By Krystal Smalley
ksmalley@wbcowqel.com

Judge Russell Wiseman seemed to have little sympathy for a woman who has been involved in a lot of trouble that has crisscrossed county lines.

Thirty-one-year-old Angela Kilgore appeared in Crawford County Common Pleas Court Monday afternoon for community control violations. Kilgore had no objections to admitting to testing positive for opiates and Oxycotin on January 29, 2014 but she did ask Wiseman if she could serve the remainder of her sentence concurrently with a Richland County sentence.

Kilgore had pleaded guilty to receiving stolen property in 2010 and 2013. Her parole officer Ken Dyer reported that Kilgore had been convicted of theft from the elderly in Seneca County and convicted on five counts in Richland County. She was sentenced to six months and 18 months respectively in each county. Seneca County is investigating Kilgore for having a male subject dead of an overdose in her driveway and she has charges pending in Ashland County.

Dyer stated that Kilgore has had issues with drugs and alcohol since 2008 but she had failed to take advantage of the opportunities that had been afforded her.

Shane Leuthold, serving as Kilgore’s counsel, stated that Kilgore was “someone who is in desperate need to get clean.”

“I admit to what I’ve done,” Kilgore said, adding that she has been addicted to drugs since she was 17. She told Wiseman she would “try to get it together this time.”

“All I know is you are a multi-county offender,” Wiseman said to Kilgore. “Only a fool would let you go out and continue behaving the way you’re behaving.”

Wiseman revoked Kilgore’s community control and imposed the remainder of her original sentence, which amounted to about 11 months.

Twenty-three-year-old Levi Johnson decided to get everything taken care of in one fell swoop. The Bucyrus man pleaded guilty to possessing drugs and admitted to his community control violations on a 2012 case.

Johnson was sentenced to three years on community control after admitting that he had possessed heroin on March 1. His license was suspended for six months and he was ordered to pay a $1,250 mandatory drug fine. Johnson must also forfeit drug-related property being held by the Bucyrus Police Department.

Johnson admitted to possessing heroin, missing his office visits, changing his address without permission, and failing to comply with his counseling while on community control. His community control was continued on the 2012 case.

Johnson will be entering into drug treatment program. He will be held in jail until he can be placed.

Twenty-seven-year-old Paul Holcomb pleaded guilty to a felony three theft charge. Holcomb admitted that he had written checks on his step-grandfather Grover Thompson’s account between March 30, 2011 and May 16, 2011.

Holcomb was placed on community control for three years and ordered to pay repetition to Thompson in the amount of $7,940 as well as a $750 fine.

Zachary Marshall was going to be given another chance, according to Judge Wiseman. The Bucyrus man appeared in court for community control violations in which he tested positive for cocaine and opiates on April 3 and missed his scheduled drug court appointments before that same date.

“This is the last time you’re going to pull one of these things,” Wiseman told Marshall.

Marshall was continued on community control and the drug court after admitting to his violations.

Marshall had originally been placed on intervention in 2013 but had that revoked due to violations in January. He pleaded guilty to drug possession in January and had been placed on community control.

Twenty-two-year-old Megan Fox has been given a chance to get cleaned up. Fox was granted intervention for two years after entering a guilty plea to theft. Fox admitted to takng items from a pawn shop on June 18, 2013. That plea will be held until Fox’s successful completion of her intervention.

“You’re going to be the one who has to rehabilitate yourself,” Wiseman told Fox.

Fox must also pay $3,000 on restitution to the victim in the case.