Two county men earn jail sentences for gross sexual imposition charges

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A Cygnet man was sentenced to three years in prison for a probation violation from his 2007 conviction of
unlawful sexual conduct with a minor, and to three years for gross sexual imposition.
In addition a Fostoria man will spend more than two years in prison for his sexual offenses.
Aaron Folk, 35, of Cygnet, also was ordered by Judge Robert Pollex to register as a Tier I sexual
offender and to serve 17 months in prison for gross sexual imposition involving a new case. That case
charged him in regard to an August 2010 incident with a 13-year-old female.
All the sentences were ordered to be served concurrently, for an aggregate sentence of three years.
Folk was given credit for time served.
Judge Reeve Kelsey sentenced Tim Johnson Jr., 21, of Fostoria, to 28 months in prison for his conviction
of two counts of gross sexual imposition.
The charges stemmed from his actions with a pre-teen girl.
He received 14 months for each count and ordered to serve the terms consecutive to each other. He must
also register as a Tier 1 sexual offender.
Through a plea agreement, an importuning charge was dismissed at sentencing.
Jeffrey Arnold was nearly sent to prison in November for his conviction of menacing by stalking involving
incidents in the Wood County portion of Fostoria.
Judge Alan Mayberry agreed to community control sanctions at the time. But in January, Arnold was back in
front of Mayberry for a violation of those sanctions. Arnold stipulated to the violation and the judge
revoked the community control and ordered the offender, 25, of Fostoria, to 12 months in prison.
Brian Urbanski, 25, of Toledo, was sentenced by Mayberry to 44 months in prison for his conviction of two
counts of receiving stolen property and two counts of forgery involving stolen checks. The sentence was
11 months on each charge and ordered to be served consecutively. He was also ordered to pay nearly $500
in restitution. Per an agreement other forgery and receiving stolen property charges were dismissed.
Three men were each sentenced to four years in prison for engaging in a pattern of corrupt activity. The
co-defendants, Jamar "Jay" Simpson, 24, of Detroit; Lee Roy Lattimore, Macomb Township, Mich.;
and Lorenzo Coo, 43, of Toledo, all received the sentence from Kelsey. In addition, Cook was ordered to
forfeit a 2008 Dodge Charger used in the criminal activity and seized at his arrest.
Other prison sentences recently imposed include:
¥ Marc Moyer, 22, of Norwalk, for two years, one year in each of two cases, to be served consecutively
for his community control violation of five separate counts of forgery combined. (Mayberry)
¥ Randall Kern Jr., 18, of Bowling Green, six months for vandalism stemming from an incident on Nov. 3
when he damaged a sprinkler head while in custody at Northcoast Community Corrections. The incident
caused $500 in damages for which restitution was ordered. The incident also triggered a community
control violation of his receiving stolen property conviction last July. He received 13 months in that
matter. The sentences were ordered to be concurrent with each other, for an aggregate total of 13
months. (Mayberry)
¥ Andrew Dean, 22, of Bowling Green, one year for failure to comply. He also was ordered to pay
restitution of $4,050, and his driver’s license will be suspended for three years. (Mayberry)
¥ William Patterson, 29, of North Baltimore, 11 months for possession of heroin. (Pollex)
¥ Andrasha Nash, 27, 11 months each for forgery and two counts of identity fraud. All sentences to be
served concurrently, and also concurrent with a sentence out of Lucas County. (Pollex)
¥ Rodney Lightfoot, also known as Stringer, 23, of Cleveland, six months each for receiving stolen
property and failure to appear. Both charges stem from a case filed in 2007. (Mayberry)
¥ Theodoro Oviedo III, 30, of Perrysburg, 10 months for a community control violation of his aggravated
assault conviction in a 2008 case. (Pollex)
¥ Dustin Ward, 22, of Tontogany, nine months for trafficking in marijuana. (Mayberry)
All prison sentences carry varying terms of post-release control.

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