SALEM, Ore. — The man who belonged to a group that was holding immigrants at gunpoint and was arrested in New Mexico on a firearms offense had been found guilty of the same crime in Oregon 12 years ago.
But Larry Mitchell Hopkins fled without serving his sentence, Klamath County, Ore., court records show.
Hopkins was sentenced to probation in 2006 in the Southern Oregon county after he pleaded guilty to two charges of being a felon in possession of a firearm and impersonating a peace officer.
“Larry Hopkins, who is a convicted felon, was showing two firearms to a group of juveniles,” a police report said. “Hopkins told the juveniles that he was a police officer and was displaying a badge that said ‘special agent.’ ”
Hopkins had been convicted in 1986 in Michigan of the felony of false pretenses, police in Klamath Falls noted, and that triggered the felony firearms charges in Oregon. Felons in Oregon are in many cases barred from possessing firearms.
Hopkins, who lived at the time in Ashland, Ore., appeared for only his initial parole meeting.
He never returned.
His parole officer sought his arrest and recommended a 20-month prison sentence, according to court records. A judge in January 2007 responded by issuing a statewide arrest warrant. The arrest order didn’t extend beyond the state. Authorities said such an arrest order is routine for lower-level crimes.
Last year, Klamath County Judge Marci Adkisson dropped the case because a deputy district attorney said the parole violation was “too old to effectively prosecute.”
Adkisson declined to comment Monday on the case.