Brecksville Bomb Plot Suspects' Police Records Show a Trail of Crime
At least three of the men are not strangers to law enforcement agencies in Northeast Ohio.
Several of the men arrested in connection with the suspected plot to blow up a Brecksville bridge have faced criminal charges before, including one juvenile charge of aggravated attempted murder.
Douglas L. Wright, 26, Brandon L. Baxter, 20, Anthony Hayne, 35, Connor C. Stevens, 20, and Joshua S. Stafford, 23, are each charged with one count of conspiracy and one count of attempted use of an explosive, said Mike Tobin, public affairs specialist for the U.S. Department of Justice, Northern District of Ohio.
Charges against Wright, Baxter and Hayne were made Monday. Charges weren’t made against Stevens and Stafford until Tuesday. None entered pleas Tuesday afternoon.
For at least three of the men, their arrests in the suspected bomb plot is not their first run-in with law enforcement, according to Cuyahoga County arrest records obtained by Patch:
Brandon Baxter
The former Lakewood resident and Lakewood High School student was arrested a few times as a juvenile — including a September 2009 incident when he was arrested for stabbing a family member with a knife. Lakewood police charged him with aggravated attempted murder, but the outcome of the case is not available as juvenile court records are sealed. As an adult, Baxter — whom acquaintances told Patch was intelligent, quiet and strange — was charged with criminal trespassing in 2010, stemming from an incident at Lakewood Park.
Anthony Hayne
With a criminal history that stretches back to theft charges in Strongsville in 2000, Hayne has faced with nearly two-dozen charges by several of Northeast Ohio law enforcement agencies — including a few in Lakewood. His record is littered with charges of theft, drugs and receiving stolen property. Hayne was most recently found guilty of breaking and entering into a Detroit Avenue deli in November 2011. In that case, he was sentenced in Cuyahoga County Common Pleas Court to probation.
Joshua Stafford
With a listed address of Lorain Avenue in Cleveland — and arrested in that city — Stafford has also faced charges in Lakewood. In August 2010, he pleaded guilty in Lakewood Municipal Court to charges of contributing to the delinquency of a minor; giving false information to a police officer; and possession of drug paraphernalia. In Lorain County, he also was charged by the Avon Lake Police on four separate occasions, with charges that include criminal trespassing; theft and receiving stolen property; and attempted breaking and entering.
Neither Stevens nor Wright have any criminal record in Cuyahoga County, according to law enforcement records.
Correction: Hayne's 2011 breaking and entering charge was filed in Lakewood.
dick cahoon
9:56 pm on Tuesday, May 1, 2012
Meth is such a wonderful drug
Mike
5:01 am on Wednesday, May 2, 2012
Druggie revolutionaries. My Sociology profs. from college would have loved these guys.
Adam C. Miller
8:31 am on Wednesday, May 2, 2012
#OccupyPrison
The Chemist
10:52 am on Wednesday, May 2, 2012
You know what is really scary..... a person can be charged with that many crimes and still be free on the streets of America. Amazing..
Myron Holley
9:05 pm on Wednesday, May 2, 2012
AND O MY there so clean cut looking.
Paxton Crenshaw
10:17 pm on Wednesday, May 2, 2012
because clean-cut = innocence!
Myron Holley
9:07 pm on Wednesday, May 2, 2012
Thank god they were dumber than short load of bricks. Other wise could have gone really bad.
Paxton Crenshaw
10:18 pm on Wednesday, May 2, 2012
hey myron, put down the stones, if you know what i mean...
Troy McClure
9:08 pm on Wednesday, May 2, 2012
They don't even look smart enough to light a match!
Myron Holley
7:04 am on Thursday, May 3, 2012
No stones Paxton just greatful.
Jessica
9:06 am on Friday, November 16, 2012
A criminal record in the city of Lakewood means that you have been to the city of Lakewood. They arrest everyone there sooner or later; it's written into the local tax code.
Jessica
9:10 am on Friday, November 16, 2012
One might imagine that the FBI is starting to adopt a similar law enforcement approach.