La Mesa, Los Santos – On Wednesday, March 22, a warrant filed by Trooper Ignazio DiNozzo resulted in a raid that located a large stockpile of illegal items. San Andreas State Police invited Weazel News to their headquarters in La Mesa to share information about the raid and what they found inside the apartment.
Shortly after the press conference, the docket for [2023-CM-079] State of San Andreas v. William Hudson was filed. It detailed Troopers DiNozzo, Solace, and Walker responding to a shots fired call at the Del Perro Heights Building, Room 17. Attempts to make contact with the occupants were unsuccessful and officers entered the apartment under exigent circumstances. Inside the law enforcement officers found three shell casings and four bullet fragments.
Search warrant 2023-WA-152 was filed that night by Trooper DiNozzo to “search the location inside the room where a weapon could be stored.” Judge Kylian Clakson reviewed and signed the warrant. According to the docket, SASP executed the search warrant on the apartment and located the following illegal items in the stash in an office:
Combat Pistol
Combat Pistol
9mm Pistol w/ Suppressor
Endurance Pistol
Double Barrel Shotgun
Double Barrel Shotgun
94x Pistol Suppressors
9x Box of Ammo
Nightstick
Handcuffs
Knuckles
Pump Shotgun
22x Box of Shotgun Ammo
35x Sulfur ( 77lbs )
2x kNo3c
12x Aluminum Oxide ( 26lbs )
2x Blasting Caps
720x Roll of Notes
2x Band of Notes
50x AK-47 Buds
1x 5g Bag of Amnesia
45x 5g Bag of AK-47
1x 5g Bag of White Widow
119x AK-47 Seeds
5x Bottle of Painkillers
ID Card ( Augustus Mcflint )
Drivers License ( Phill Cooper )
Gun License ( Alex Rodney-Lopez)
As a result of the raid, William Hudson was brought up on the following charges:
4x Unlawful Possession of Class 1 Firearm | 40 Months – $550 Fine
3x Unlawful Possession of Class 2 Firearm | 65 Months – $1,800 Fine
2x Possession of Government Property | 30 Months – $75 Fine
95x Possession of Illegal Modifications | 2,375 Months – $23,750 Fine
1x Unlawful Possession of Illegal Weapon | 10 Months – $250 Fine
18x Grand Possession of Counterfeit or Marked Bills | 100 Months – $5,000 Fine
23x Possession of Contraband | 45 Months – $1,150 Fine
1x Class 2 Drug Paraphernalia | 15 Months – $35 Fine
6x Class 1 Drug Possession w/ Intent to Distribute | Months – $3,000 Fine
1x Possession of Explosive / Incendiary Device Components | 45 Months – $3,500 Fine
All of this added up to a total time of 2,785 months and fines of $39,110. The suspect, William Hudson plead Not Guilty to the charges. Judge Corina Wickin was asked to sit in for a pre-trial conference at the request of Judge Kylian Clarkson and decided to dismiss the search warrant, rendering the evidence found during the search inadmissible.
While the warrant and the request for the warrant were both valid and remain to be valid, as both were brought forth in Good Faith and sufficient probable cause existed. I would have written and signed a warrant based on the facts given. There is another issue that was discovered during the pre-trial conference. This error was not the fault of The Honorable Judge Kylian J. Clarkson, but rather an error on the behalf of Law Enforcement. When a warrant, whether arrest or search and seizure; is executed the officer(s) must give a copy of the warrant and a receipt for the property taken to the person from whom, or from whose premises, the property was taken or leave a copy of the warrant and receipt at the place where the officer took the property in a conspicuous area. I want to be clear, this does NOT include the Probably Cause Affidavit, a separate request may be made for this should a trial be necessary. During the conference it was brought to light that Mr. Hudson was not provided a copy, his attorney was not provided a copy, and it was not left at the property. This violates his right to see the warrant and violates procedure. Given that the warrant was dismissed, any evidence that was found during the search would be considered inadmissible.
Corina Wickin – CIRCUIT JUDGE -State of San Andreas – [2023-CM-079] State of San Andreas v. William Hudson
With the search warrant dismissed, Judge Clarkson dismissed the case with prejudice and indicated any legal possessions confiscated in the raid could be returned effective immediately to Mr Hudson.
Weazel News received the following comment from the San Andreas State Police regarding the dismissal of 2023-CM-079:
“At the end of the day we were able to get a multitude of illegal items off the streets. It is our job to keep the citizens of San Andreas safe and that is what we will continue to do.”
Trooper Ignazio DiNozzo – San Andreas State Police
While the case against William Hudson has been dismissed, Trooper DiNozzo is staying positive and remains vigilant in his duty to protect the citizens of San Andreas.
Pingback: Stella’s Scoops Volume 16 – Weazel News – New Day RP
freedom501
May 2, 2023 at 7:07 am
these judges really are corrupt as corrupt can be huh? that would never fly under a competent judge!!
SteelShade
June 19, 2023 at 10:14 pm
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣