A man wanted on a felony warrant out of Anoka County was apprehended and now faces new charges through the efforts of the Isanti County Sheriff’s Office and the Isanti Police Department.
Jack Edward Triemert, 19, of Isanti, was charged before Judge Amy Brosnahan Jan. 13 in Isanti County District Court in Cambridge with felony fifth-degree drug possession-subsequent conviction and misdemeanor pharmacy, possession of hypodermic syringes-needles.
Brosnahan set bail at $22,000 without conditions or $10,000 with conditions and Triemert’s next court appearance for Jan. 21.
Triemert was convicted of felony fifth-degree drug possession in Anoka County in December 2014 and received an amended sentence in December 2015 for a probation violation. Anoka County issued a warrant for his arrest on Dec. 31, 2015.
According to the criminal complaint:
On Jan. 11, at approximately 3:30 p.m., Deputy Sean Connolly of the Isanti County Sheriff’s Office was advised by dispatch that an individual with a felony warrant for drugs out of Anoka County was present at a residence along the 110 block of South Passage Southeast in Isanti. The individual was identified as Triemert.
Connolly, along with Investigator Dustin Noreen from the Isanti Police Department, went to the residence together as Triemert had a history of fleeing from law enforcement.
Connolly and Noreen went to the location and knocked on the door. They were allowed in and shown Triemert’s bedroom. The officers opened the door and observed Triemert sitting on the bed. Connolly asked Triemert to step out of the room and advised there was a felony warrant out for his arrest.
Triemert repeatedly kept putting his hands in the front pocket of his hoody and was advised to keep them in plain sight. Connolly then placed Triemert in handcuffs and asked if there was anything sharp or anything illegal on him. Triemert advised he had a syringe loaded with heroin in his front hoody pocket. Triemert also advised there was a spoon in plain view on the floor of his bedroom he used to heat up and load the heroin.
Both items were collected as evidence. The liquid in the syringe field tested positive for heroin.