Cases involving three different chases nearing court decision
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(From left to right): Talon Scott Cavanaugh, Ceaser Ramon Rodriguez and Jonathan Hamilton | Courtesy Bannock County Jail and Caribou County Sheriff’s Office
POCATELLO Three men are scheduled to appear in court facing separate charges involving high-speed chases in southeast Idaho.
Jonathan Hamilton will be sentenced in May after reaching a plea agreement. Talon Cavanaugh and Ceaser Rodriguez are each scheduled to appear before juries after registering pleas of not guilty.
Hamilton, 38, was arrested on Jan. 20 following a car chase that began in Soda Springs and ended when his vehicle was disabled just north of McCammon.
Idaho live-in nanny gave METH to 13-year-old in her care, slept in the same bed as her and gave then teen Mike’s Hard Lemonades without telling her they were alcoholic
Wanda May Mansfield, 34, has been charged with injury to a child, as well as possession of a controlled substance, which are both felonies
The live-in nanny allegedly shared a bed with a 13-year-old girl due to bedbugs
She also allegedly smoked weed and possibly meth with the girl and allowed the teenager to drink Mike s Hard Lemonade, thinking it was regular lemonade
Social workers observed a household that was unsafe and filled with pet feces
Live-in nanny accused of injury to a child for allegedly encouraging drug use
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Wanda May Mansfield | Bannock County Jail
POCATELLO A Pocatello woman faces multiple charges after allegedly encouraging a 13-year-old girl to smoke marijuana and possibly methamphetamine.
Wanda May Mansfield, 34, has been charged with injury to a child and possession of a controlled substance, both felonies.
Deputies from the Bannock County Sheriff’s Office received calls from Child Protective Services on April 2, according to an affidavit of probable cause. CPS told the deputies that Mansfield, who also goes by the name Wanda Kimball, was working as a live-in nanny and had allegedly been involved in troubling activities involving a 13-year-old girl in her care.
Prosecutor finds wrongdoing but no criminal action in death of mentally ill Bannock County inmate eastidahonews.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from eastidahonews.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Prosecutor says no criminal charges in jail starvation death
by Rebecca Boone, The Associated Press
Posted Apr 13, 2021 4:55 pm EDT
Last Updated Apr 13, 2021 at 4:58 pm EDT
BOISE, Idaho Idaho jailers watched as a mentally ill man starved to death, according to a newly released investigatory report, but a prosecutor says there isn’t enough evidence to justify criminal charges in the case.
Lance Quick, 40, was a home inspector in the grip of a manic episode when he was taken to the Bannock County Jail for processing on Dec. 8, 2018. Quick, like millions of other Americans, had bipolar disorder a common but serious mental illness that causes periods of depression and periods of manic behaviour that can sometimes turn into psychotic episodes.