which could lead to a prison term of up to four years.In an effort to avoid extradition, the "Dog the Bounty Hunter" star offered shortly after his arrest to apologize to Mexico, to pay a fine, to forfeit the bail he posted in the country, and to make a charitable contribution.
What does a STAY mean?
The act of temporarily stopping a judicial proceeding through the order of a court.A stay is a suspension of a case or a suspension of a particular proceeding within a case. A judge may grant a stay on the motion of a party to the case or issue a stay sua sponte, without the request of a party. Courts will grant a stay in a case when it is necessary to secure the rights of a party.There are two main types of stays: a stay of execution and a stay of proceedings. A stay of execution postpones the enforcement of a judgment against a litigant who has lost a case, called the judgment debtor. In other words, if a civil litigant wins money damages or some other form of relief, he may not collect the damages or receive the relief if the court issues a stay. Under rule 62 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, every civil judgment is stayed for ten days after it is rendered. An additional stay of execution lasts only for a limited period. It usually is granted when the judgment debtor appeals the case, but a court may grant a stay of execution in any case in which the court feels the stay is necessary to secure or protect the rights of the judgment debtor.
Thursday, October 19, 2006
BREAKING NEWS....PRESS CONFERENCE!!
********************
BREAKING NEWS - PRESS CONFERENCE:DUANE "DOG" CHAPMAN, ATTORNEYS CALL PRESS CONFERENCE ON FRIDAY, 10/20/06, 10 A.M., AT NBC EXHIBITION HALL FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Thursday, October 19, 2006 Honolulu, HI - Duane "Dog" Chapman and his attorneys, William Bollard and Brook Hart, have called a press conference to make a major announcement re the extradition case, as follows:WHO: Duane "Dog" Chapman, William Bollard, and Brook Hart, with Beth Chapman, Tim Chapman, and Leland ChapmanWHEN: Friday, October 20, 2006 • 10:00 a.m. (Hawaii Time)WHERE: Neal Blaisdell Center Exhibition Hall, Honolulu, HawaiiBackgroundDuane "Dog" Chapman, star of the top-rated A&E television show DOG THE BOUNTY HUNTER, was arrested last month by U.S. marshals in Hawaii on charges of illegal detention and conspiracy in his June 18, 2003, capture in Mexico of cosmetics heir Andrew Luster. Also arrested were Leland Chapman, Duane's son, and Timothy Chapman, their associate. The three spent one night in the Federal Detention Center in Honolulu, and were released after posting bail. The three have been ordered to appear at an extradition hearing, which has not yet been scheduled. Since the arrest, hundreds of thousands of fans from across the country and around the world – including 29 members of Congress – have been pleading with the U.S. and Mexican authorities for their freedom and holding them up as "heroes" for bringing serial rapist Luster to justice. Luster is serving a 124-year prison sentence for his heinous crimes against the women he drugged, raped, and videotaped.
Tuesday, October 17, 2006
Interview about the Chapman case...
http://tancredo.house.gov/press/2006.10.11%20TT%20CNN.wmv
Thursday, October 12, 2006
'Dog' touched by Tancredo's aid......
Congressman leads charge to halt bounty hunter's extradition
Duane "Dog" Chapman
STORY TOOLS
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By M.E. Sprengelmeyer, Rocky Mountain News October 12, 2006
When he learned that Rep. Tom Tancredo came to his defense, burly bounty hunter Duane "Dog" Chapman reacted in a way one wouldn't expect.
"I cry easy, so to tell you I cried doesn't tell you very much," Chapman said in a telephone interview from his home in Hawaii.
Tancredo is leader of the "Set the Dog Free" movement in Congress. He and 29 other Republican congressmen have signed a letter asking Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice to block Chapman's pending extradition to Mexico.
"Colorado is our home, bro. We've done a lot of work there. I thought most of my friends were gone. It's proven today that they're not," Chapman said.
Chapman, a Denver native, launched a bail bond and bounty-hunting business in Colorado in 1980. After some high-profile arrests of fugitives, he gained national fame as host of the A&E network's reality show, Dog The Bounty Hunter.
Now, Mexico wants him extradited there. He was arrested last month, along with two of his colleagues, on a charge of illegal detention and conspiracy, the Associated Press reported. The charge stems from his capture of convicted rapist Andrew Luster, the Max Factor heir, on June 18, 2003, in Puerto Vallarta, Mexico.
Chapman's case has become a cause celebre on the Internet, with a "Set the Dog Free" anthem and an official Web site, www.dogthebountyhunter.com/main.php.
Tancredo has tried to draw attention to the case since last month. This week, he enlisted Rep. Joel Hefley, R-Colorado Springs, and 28 other colleagues in sending a letter protesting the State Department's approval of the pending extradition.
"Why is the department pursuing this case when Mr. Chapman was in communications and cooperating with U.S. and Mexican authorities before and throughout the entire period he was pursuing Mr. Luster?" the letter says. "Finally - and perhaps most importantly - why is Mr. Chapman being 'rewarded' for everything he has done for both the U.S. and Mexico by bringing Mr. Luster in with the prospect of serving jail time in Mexico?"
Chapman is no stranger to jail. In his 20s, he served about 18 months in a Texas prison in connection with a homicide. Chapman said he had nothing to do with the fatal shooting, although he was in the area and heard the gunshot.
Skills he honed in prison, combined with happenstance, led him into the bail bonds and bounty-hunting business. Now, with his company, Free As A Bird Bail Bonds, which is still operating in Colorado, he describes himself as "like a freak-of-nature convict gone good."
But he says all of that is at risk if he gets tossed into a Mexican jail, where he figures he'd meet up with plenty of violent criminals who have no love for fugitive hunters.
"This is the real deal. This is a life-threatening travesty," Chapman said. "What I worry about most is leaving my family and going to jail. There's no bucket of gold at the end of this rainbow. There's a cell."
A plea to 'Set the Dog Free'
"It seems that Mexican authorities are pressing this case only because they are so stung by the embarrassment of failing where Mr. Chapman succeeded."
- Letter to Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice by Rep. Tom Tancredo and 29 other members of Congress
"I've had a lot more confidence when I saw Mr. Tancredo has 30 people signed up. When we retire, I'm heading to Washington, because I love this kind of stuff."
- Duane "Dog" Chapman, on Tancredo's effort on his behalf
Listen to the "Set the Dog Free" anthem at www.dogthebountyhunter.com/main.php
Tuesday, October 10, 2006
Congress Members Ask That Bounty Hunter Not Be Extradited To Mexico
U.S. Rep. Tom Tancredo and 28 other members of Congress recently sent a letter to Secretary of State Condoleeza Rice, asking her to deny the extradition of Duane "Dog" Chapman to Mexico.
“Thanks to Mr. Chapman, Luster is now serving a 124-year sentence,” said Tancredo. “It seems that Mexican authorities are pressing this case only because they are so stung by the embarrassment of failing where Mr. Chapman succeeded.”
Chapman left Hawaii for the mainland in February to search for Luster. In 2003, he received a tip regarding the whereabouts of Andrew Luster, who disappeared during his trial for rape. Chapman went to Mexico to act on this tip, and was accompanied by a local Mexican police officer – who he agreed to pay. He was also in communication with U.S. officials, who were aware of his activities, Tancredo said.
While in Mexico, Chapman found Luster and brought him back to the United States. However, since bounty hunting is considered illegal kidnapping under Mexican law, Chapman, two other bounty hunters and two journalists were arrested in June of 2003 on charges of being in Mexico illegally.
Chapman has since returned to the U.S. after posting bail.
Mexico has requested extradition for Chapman to face charges of illegal detention and conspiracy in the apprehension of Luster.
Chapman claims to have captured more than 6,000 fugitives. He was born and raised in Denver. He and his wife own a bail bond business in Honolulu and another in Colorado, and regularly return to Denver.
29 members of Congress ask Rice to keep bounty hunter in U.S.
The Associated PressWEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 11, 2006-->
Published: October 10, 2006
HONOLULU A Colorado congressman announced Tuesday that he and 28 other members of Congress have sent a letter to Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice asking her to deny the extradition of Duane "Dog" Chapman to Mexico.
Chapman, who is the star of the popular Hawaii-based A&E show "Dog The Bounty Hunter," was arrested last month along with two of his co-stars for illegal detention and conspiracy in his capture of fugitive convicted rapist Andrew Luster, the Max Factor heir, on June 18, 2003, in Puerto Vallarta, Mexico.
Chapman was released on $300,000 (€239,270) bail the next day. He must attend extradition hearings to face trial in Mexico, where bounty hunting is considered a crime.
Luster is now serving a 124-year prison term.
"It seems that Mexican authorities are pressing this case only because they are so stung by the embarrassment of failing where Mr. Chapman succeeded," the Republican congressman said in a statement.
All of the signers of the letter listed by Congressman Tom Tancredo are also Republican.
Sunday, October 08, 2006
Prosecutor says Chapman has NO CONSTITUTIONAL RIGHTS
Note: Please pay close attention to the comments by the US Prosecutor. This may be historic. When has the US Government ever made the argument that a US Citizen no longer has the protections and rights granted by the US Constitution???9/15/2006BRUCE ASATO The Honolulu Advertiser LUCY PEMONI Associated Press Chapman, son Leland, and Tim Chapman (no relation) were arrested by U.S. Marshals yesterday on charges of illegal detention and conspiracy stemming from their 2003 capture of Max Factor heir and convicted rapist Andrew Luster in Puerto Vallarta, Mexico. Under Mexican law, it is illegal for someone who has not been authorized by the government to arrest another person. "They want to extradite (Duane Chapman)," said Brook Hart, the Chapmans' attorney. "We have an extradition treaty with Mexico and people get extradited all the time. But usually they're extraditing serious criminals, not someone who assisted in the arresting of a serious criminal. "It's an unusual case." At an arraignment hearing yesterday afternoon, Assistant U.S. Attorney Ronald Johnson argued that the defendants should remain in custody until their extradition hearing, which has yet to be scheduled, explaining that since this is an international case, "there is no constitutional right to bail. There is a presumption against bail." Hart countered that Duane Chapman's high profile and ties to the community constituted special circumstances under which bail could be considered under the law. "Duane is an internationally known figure, has lived in Hawai'i since 1989, and is assured to show up (for his hearing) and will check in every day, or several times a day," Hart said. "All he wants is to go home and take care of his family and continue doing three shows a week for A&E." U.S. Magistrate Judge Barry Kurren said he was inclined to grant the Chapmans' release on bail. "The Chapmans have known about this for a long time. They have strong ties here given their notoriety, and they have a financial stake here," he said. "They are very unlikely to risk all of that by fleeing." Still, the final decision was postponed for a hearing this afternoon so that a financial report needed to determine bail could be prepared by the defense and reviewed by Kurren and the prosecution. Today's hearing is scheduled for 3 p.m. Duane Chapman and his fellow defendants remained silent throughout the proceedings, although Chapman did offer a "shaka" sign to supporters in the packed courtroom and once gestured to his wife, Beth, to remain silent after she addressed the court directly during a debate over when Chapman's financial information could be compiled. Hart said he and the Chapmans had not yet decided whether to fight extradition. Beth Chapman, who arrived at the hearing flanked by family and a "Dog the Bounty Hunter" film crew, met with reporters after the hearing and thanked the public for its support of the family. "If we did something wrong, then we will stand there for it," she said. "And if Duane has to return to Mexico to clear up any misunderstanding, then that's what we will do." Luster had eluded capture for more than five months when Chapman tracked him to Puerto Vallarta and apprehended him. The streetside confrontation was reported to local police, who later arrested the Chapmans and their camera crew on kidnapping charges. The Chapmans were released on bail, but failed to show up at a scheduled hearing on July 15, 2003. A U.S. warrant for the Chapmans' arrest was signed by a federal judge in Honolulu on Wednesday. Marshals executed the warrant early yesterday, arresting Duane Chapman and Tim Chapman at their Hawai'i Kai residence, and Leland Chapman at his home on Wilhelmina Rise. Lucas Platt, who produces "Dog the Bounty Hunter," said the latest events shouldn't affect the show, which has been a ratings pillar for A&E since its debut in 2004. "It probably won't have much impact at all," Platt said. "I believe he's innocent, and if there's been some misunderstanding going on here, they'll take care of it and it'll be resolved and we'll continue on." Platt said the arrest and possible extradition likely would not keep the show from returning for a fourth season. "I can't speak for the network since I don't work for the network, but I can say that they were aware that Duane and his crew had gone to Mexico to bring back Andrew Luster before they originally picked up the show," he said. "I'm sure they will support him through this." Today was to have been the last day of the current shooting block for next season, but it is likely that production will continue — as it did yesterday when camera and sound technicians followed the family throughout the day — as long as the case drags on. It's been a tumultuous last few months for Chapman. On May 19, a day before Chapman wed his longtime companion Beth, Chapman's 23-year-old daughter from a previous marriage, Barbara, was killed in a car accident in Fairbanks, Alaska. In August, a San Francisco man, Simaile Lutu, filed suit seeking damages from Chapman, his bond company, and San Francisco police claiming that Chapman and his crew mistakenly apprehended him while going after a bail jumper, and that the incident resulted in two other mistaken-identity confrontations with police.
Monday, October 02, 2006
Want 2 REALLY make an impression with ur letters of support?
Awesome Article w/ Details of Luster bust!!!!
And thank Dog for that.
Friday, September 29, 2006
Dog' Chapman released from ankle bracelet Associated Press HONOLULU
Thursday, September 28, 2006
Dog Appearing at the Atlantic City
DC Protest Not Good :(
Date: Sep 28, 2006 2:11 PM
the protest in washington, started by a myspace member was not a success... only 25 people there! don't give up hope, if anyone wants to start another one, make sure that you get loads of promotions from tv companies, and from radio shows etc. but keep promoting www.petitiononline.com/jiles45/petition.html it needs loads of publicity!!!
Celebrity with local ties faces jail in Mexico
BY ROYCE ARMSTRONG
LUCEDALE -- An A&E TV celebrity with ties to the Gulf Coast may be facing four years in a Mexican prison.
Timothy Charles Chapman, 41, was arrested on Sept. 14 at his home in Hawaii and charged with illegal detention, according to his mother, Dianne Carpenter, of Lucedale. Arrested with Chapman were Duane "Dog" Chapman and Leland Chapman, his co-stars in A&E's reality TV program "Dog the Bounty Hunter".
"I am concerned about my son spending time in a Mexican prison," Carpenter said during a phone interview Tuesday from Hawaii. "It is not like in this country. There is no such thing as protective custody or solitary confinement. There are no cells. Everyone is put into what is basically a big pen with high walls around it. Each prisoner makes his own place in whatever corner he can find. There are payoffs for safety and even then safety cannot be assured."
Duane "Dog" Chapman is the central figure of the program. Duane Chapman's son, Leland, co-stars along with Timothy Chapman. Although sharing the same name, Timothy Chapman is not related to Duane and Leland.
Timothy Chapman is a third generation bail bondsman and bounty hunter. His maternal grandparents were in the bonding business. Later, his mother began arranging bonds in Colorado. Tim learned from her and began arranging bonds when he was 13, she said.
"He made his first capture when he was 15," Carpenter said. "We were driving down the street and we noticed a fugitive who had skipped out on his bail. Before I could stop the car Tim had already jumped out with a pair of handcuffs, had him down on the sidewalk and had the cuffs on him.'"
Timothy Chapman has been in the bonding and bounty hunting business ever since. He currently owns and operates Island Bail Bonds in Hawaii. Duane "Dog" Chapman and his son operate Da Kine Bail Bonds.
The trio was catapulted to fame after their June 18, 2003, capture of Max Factor heir, Andrew Luster, in Puerto Vallarta, Mexico. Luster was convicted on three counts of rape in absentia after skipping out on his $1 million bond. The Chapman's, who had worked together for more than two decades, captured him.
"They caught him when federal authorities couldn't find him," Carpenter. "They (the FBI) were embarrassed.
"It is all about money," Carpenter said. "They (Chapman and his partners) did everything right. They notified the authorities and paid a Mexican police officer to go with them when they made the capture. It was that same police officer that participated in the road block that stopped them on their way to the airport. He then claimed he didn't know anything about it."
The Mexican authorities then seized Luster and arrested the three bounty hunters. The Mexican police turned Luster over to U.S. authorities.
A search of Luster's room after the arrest turned up plans for payback against many of the participants in his trial. Luster is serving a 124-year prison term.
Carpenter wonders why, 38 months later, the Mexican government has decided to pursue this case when the charges will expire at the end of October.
The arrest order, issued Sept. 13, lists the charges as illegal detention of Andrew Luster and conspiracy.
Duane Chapman has said that he believes a deal has been reached between the U.S. and Mexican governments to trade him and his partners for Mexican drug dealers wanted by U.S. authorities.
"I cannot say if I believe that or not," Carpenter said. "I think this case is too visible. Fans are flooding Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice's office with complaints about this case. I understand a demonstration to be held in Washington, D.C., is being planned."
The Associated Press reported Sept. 22 that Duane Chapman offered to apologize, pay a fine, forfeit the $1,300 bail he paid in Mexico and make a charitable contribution in order to avoid extradition.
Carpenter said her parents retired and moved to Biloxi. She moved to Mississippi after her husband passed away in 1998.
"I worked for a local bonding company," Carpenter said. "This business gets into your blood. I started A Sunshine Bail Bonds in Pascagoula in 2003. Tim's older brother, Russell, came to Mississippi to help me. He had been part of the team in Hawaii, but he decided to stay in Mississippi.
Carpenter is currently in Hawaii providing moral support for her son and helping him sort through this legal mess.
"This really makes me appreciate our own legal system," she said. "In the U.S. everyone is entitled to bond while you wait for trial unless you have committed a capital crime. The law here assumes innocence until proven guilty. That is not so in Mexico. There you are assumed to be guilty unless you can prove you are innocent. If they are extradited, they may not be able to get out on bond before the trial.
Reporter Royce Armstrong can be reached at rarmstrong@themississippipress.com or (601) 766-9624
Wednesday, September 27, 2006
Tom Tancredo to Fans: Write Congress to Help Dog the Bounty Hunter
Tom Tancredo to Fans: Write Congress to Help Dog the Bounty Hunter
By Jon ShanksSep 27, 2006
US Congressman from Colorado Tom Tancredo made a tough statement when Duane Chapman was arrested to try and assist the popular reality TV star Dog the Bounty Hunter.
Write Congress to Help Dog the Bounty Hunter
Now the Congressman is asking for fans help. Tancredo appeared with Rita Crosby on Tuesday's show and pleaded with fans of Chapman to write their representatives to get the Dog unleashed from his legal troubles.
***
Right now, Chapman is facing extradition back to Mexico for a 2003 incident. Rita Crosby gives a synopsis of the interview on her blog.
She writes:
"Today, he told me he’s written a letter to the Attorney General asking who “was in charge of prioritizing assignments. Is it this administration-or the one in Mexico City?”
He spoke to Dog on the phone in the last few days and believes, as many Americans do, that this man is a hero for getting a convicted rapist off the streets. The Congressman believes that justice officials on both sides of the border have their priorities out of whack to be focusing on bringing Dog back to Mexico when they have so many more severe problems at hand. He also wondered if it’s more than coincidence that Dog and two of his other team members get hauled in by U.S. Marshals only days before a major drug lord from Mexico gets brought back to the United States."
Continuing from Rita:
"The Congressman, known for fighting for what he believes in, is really trying to do what he can to keep Dog on U.S. soil and free from any further legal actions stemming from the Andrew Luster case. He’s also written a letter to Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and asked the public watching our show to log on to his web site to read the letters and reach out to their congressmen and get them to sign onto his letters so that his message can gain momentum."
***
Kudos to both Tancredo and Crosby for keeping this ridiculous situation in the public eye. Fans of the Dog should follow the advice and contact their representatives in Congress and demand that they sing on with Tancredo and keep the US Bounty Hunter on US soil.
See the video here.
--Jon Shanks writes from Tempe
Tom Tancredo, congressman, CO.
http://tancredo.house.gov/
Washington, DC--U.S. Rep. Tom Tancredo (R-Littleton) U.S. Rep. Tom Tancredo was on Rita Crosby this afternoon to discuss the arrest of Duane “Dog” Chapman
Click here for the interview with Rita Crosby
Click here for the letter to the Department of Justice.
Click here for the letter to the Department of State.
Celebrity with local ties faces jail in Mexico
BY ROYCE ARMSTRONG
LUCEDALE -- An A&E TV celebrity with ties to the Gulf Coast may be facing four years in a Mexican prison.
Timothy Charles Chapman, 41, was arrested on Sept. 14 at his home in Hawaii and charged with illegal detention, according to his mother, Dianne Carpenter, of Lucedale. Arrested with Chapman were Duane "Dog" Chapman and Leland Chapman, his co-stars in A&E's reality TV program "Dog the Bounty Hunter".
"I am concerned about my son spending time in a Mexican prison," Carpenter said during a phone interview Tuesday from Hawaii. "It is not like in this country. There is no such thing as protective custody or solitary confinement. There are no cells. Everyone is put into what is basically a big pen with high walls around it. Each prisoner makes his own place in whatever corner he can find. There are payoffs for safety and even then safety cannot be assured."
Duane "Dog" Chapman is the central figure of the program. Duane Chapman's son, Leland, co-stars along with Timothy Chapman. Although sharing the same name, Timothy Chapman is not related to Duane and Leland.
Timothy Chapman is a third generation bail bondsman and bounty hunter. His maternal grandparents were in the bonding business. Later, his mother began arranging bonds in Colorado. Tim learned from her and began arranging bonds when he was 13, she said.
"He made his first capture when he was 15," Carpenter said. "We were driving down the street and we noticed a fugitive who had skipped out on his bail. Before I could stop the car Tim had already jumped out with a pair of handcuffs, had him down on the sidewalk and had the cuffs on him.'"
Timothy Chapman has been in the bonding and bounty hunting business ever since. He currently owns and operates Island Bail Bonds in Hawaii. Duane "Dog" Chapman and his son operate Da Kine Bail Bonds.
The trio was catapulted to fame after their June 18, 2003, capture of Max Factor heir, Andrew Luster, in Puerto Vallarta, Mexico. Luster was convicted on three counts of rape in absentia after skipping out on his $1 million bond. The Chapman's, who had worked together for more than two decades, captured him.
"They caught him when federal authorities couldn't find him," Carpenter. "They (the FBI) were embarrassed.
"It is all about money," Carpenter said. "They (Chapman and his partners) did everything right. They notified the authorities and paid a Mexican police officer to go with them when they made the capture. It was that same police officer that participated in the road block that stopped them on their way to the airport. He then claimed he didn't know anything about it."
The Mexican authorities then seized Luster and arrested the three bounty hunters. The Mexican police turned Luster over to U.S. authorities.
A search of Luster's room after the arrest turned up plans for payback against many of the participants in his trial. Luster is serving a 124-year prison term.
Carpenter wonders why, 38 months later, the Mexican government has decided to pursue this case when the charges will expire at the end of October.
The arrest order, issued Sept. 13, lists the charges as illegal detention of Andrew Luster and conspiracy.
Duane Chapman has said that he believes a deal has been reached between the U.S. and Mexican governments to trade him and his partners for Mexican drug dealers wanted by U.S. authorities.
"I cannot say if I believe that or not," Carpenter said. "I think this case is too visible. Fans are flooding Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice's office with complaints about this case. I understand a demonstration to be held in Washington, D.C., is being planned."
The Associated Press reported Sept. 22 that Duane Chapman offered to apologize, pay a fine, forfeit the $1,300 bail he paid in Mexico and make a charitable contribution in order to avoid extradition.
Carpenter said her parents retired and moved to Biloxi. She moved to Mississippi after her husband passed away in 1998.
"I worked for a local bonding company," Carpenter said. "This business gets into your blood. I started A Sunshine Bail Bonds in Pascagoula in 2003. Tim's older brother, Russell, came to Mississippi to help me. He had been part of the team in Hawaii, but he decided to stay in Mississippi.
Carpenter is currently in Hawaii providing moral support for her son and helping him sort through this legal mess.
"This really makes me appreciate our own legal system," she said. "In the U.S. everyone is entitled to bond while you wait for trial unless you have committed a capital crime. The law here assumes innocence until proven guilty. That is not so in Mexico. There you are assumed to be guilty unless you can prove you are innocent. If they are extradited, they may not be able to get out on bond before the trial.
Reporter Royce Armstrong can be reached at rarmstrong@themississippipress.com or (601) 766-9624.