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Felon accused in the city center cuts the ankle monitoring a few days after release on Bond

Felon accused in the city center cuts the ankle monitoring a few days after release on Bond

San Antonio – a man with a long criminal historian arrested under the suspicion that he shot a stolen gun during a fight outside a bar in the center of the city earlier this month is now sought by law enforcement after cutting the ankle monitor. Shortly after leaving prison, confirmed sources.

Joseph Reynaldo Olivarri, 38, was arrested in the first hours of February 16, on the charge of illegally transporting a firearm with a conviction to the crime, together with the unloading of a firearm to a municipality. According to a police report, the officers were responding to the reports of a fight outside a bar in the 800 block of North Alamo Street, when the officers started receiving reports on a shot in the same area.

Witnesses identified Olivarri to Security and Police on the spot as a shooter, according to the report. The officer wrote in his report that Olivarri tried to move away from the scene, but was detained by a security guard. The officers located a firearm in the side floor of the passenger of a black Nissan Altima Olivarri had been seen inside and noted in the report, the shell carcasals spent nearby were matching the recovered weapon caliber. Police reports said a firearm was reported stolen in a burglary of the vehicle on January 18th.

Videos made by Jacob Vasquez He shows him the street fight and when the firearms broke out. A large crowd is seen dispersing quickly, while shooting sounds in rapid succession.

The records show that Olivarri was issued from prison on February 17, after registering bonds totaling $ 70,000; The issuing conditions included GPS monitoring and complete arrest at home. On February 19, Olivarri cut the ankle monitor and was subsequently issued a mandate for his arrest. Olivarri, who claim that sources have links with the Mexican mafia, remains sought by law enforcement in this publication.

While the District of Bexar County District, Joe Gonzales, does not establish bonds for criminal defendants and recommends only amounts of bonds, in this case, Gonzales said that the judge magistrate who established the Olivarri obligation followed the recommendation of his position.

“The responsibility to establish these bonds falls on the judge magistrate,” Gonzales said. “They don’t have a crystal ball either, right? You have to make the decisions they make based on the information they have in front of them and I will tell you that, for the most part, mostly the magistrate judges follow our recommendations regarding these violent offenses. “

Olivarri has an arrest history that extends over at least two decades in Bexar County, the recordings show. Prior to the latest incidents, Olivarri was arrested for an accusation of murder that was later rejected by Gonzales’s office for further investigations. Gonzales refused to elaborate the details of this investigation, only noting that it remains in progress. However, he shared the intention of his office to continue to follow the case.

Despite the historian of extended arrest and condemnation of Olivarri, together with his alleged tape affiliation, the amounts of bonds established in relation to his latest cases were a strong contrast to those established in high profile cases with a defendants with a Small criminal history or without any historian, such as Myrta Romanos and Ramon Preaco. Preciado and his wife, Romanos, were assumed to help their son Christopher Preacoo, after fadly shot the expected parents Savannah Soto and Matthew Guerra during a drug transaction, according to judicial documents. Ramon Preciado was issued on Friday after registering bonds totaling $ 450,000, while Romanos remains closed on bonds totaling $ 600,000.

“The law states that everyone, with few exceptions – if you are accused of a capital crime – you have the right to consider for a connection,” Gonzales said. “And this is exactly what happens and so it’s time to look at it.”

Gonzales said he supports two draft laws for the reform of the bodies submitted by Senator Joan Huffman in Harris county – one of them increases the number of offenses in which one judge has the ability to withdraw someone without bonds, and the other requires district judges to establish bonds to establish bonds for violent offenses.

“This is a way we can do something about the current state of the law,” Gonzales said.

If and when Olivarri is re-arrested, Gonzales said that a judge ordered to be detained without bail.

Asked for his message to those who feel that Olivarri should not have been from prison, Gonzales replied: “Unfortunately, the state of the law is that even someone has the right to be taken into account for a connection.

“Even someone like him has the right to go before a judge and to ask for a connection and that is exactly what happened here. Unless the law does not change, we must operate within the law.”