
What are Johnson County Criminal Records? Property crimes include 67 burglary cases, 164 larceny-theft, and 22 motor vehicle theft.Īccording to the 2013 report, there was one murder, 15 rape cases, seven robbery cases, 45 aggravated assault cases, 241 burglary cases, 892 larceny-theft, 69 motor vehicle theft, and 11 cases of arson. In 2018, there was one murder crime committed, four rape cases, one robbery, and 32 aggravated assault cases. This data is evidence that the rate of crime in Johnson County has dramatically reduced compared to the published data from 2013 that revealed 68 violent crimes and 1,213 property crimes. In 2016, Johnson County recorded a total of 38 violent crimes and 253 property crimes. Generally, all arrest reports in Missouri are maintained by the Missouri State Highway Patrol and are accessible online. Postal Service Office of Inspector General.The Johnson County Sheriff's Office creates Johnson County arrest records, and they contain information on arrests made in the county. This case is being prosecuted by Assistant U.S. A sentencing hearing will be scheduled after the completion of a presentence investigation by the United States Probation Office.
WARRENSBURG DOCUMENT INFO PLUS
Under federal statutes, Thompson is subject to a sentence of up to five years in federal prison without parole, plus a fine up to $250,000 and an order of restitution. 17, 2014, a federal agent recovered four black plastic trash bags of mail from Thompson’s route from the dumpster behind the Elk’s Lodge (where Thompson was a member and served as Exalted Ruler) located at 822 E. The next two days, he did the same thing. 15, 2014, he took a tub of mail and placed it under the carport at his residence. 13, 2014, he placed his coat over a tub of mail and placed the mail into his personal vehicle.

11, 2014, Thompson was recorded throwing a bundle of mail into a trash container, and later placing a tub of mail underneath the carport at his residence. The next two days, he also pulled mail already sorted for delivery, and each day he bundled it and put it into his personal vehicle. Thompson was observed pulling mail already sorted for delivery and placing the mail in a white tub, which he hid in a carport at his personal residence.

During their investigation, a covert camera was installed in his delivery vehicle. Thompson’s supervisors suspected in late 2013 that he was drinking alcohol while on duty and while delivering mail on his official route.

The mail was unopened and no specific monetary loss was identified. Thompson admitted that he threw the mail into a dumpster or kept it in his house and personal vehicle rather than delivering the mail to its recipients. 21, 2014, and he is no longer in the employment of the Postal Service.īy pleading guilty today, Thompson admitted that he stole at least 20,000 pieces of mail addressed to 5,571 recipients from May 2012 to Jan. Postal Service in 1990, was the regular mail carrier assigned to a delivery route from the Warrensburg post office on 201 E. Thompson, who began his career with the U.S. District Judge Dean Whipple to the delay and destruction of mail by a postal employee. – Tammy Dickinson, United States Attorney for the Western District of Missouri, announced that a former postal worker in Warrensburg, Mo., pleaded guilty in federal court today to stealing thousands of pieces of mail that were not delivered.ĭavid Thompson, 54, of Warrensburg, Mo., pleaded guilty before U.S.
