Pubdate: Fri, 09 Jan 2004 Source: The Dominion Post (WV) Copyright: 2004 The Dominion Post Contact: http://www.dominionpost.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1426 Author: Jake Stump Note: Photo at http://www.dominionpost.com/a/news/2004/01/09/ab/ Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/pot.htm (Cannabis) Bookmarks: http://www.mapinc.org/topics/goose+creek Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/people/kenneth+walker Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/people/michael+newby 'HIGH-RISK' ACTION IN GREENMONT Armed Traffic Stop Leads To Drug Fugitive's Arrest [ Photo- Morgantown Police Department officers S.E. Carl (above, from left) and J.H. Wells take up positions behind a cruiser so they can cover canine officer C. Lott and his police dog, Yukon. Lott and Yukon prepare to approach a stopped car on Cherry Street suspected to contain a fugitive wanted in Pennsylvania. The man was not in the car, but was captured later in Granville. Morgantown Police detective P.D. Mezzannotte (below, right) interviews one of two men who were in the Jeep that was stopped by MPD units on Cherry Street. One of the men was arrested for marijuana possession.] Morgantown Police aided in the capture of a fugitive Thursday following a "high-risk" traffic stop on Cherry Street. Guns drawn, police surrounded a Jeep in the South Park neighborhood as a canine and officer approached the vehicle. But the man they were looking for, Charles Haralson, 23, of Altoona, Pa., wasn't in the vehicle. He was in the Granville area, where authorities caught up with him, led by information obtained at the stop. In a joint effort between the Mon Valley Drug Task Force, Pa. State Police and the Morgantown Police Department, Haralson was arrested on fugitive-from-justice charges in Pennsylvania and cocaine charges in West Virginia, said Morgantown Police Sgt. M.K. Lantz. Haralson was transported to the North Central Regional Jail and awaited extradition to Pennsylvania Monday night. One of the men in the Jeep, Akiba Dillard, 26, of Morgantown, was arrested for marijuana possession. "Information obtained at the traffic stop led to Mr. Haralson's location in the Granville area," Lantz said. MPD stopped a gray Jeep Cherokee on Cherry Street after Pennsylvania authorities pinpointed Haralson in Morgantown and linked him to the vehicle. "He was thought to have been in the vehicle," Lantz said. "But he wasn't." The Jeep was occupied by two males: Dillard and another man who was not arrested or identified. Both were handcuffed briefly at the scene while the officer and drug dog approached the Jeep, but were then uncuffed. Police sources could not precisely say Thursday night when Dillard was arrested. Dillard's arrest was unrelated to Haralson, Lantz said. Dillard was released on $500 personal recognizance bond. Haralson's cocaine possession charges stem from his arrest Nov. 26, 2003, under a false name he gave police at Morgantown Motel, said a member of the Mon Valley Drug Task Force. Haralson, under the false name, was arraigned at Monongalia County Magistrate Court and later released. He was scheduled to appear under that name in court in February, according to the source. At the time, "John Doe's" fingerprints were sent to an FBI lab, the source said. The source did not want to reveal the alias. After his release, authorities discovered that the fingerprints taken from "John Doe" matched those of Haralson, who was wanted on multiple charges in Bedford County, Pa. Lantz said police had to treat the traffic stop on Cherry Street as "high-risk" because of Haralson's history of violent behavior and the chance that one of the car's occupants may have been armed. "It was done to protect our officers and the neighborhood," Lantz said. The occupants stepped slowly out of the car before a canine and officer approached it. Police, thinking Haralson remained in the vehicle, braced themselves and drew their guns as the canine zeroed in on the car. "The canine officer was in a vulnerable position," Lantz said. "We were there to protect him. It's done for safety, no other reason. Ninety-nine percent of traffic stops are done in a normal manner. With the possibility that an officer or the public may be in danger, we have to do a high-risk stop." The Mon Valley Drug Task Force consists of officers from MPD, Monongalia County Sheriff's Department, Fairmont Police and the Marion County Sheriff's Department. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin