Carson City sheriff’s deputies make arrests for warrants, DUI
A 41-year-old Carson City man was arrested on Monday, July 31 at around 1 a.m. for two warrants of domestic battery charges, a residential burglary felony charge and a destruction of property misdemeanor charge.
Gilbert Ortiz was in the passenger seat when the driver of the black sedan ran a red light, turning left and almost striking the front of the officer’s patrol unit that was sitting at the traffic light.
The officer requested for a second unit to assist. Ortiz showed up having two warrants of arrest, one for a domestic battery with a bail of $5000. The second warrant was for residential burglary, domestic battery and destruction of property with a $25,000 bail. Ortiz was asked to exit the vehicle and was arrested by the officer.
The 38-year-old Carson City driver was a woman who the officer reported had red, watery eyes and slurred speech. The officer also smelled a strong odor of alcohol from within the car. The arresting officer conducted two impairment tests on the driver and K-9 dog was also deployed on the car, providing a positive alert on the exterior before the other officer searched the vehicle.
The officer conducting the impairment tests saw multiple fails in the two tests. When the officer conducted the preliminary breath test, the woman blew a .291. She was also arrested, where she and Ortiz were transported to Carson City Jail.
In other arrests:
— A 27-year-old man, Luke Brett was arrested on Friday for two Carson City warrants on violation of a suspended sentence and contempt of court. The bail for those two warrants were $1000 and $500 in cash only. The Carson City man also had two Douglas County warrants, one felony charge listed for obtaining money under false pretenses. Those bails are $1000 and $1500 cash only bails.
All information for the crime log (unless otherwise noted) comes from the arrest reports supplied by the Carson City Sheriff's Office, and is considered by law to be public information. All subjects are innocent until proven guilty in a court of law. The policy of Carson Now is to name anyone who is arrested for a felony offense.