logo
Violent courthouse brawl with fleeing defendant lands 3 SoCal sheriff's deputies in hospital

Violent courthouse brawl with fleeing defendant lands 3 SoCal sheriff's deputies in hospital

Yahoo01-04-2025

A Riverside County man, charged with multiple felony counts of domestic violence, was at the center of a courthouse brawl that culminated in three sheriff's deputies being sent to the emergency room, according to authorities.
Ryan James Chalfant, 31, attempted to flee the Riverside County Hall of Justice after refusing to be handcuffed during his arraignment hearing Friday, Riverside County sheriff's officials said.
Chalfant was facing charges of two counts of corporal injury to a spouse or cohabitant with a prior conviction in the past seven years, one count of making criminal threats and one count of false imprisonment — all felonies, according to Riverside County Superior Court records.
A court deputy followed him out of the courtroom, where two additional deputies saw him and joined the pursuit, said department spokesperson Sgt. Wenndy Brito-Gonzalez. All three deputies wound up with minor injuries while attempting to apprehend Chalfant and were transported to a local hospital, she said.
The Sheriff's Office will seek additional charges against Chalfant as a result of the incident, she said.
He was rearrested Friday afternoon and booked on multiple new charges, according to the county inmate log. They include committing a felony while on bail, resisting a peace officer causing serious bodily injury, battery on a peace officer, escaping custody using force and violating probation.
Read more: Kim Delaney, 'General Hospital' and 'NYPD Blue' actor, arrested on suspicion of a felony
Chalfant was not injured during the brawl but was transported to the hospital for a medical evaluation per the department's standard protocol, said Brito-Gonzalez.
He was initially arrested on Valentine's Day following a domestic violence call and posted $50,000 bail the following day, according to the county's inmate log. During his arraignment hearing on Friday, a judge set his bail at $1 million and ordered him to be arrested.
He is now scheduled to be arraigned, again, on Tuesday, according to court records.
He has prior convictions for domestic violence and was on parole and probation at the time of his arrest in February, according to court records. In 2022, Chalfant was convicted of two felony counts of corporal injury to a spouse or cohabitant, two felony counts of making criminal threats and one misdemeanor count of attempting to escape from an officer, according to court records.
Sign up for Essential California for news, features and recommendations from the L.A. Times and beyond in your inbox six days a week.
This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Counterfeit Xanax, firearms seized during search of Bay Area home
Counterfeit Xanax, firearms seized during search of Bay Area home

San Francisco Chronicle​

time2 days ago

  • San Francisco Chronicle​

Counterfeit Xanax, firearms seized during search of Bay Area home

A Vallejo man was arrested after deputies seized a large quantity of counterfeit Xanax pills and firearms during a search of his home, according to the Solano County Sheriff's Office. Ricardo Caro, 32, was booked into Solano County Jail after deputies executing a search warrant Friday morning discovered the counterfeit prescription pills and illegal firearms, the sheriff's office said.

Should irresponsible hikers be forced to pay for their rescue? This sheriff says yes
Should irresponsible hikers be forced to pay for their rescue? This sheriff says yes

Los Angeles Times

time3 days ago

  • Los Angeles Times

Should irresponsible hikers be forced to pay for their rescue? This sheriff says yes

The number of rescues in the wilderness areas around Mt. St. Helens keep going up — and the actions of some of those before they call for help have drawn criticism as reckless. One man, 21, kayaked over a waterfall, suffering a spinal injury. A 54-year-old woman glissaded down Mt. St. Helens — sliding down a snow-covered slope — and suffered a head injury when she struck a rock. Each of those rescues in May, in a remote, mountainous county, required six-hour efforts. And one West Coast sheriff is now pondering sending the most egregious victims a bill. The idea would involve a new county ordinance where a person could be cited 'if they are found to be reckless or negligent in their actions where search and rescue is requested to respond,' according to the Sheriff's Office in Skamania County, the remote, sparsely populated county in Washington that is home to Mt. St. Helens. 'I need to find a creative way to deter the current behavior we are witnessing while attempting to recoup the financial burden placed on our county,' Sheriff Summer Scheyer said in a statement. 'This ordinance is still in the planning phase, but I believe it would be an added deterrent for those who take exceptional risks.' The number of search-and-rescue missions soared in May in Skamania County compared to the same month last year, the Sheriff's Office said, with a number of missions taking four to nine hours to complete the rescue. Skamania County isn't alone. In southern Utah, the Garfield County Sheriff's Office on Tuesday announced it was requiring permits for some of the most remote and challenging slot canyons, noting 'a significant increase in search and rescue operations.' Nationwide, the number of national park search-and-rescue operations is in the thousands — 3,308 in 2023 — which can entail anything from a child who is separated from their parents to a hiker who is lost in the backcountry. The idea of forcing irresponsible hikers to pay for their rescue has come up before. In New Hampshire, the state says people may be required to pay back the costs to rescue them. One way to avoid such charges is buying 'Hike Safe Cards' — $25 per person and $35 per family — that supports the state's search-and-rescue efforts. One recent rescue that gained attention involved a pair of hikers who had to be rescued after they hiked despite a forecast of rain, sleet and snow in the middle of January, went off a marked trail and feared they were hypothermic. Rescuers had to break a trail — for three-quarters of a mile in steep terrain — to get to the hikers. 'The pair were found to be inadequately prepared for the conditions that were forecasted,' the Fish and Game Department said in a news release, and neither had Hike Safe Cards. In 2013 in California, a massive search-and-rescue operation was launched in Orange County for two hikers, Nicolas Cendoya, 19, and Kyndall Jack, 18. They called for help after going on an Easter Sunday hike in Trabuco Canyon and became lost. The cellphone they used to make the call stopped working before authorities could identify their location. Cendoya was found three days later, shoeless and disoriented half a mile from their car, and Jack, the day after, in shoulder-high brush. After authorities found methamphetamine in the vehicle, which the pair had parked before the hike, some government officials called for the $160,000 rescue bill to be paid back. Cendoya pleaded guilty to one felony count of drug possession but was eligible for a drug-diversion program, which if completed successfully would mean he could have the case against him dismissed. Court records indicated the case was dismissed in 2015. A judge, however, denied the Orange County Fire Authority's request that the agency get back the $55,000 it spent on the search for the pair, saying the fire agency was not a victim of a crime and couldn't seek restitution. In response, California lawmakers changed the law to allow government officials to seek reimbursement for future rescues, with certain conditions. Signed into law in 2015, the law allows a county or city to seek reimbursement for the costs of a rescue if it required 'the use of extraordinary methods,' and 'was caused by an intentional act in knowing violation' of any law 'that resulted in a criminal conviction of that person for that act.' But a county can't collect if the person rescued can't afford to pay. The county also can't collect more than $12,000 unless the person rescued was convicted of a felony. Although Orange County did not recoup its costs, the hikers did face other legal action to hold them financially accountable. Jack was sued by a volunteer rescuer who was injured during the search, falling more than 100 feet, according to the rescuer's attorneys. The volunteer, who accused Jack of negligently putting rescuers in danger, received $100,000 as part of a legal settlement, paid from a homeowner's insurance policy held by Jack's mother. The rescuer's attorney said Cendoya also settled with the rescuer for an undisclosed amount of money. Some search-and-rescue organizations don't support the idea of charging people needing rescue. 'No one should ever be made to feel they must delay in notifying the proper authorities of a search or rescue incident out of fear of possible charges,' the Mountain Rescue Assn. says. In a position paper in 2009, the association said that most services that rescue people in the mountains in the U.S. 'are provided by teams of unpaid professional rescue mountaineers who give up their own time to participate in search and rescue activities.' 'The typical search and rescue mission is over within a matter of a few hours, and with the vast majority of the work performed by unpaid professional volunteers, the costs are generally very low,' Charley Shimanski, then the president of the Mountain Rescue Assn., said in a statement. 'It's true that teams are sometimes over-taxed, and that newcomers to the backcountry call 911 in questionable circumstances,' the Colorado Search and Rescue Assn. said. 'Yet we still don't believe charging for services is the answer. We know from experience that when people think they're going to be charged, they often delay calling, or even intentionally evade, rescuers.' Times staff writer Alex Wigglesworth contributed to this report.

Man sentenced to 20 years in toddler's slaying that was streamed on Facebook Live
Man sentenced to 20 years in toddler's slaying that was streamed on Facebook Live

Chicago Tribune

time4 days ago

  • Chicago Tribune

Man sentenced to 20 years in toddler's slaying that was streamed on Facebook Live

A judge on Wednesday sentenced a man to 20 years in prison in an attack that killed a 2-year-old boy and his uncle on Valentine's Day in 2017 after he testified against an accomplice at a jury trial last month. Devon Swan, 34, pleaded guilty in October of 2023 to conspiracy to commit murder, but he has already served nearly all of his sentence, which was ordered to be at 50% with credit for time served while awaiting trial. 'At trial, you testified candidly,' Cook County Judge Thomas Byrne said. 'You didn't avoid any of the answers.' More than eight years ago, Lavontay White Jr., 2, was strapped in a child safety seat when he was shot and killed along with his uncle, Lazarec Collins, 26, by a group that was aiming for Collins, according to prosecutors. The attackers ambushed him while he was in a car in a West Side alley because the killers believed he was involved in the slaying of a brother of one of the suspects, according to court records. His 20-year-old pregnant girlfriend was injured. Swan's sentencing came after a jury earlier this month found his co-defendant, Doniel Harris, 27, guilty of murder and attempted murder. A third defendant, Jeremy Ellis, 27, in March pleaded guilty to murder and was sentenced to 50 years in prison. Though the plea agreement with the state called for 20 years, Swan's attorney, Dena Singer, asked the judge to mete out a punishment of 18 years, arguing that her client 'has gone above and beyond what the state's attorney asked.' Singer said that Swan met with prosecutors multiple times and even let the state know about a conversation that happened within the Cook County Jail that helped their case. Singer also told the judge that Swan earned additional credits for pursuing work and educational opportunities. Byrne, though, declined to shave off additional years and ordered the sentence laid out in the plea agreement. 'Frankly, that's what you are expected to do as part of the agreement,' Byrne said. The shooting was captured on Facebook Live as Collins' girlfriend streamed video of the three riding in a car shortly before 1:30 p.m. near the woman's home at Ogden and Kostner avenues in the Lawndale neighborhood. Harris drove up to the victims' car, and he and one of the people in the back seat opened fire, prosecutors said. The pregnant woman, who was driving, exited her vehicle and ran to a residence. The gunmen continued to shoot multiple times at Collins and his nephew, prosecutors said. Collins suffered five wounds to the abdomen, back and legs. Lavontay was shot in the back of his head, and the bullet traveled through his cheek, prosecutors said.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store