Bloomfield man accused of violating a protective order
A Bloomfield man was arrested early Tuesday when an officer and deputy stopped at a convenience store and saw the man with a juvenile they recognized. The officers said the juvenile was a protected person and the man has been ordered to have no contact with the juvenile.
Nathon Job Scott, 24, of Bloomfield, was arrested by Bloomfield Deputy Marshal Jordan Allor on Tuesday, June 18.
Officer Allor and Sgt. Bobby Pierce of the Greene County Sheriff’s Department had both stopped in at Huck’s in Bloomfield around 12:12 a.m. and while they were there, Scott came inside with the male juvenile.
The officers checked and confirmed that the protective order was still valid before Scott was handcuffed and transported to the Greene County Jail.
The protective order was put into place in February when Scott was arrested then charged in a domestic case. That case is still pending against Scott - he was charged with:
Domestic battery committed in the presence of a child less than 16, a Level 6 felony.
Domestic battery, a Class A misdemeanor.
Possession of marijuana, a Class B misdemeanor.
When Officer Allor talked to Scott, Scott said he spoke with his attorney who told him the protective order was no longer valid and that he could be with the juvenile.
Officer Allor reported the juvenile was listed as a household or family member of the protected person and there was to be no contact between Scott and the juvenile and that Scott was served with the order by court staff on February 21.
Scott was booked into jail at 12:42 a.m. He’s being held without bond.
In this latest case, he’s facing a charge of invasion of privacy in violation of a protective order, a Class A misdemeanor.
His initial hearing is scheduled in Greene Superior Court early next Monday, June 24.