COURT HOUSE – A Cape May County grand jury handed up six indictments Nov. 27.
The abbreviation CDS below stands for controlled dangerous substance.
A charge of “certain person not to have a weapon” can be brought against someone possessing a weapon who was previously convicted of a felony.
The individuals listed are presumed innocent until proven guilty.
Josue E. Barrios-Rodriguez
Josue Barrios-Rodriguez, of Wildwood, was indicted on two fourth-degree counts for unlawful possession of a weapon and certain person.
The indictment lists the weapon as a wooden stick. An earlier 2014 conviction for distribution of a CDS led to the certain person count.
Molly R. Doyle
Molly Doyle, of North Wildwood, faces a count for third-degree possession of a CDS, alprazolam.
Jason M. Duzenski
Jason Duzenski, of Wildwood, was indicted on four counts of third-degree possession of a CDS, as well as one second- degree count for possession with intent to distribute.
The drugs for each of the four possession counts were: methlenedioxyamphetamine, known by its street names of Molly or Ecstasy; methamphetamine; gamma-hydroxybutyrate, also known as fantasy; and alprazolam.
Glenn B. Johnson
Glenn B. Johnson was arrested in Wildwood in September on drug charges. This week he was indicted on two counts of third-degree possession of a CDS, third-degree possession with intent to distribute and second-degree possession of a weapon while committing a CDS crime.
The indictment contained a fourth-degree count for unlawful possession of a weapon. The weapon in question was a knife.
Charles Lunn
Charles Lunn was indicted on second-degree certain person charges. Lunn was convicted in 2009 for burglary in Florida. He was arrested in Wildwood in September in possession of a repeater pellet gun.
Gary R. Nelson, James D. O’Conner
Gary Nelson, 33, of Court House, and James O’Conner, 28, of Toms River, were indicted for third-degree possession of a CDS, methamphetamine, along with possession with intent to distribute and intent within 500 feet of public property, both of these counts in the second degree.
Proximity to a school also led to a count for third-degree intent to distribute within 1,000 feet of a school.
Both are also facing weapons charges stemming from possession of switchblade knives.
For O’Conner the charge is fourth-degree possession of a prohibited weapon.
Nelson, who was previously convicted of burglary in both Camden and Burlington counties, faces the more serious counts for second-degree possession of a prohibited weapon and second-degree certain person.
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