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“Upon arrival I could hear a female screaming and loud thuds coming from upstairs,” Officer D.W. Umberger wrote in his criminal complaint.
Identifying himself as a police officer, Umberger went inside the apartment and ran upstairs.
“I observed a white female identified as Mrs. Terri Lovell and a white male identified as David Lovell on the floor at the end of their bed,” the officer wrote. “Both subjects had injuries to their faces and Mrs. Lovell had a bruise to her back on the right side. Both subjects stated they had been arguing all day.”
Both employed by Pizza Hut, they were initially being held without bond.
On Thursday, though, David Lovell was given a $10,000 bond following a Wythe County Juvenile and Domestic Relations Court hearing. Conditions included having no contact with his wife, not leaving the commonwealth and seeking counseling from Mount Rogers. Terri Lovell has a bond hearing set for May 3.
Their preliminary hearings have been scheduled for June 28. If a judge finds probable cause, he’ll send the charges to a grand jury for consideration. An unlawful wounding conviction carries a maximum five-year prison sentence.
http://www.swvatoday.com/news/article_0f263436-0d7a-11e6-a913-1f7d7c5d936f.html
Identifying himself as a police officer, Umberger went inside the apartment and ran upstairs.
“I observed a white female identified as Mrs. Terri Lovell and a white male identified as David Lovell on the floor at the end of their bed,” the officer wrote. “Both subjects had injuries to their faces and Mrs. Lovell had a bruise to her back on the right side. Both subjects stated they had been arguing all day.”
Both employed by Pizza Hut, they were initially being held without bond.
On Thursday, though, David Lovell was given a $10,000 bond following a Wythe County Juvenile and Domestic Relations Court hearing. Conditions included having no contact with his wife, not leaving the commonwealth and seeking counseling from Mount Rogers. Terri Lovell has a bond hearing set for May 3.
Their preliminary hearings have been scheduled for June 28. If a judge finds probable cause, he’ll send the charges to a grand jury for consideration. An unlawful wounding conviction carries a maximum five-year prison sentence.
http://www.swvatoday.com/news/article_0f263436-0d7a-11e6-a913-1f7d7c5d936f.html