Incident: Possession of CDS with the Intent to Distribute / Resisting Arrest
Date of Incident: 24 November 2010
Location: 1600 block of Waconia Drive, Salisbury, MD
Suspect: Terrance D. Hayman, 40, Salisbury, MD
Date of Incident: 24 November 2010
Location: 1600 block of Waconia Drive, Salisbury, MD
Suspect: Terrance D. Hayman, 40, Salisbury, MD
Narrative: On 24 November 2010 at 4:06 PM, a deputy from the Wicomico County Sheriff’s Office attempted to stop a Toyota Camry with New Jersey registration for speeding on West Road. Instead of stopping, the operator sped away from the deputy and turned into a residential community off of West Road, onto Waconia Drive. The deputy observed that the Toyota Camry drove into a drive way and headed around the rear of one of the residences at which point the three occupants all exited the vehicle and began running away on foot. The deputy managed to catch one of the suspects, Terrance Hayman. While the deputy had been chasing Hayman, the deputy observed what he thought was Hayman attempting to ingest CDS in an effort to hide it from the deputy. Upon attempting to take Hayman into custody, he actively resisted arrest, requiring a physical struggle with the deputy who eventually managed to subdue him.
The deputy recovered a baggie dropped by Hayman that still had obvious Cocaine reside in it.
Also found in the car Hayman ran from were additional baggies of what was recognized as Cocaine, in an amount and manner of packaging indicative of distribution.
Hayman was transported to the Central Booking Unit where he was processed and taken in front of the District Court Commissioner. After an initial appearance, the Commissioner detained Hayman on $100,000.00 bond.
Charges: Possession of CDS with the Intent to Distribute
Resisting Arrest
Charges: Possession of CDS with the Intent to Distribute
Resisting Arrest
1 comment:
After they ditch their baggies in view of the officer, how come they never get cited for littering? That's $100 or $1000 the police budget could use and littering charges are rarely contested.
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