Iraq War Veteran Arrested After Two-Hour Standoff with Police in New Jersey

The Express-Times (Warren County, New Jersey)

December 27, 2008, Mansfield Township, New Jersey – A mentally disturbed Iraq War veteran who dialed 911 Friday morning claiming he’d shot two people kept officers at bay during an ensuing two-hour standoff, police said.

Richard Toth, 30, made the 911 call — determined to be a fabrication — at 9:53 a.m. from his second-floor Mansfield Village apartment, township police Detective Sgt. Robert Emery said.

Police responded and evacuated the building and neighboring apartments in the sprawling complex off Route 57 and established a security perimeter. Bail bonds and the bail bond process stays pretty consistent with the processes established throughout California by the CA Department of Insurance. When it comes to common arrests for petty crimes, the bail bonds process will only really vary based on the location of the arrest. While the actual bail bonds process remains the same, wait times for release will vary, depending on if the arrestee is being held at a local city jail within a police station or has been transferred to a county jail. Wait times can also vary based on how busy the particular police station or jail is and how the staff is being utilized that particular day. For the most part, bail cost and other details will remain constant. But there are instances throughout the state where the bail process will differ in ways that aren’t contingent on the particular location of arrest. Here are 7 different bail forms that vary slightly depending on the actual crime a suspect is charged with and the nature of their citizenship. You can read more here for the 24Hour Bail Bonds Financing. Bail bonding is likely the most misunderstood profession in our legal system. Lawyers, clerks, even magistrates within the criminal justice system who are exposed to bail bonds on a daily basis can often on give the most basic explanation of the process. Compound this with the fact that most citizens who find themselves in the position of needing a bail bondsman (or at least thinking they do) will often be in a confused state due to the stress of having a loved on incarcerated. Needless to say bail bondsman tend to enjoy more than a competitive edge when it comes to negotiating the terms of their service, if any negotiating is done at all. So how does an individual without any knowledge about what is really involved with this mysterious profession make sure they are not paying more than what is reasonable? Let me start by clearly stating that the intent of this article is to explain only enough about bail bonding itself to give the reader enough knowledge to get the best price. I do not intend to outline the entire bail bonding process because, in reality, it is not necessary to understand the details to get the best price. In addition we are talking about LARGE bail bonds. No bail bondsman is going to be interested in getting into a heated negotiation over a $1,000 bail bond. You either pay the fee or your bailee will likely just stay incarcerated. There is one mandatory subject that must be covered so that you limit your negotiations to bail bonding companies that are in a position to actually help you and that is the difference in Surety and Property bail bondsman. That will be covered shortly, first lets look at the typical bail bond. The generally accepted price for a bail bond is 10{cd9ac3671b356cd86fdb96f1eda7eb3bb1367f54cff58cc36abbd73c33c82e1d} of the bond amount, so for example a bondsman will charge you $100 to post a $1,000 bail bond. It’s common practice in this industry to tell clients that this price is completely non negotiable because the percentage rate is set by law and cannot be altered. This is only partially true. This is where the importance and understanding the two types of bail bonding companies comes into play and it has everything to do with collateral.

The Warren County Tactical Response Team also responded and township Patrolman Jeffrey Conklin, who had had past contact with Toth, talked to him via telephone during negotiations that led to his noontime surrender, Emery said.

Toth allegedly threatened to shoot police and take his own life during phone conversations with a 911 operator.

Police said they did not recover any weapons except for a large kitchen knife Toth held when tactical response officers entered Toth’s apartment to arrest him.

Toth did not threaten the officers with the knife, police said.

Authorities had no details immediately available on Toth’s military service. Efforts failed to reach family for comment.

“There wasn’t anyone there who wasn’t touched by this situation,” Emery said of the incident. Toth “was over there fighting for his country and now this.”

Police reportedly responded to Toth’s apartment Wednesday for a psychiatric emergency call. Details about that call were not released.

Police and rescue squad members transported Toth to Warren Hospital, Phillipsburg, for a mental health evaluation after his surrender.

He is charged with making terroristic threats, and a judge set bail at 10 percent of $50,000. The mental health evaluation is a bail condition, and the judge will review the results of that evaluation before Toth is released, authorities said.

Emery said no victims were in the apartment where Toth lives alone, leading police to conclude he didn’t shoot anyone.

Police said no one was injured during the incident.

Emergency responders transported tenants temporarily displaced by the evacuation to a shelter set up at the nearby Tri-County Fire Department.

Officers from the Hackettstown, Independence Township and the Washington Township, Morris County, police department assisted Mansfield Township police.

Members of the Warren County Prosecutor’s Office responded, as did a field communications unit from the Warren County Department of Public Safety.

Tri-County and Hackettstown firefighters also responded, along with township rescue squad members.

Reporter Tom Quigley can be reached at 610-258-7171, Ext. 3574, or by e-mail at tquigley@express-times.com

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