Pubdate: Tue, 16 Dec 2008 Source: Tribune Review (Pittsburgh, PA) Copyright: 2008 Tribune-Review Publishing Co. Contact: http://www.pittsburghlive.com/x/pittsburghtrib/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/460 Author: Mike Seate Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/prison.htm (Incarceration) VIOLENT SUSPECTS PUT BACK ON STREET When Robert Korbe was arrested during a countywide drug sweep on Nov. 19, the list of charges facing the 39-year-old Indiana Township man was impressive. Korbe, after all, is something of a one-man crime wave with a mug that resembles human brick Ben Grimm from the old Fantastic Four comic books. Korbe proved as tough as his looks when he brawled with 10 or so police officers from several departments in the middle of Main Street in Sharpsburg after leading them on a high-speed chase in May. It took several Taser blasts to bring Korbe down that night, Sharpsburg police Chief Leo Rudzki said, but not before he put one of the cops in the hospital with a shoulder injury. "We've arrested him and his brother Billy before, and we're aware there could be a fight with these two," the chief said. Now Korbe faces charges in connection with a drug ring and the raid on his home, an unfortunate scenario in which Korbe's wife has said she fired a shot from an upstairs landing that struck and killed FBI Special Agent Samuel Hicks when he came through the front door. That fatal raid never would have taken place if Korbe had remained in jail after the brawl with the 10 local cops back in May. It seems absurd and very wrong that a criminal with an arrest record dating to 1991 not only could beat a whole room full of cops, but could do so while accidentally dropping 5 ounces of cocaine -- worth about $140,000 on the street -- out of his pants and still get out on bond. Not only was Korbe granted bond, he paid the required $25,000 on the night of his arraignment and hit the streets again hours later, said Mike Manko, spokesman for the Allegheny County District Attorney's Office. That means Korbe was back in action before the cops' black eyes ceased swelling, a disturbing development but perfectly within the letter of the law, Manko said. "It's only in homicide cases where bond is denied. Otherwise, if a person has the money, they have to be let go," Manko said. That may sound crazy to those of us not immersed in the criminal justice system, but everyone I spoke with seemed to agree that payment of cash bail in exchange for freedom is a hallmark of the legal system. "We'd like to use bond as a punishment, but we can't," was how Chief Rudzki put it. Allegheny County District Judge Richard King said it is rare for even violent criminals to be denied bail and, had he arraigned Korbe, he would have issued bond. "This has always been a part of our justice system," he explained. Maybe so, but it stinks to know that however violent a criminal may be, and regardless of how much dope they peddle or how much butt they kick, the right amount of cash can always get them back on the streets. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin