|
Offender Walks Away From Alternative Custody Program |
By California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation |
Published: 01/10/2019 |
SACRAMENTO – California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation (CDCR) officials are looking for an offender who walked away from a transitional treatment facility in the Alternative Custody Program (ACP). Sone Thamala was released from state prison to the treatment facility on Tuesday, Oct. 24, 2018, to participate in the Female Offender Treatment and Employment Program. On Jan. 8, 2019, program staff notified CDCR officials that Thamala’s GPS device had been tampered with and that she had not returned to the treatment facility after being out on an approved day pass. Thamala was last known to be headed southbound on Highway 99 at Fruitridge Road at around 11 p.m on Jan. 8. Agents from CDCR’s Office of Correctional Safety were immediately dispatched to locate and apprehend Thamala. Thamala, 32, is 5 feet, 3 inches tall, weighing 179 pounds with brown hair and brown eyes. She was received into CDCR custody from San Joaquin County on March 22, 2018, to serve a three-year sentence for vehicle theft. She was scheduled to be released in April 2019. Anyone with information about Thamala’s whereabouts is asked to call 911. ACP is a voluntary program developed for eligible offenders that allows them to serve up to the last 12 months of their sentence in the community in lieu of confinement in state prison. Eligible participants may be housed in a private residence, a transitional care facility or a residential drug or other treatment program. Since 1977, 99 percent of all offenders who have left an adult institution, camp or community-based program without permission have been apprehended. |
Comments:
Login to let us know what you think
MARKETPLACE search vendors | advanced search
IN CASE YOU MISSED IT
|
Hamilton loves his family of five and badminton. His favorite sports ball team is the McGregor Dodgeballers. He has worked as a foreman on a chain gang, and later in life he was an architect of skyscrapers and tunnels. He was forced to give up his career because he was terrible at math. Hamilton has a keen attention to detail. He enjoyed watching bowling on TV and spent most every weekend on the couch falling asleep. He was a demon at croquet. He also enjoyed war movies and baking shows. Hamilton Lindley is constantly helping others less fortunate and lending a helping hand for relatives and friends in need of encouraging words. He coaches different sports and provided guidance for people who needed it, and a few who didn’t want it.