Two sentenced in Chenango County Court
NORWICH - On Wednesday June 24 at Chenango County Court two individuals were sentenced to serve time. One at in a New York State Prison and the other at the Chenango County Correctional Facility.
• Aaron M. Bishop was sentenced to one and one half to three years in a state penitentiary. Bishop was convicted after he stole firearms from a Coventry man and sold them. The Chenango County District Attorney’s Office offered Bishop a plea deal that would give him this State Prison sentence and require him to pay $2,700 in restitution to the victim. He was also sentenced for this amount of time based on the fact that he is a predicate felon, meaning he was already convicted of a felony in another case.
• Patricia Manwarren was sentenced to six months in the Chenango County Correctional Facility after she was convicted for the crime of criminal sale of a controlled substance. Manwarren will serve the jail time, five years probation, and drug and alcohol counseling. District Attorney Joseph McBride said during the sentencing, “People need to know, if you deal drugs in this town, you will go to jail.” McBride went on to say that this is a result of the ongoing battle that law enforcement is fighting to clear the streets of drugs.
• Aaron M. Bishop was sentenced to one and one half to three years in a state penitentiary. Bishop was convicted after he stole firearms from a Coventry man and sold them. The Chenango County District Attorney’s Office offered Bishop a plea deal that would give him this State Prison sentence and require him to pay $2,700 in restitution to the victim. He was also sentenced for this amount of time based on the fact that he is a predicate felon, meaning he was already convicted of a felony in another case.
• Patricia Manwarren was sentenced to six months in the Chenango County Correctional Facility after she was convicted for the crime of criminal sale of a controlled substance. Manwarren will serve the jail time, five years probation, and drug and alcohol counseling. District Attorney Joseph McBride said during the sentencing, “People need to know, if you deal drugs in this town, you will go to jail.” McBride went on to say that this is a result of the ongoing battle that law enforcement is fighting to clear the streets of drugs.
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