Laramie County arrests reported May 27-28: weekend bookings and charges

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The Laramie County Sheriff’s Office released a new arrest log this week listing recent detentions and the charges authorities recommended. The entries highlight a mix of traffic- and court-related offenses, as well as allegations of domestic and endangerment incidents that may affect local court dockets in the coming days.

The information below comes from the sheriff’s public records and reflects law enforcement contact that resulted in arrests. It is a preliminary record and does not represent final court outcomes.

Recent arrests reported by local law enforcement

  • Jeremiah Dean Andrews — accused of two violations of a protection order
  • Chaundra Rene Barkell — alleged domestic battery, interference with a peace officer (no injury), and child endangerment
  • William Cody Brennand — reported for failing to appear in court
  • Shania Lynn Combs — detained for an alleged probation violation
  • Justin Patrick Erb — arrested as a parole/probation violator without a warrant
  • Michael Farella — taken into custody on an outstanding Wyoming warrant
  • Carlos Andrew Miguel Galindo — cited for failure to pay
  • Anna Marie Howe — cited for failure to pay
  • Crystal Adriana Palma — held on a DUI-related/Drug Court hold
  • Ariel Adrian Philippi — listed for failure to appear and held on a DUI-related/Drug Court hold
  • Jerome Dale Nash — alleged subsequent offense of driving under suspension, plus no registration and no liability insurance
  • Emanuel Rhodes — cited for failure to comply

Readers should note that the list names individuals who were taken into custody and the offenses initially reported by law enforcement. Under the law, each person is presumed innocent until proven guilty. Charges shown here are pending and may be altered when or if the Laramie County District Attorney files formal counts.

What this log does — and what it omits

The sheriff’s arrest log is intended as a public record of recent arrests, but it is not exhaustive. It does not include records for juvenile offenders, allegations of a sexual nature, or instances where arrestees posted bond or were released before the office published the entry.

Because the entries are initial law-enforcement reports, follow-up actions — arrests, arraignments and court filings — typically appear later in official DA filings and court dockets. Those subsequent records provide the authoritative status of any case.

For ongoing community context, these logs offer a snapshot of law-enforcement activity: a mix of warrant service, court noncompliance, traffic-related enforcement and alleged domestic incidents. They can signal patterns for local public-safety reporting, but they should be read as provisional records rather than final adjudications.

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