Delaware News


Career criminal sentenced to life in prison

Criminal Division | Department of Justice | Date Posted: Thursday, August 26, 2010



Attorney General Beau Biden announced that Dover resident Dallas Drummond has been sentenced to life in prison as a “habitual offender”.

Following a two-day trial in Superior Court,  a Kent County Jury last month convicted Drummond of Burglary, Theft by False Pretense, Theft, and Criminal Trespass. After his conviction, prosecutors petitioned the Court to declare Drummond aDegree.

“habitual offender” and this morning Superior Court Judge Robert B. Young did so and sentenced him

to the mandatory term of life in prison without parole.

Drummond, age 31, a registered sex offender, has been arrested more than 70 times and has

been charged with more than 100 criminal offenses. He has failed to complete probation multiple

times and has previously been convicted of rape, assault, burglary, conspiracy, harassment,

endangering the welfare of a child, failure to register as a sex offender, criminal impersonation, and

other offenses. The Attorney General’s office argued that Drummond is a substantial risk to the

community and a danger to his family and to society.

“Career criminals do not belong in our communities, they belong behind bars where they

cannot be a threat to public safety,” Biden stated.

On January 19, 2009, Drummond broke into the Smyrna apartment of his estranged wife, who

had previously obtained a No Contact Order against him, and stole a computer which he later sold.

While free on bail awaiting his July, 2010 trial for these offenses, he was arrested on April 14, 2010

and charged with committing a rape which occurred in April 2009. He has been in prison since his

April, 2010 arrest.

“The Department of Justice is committed to protecting the citizens of Delaware from violent

habitual criminals like Dallas Drummond, and when appropriate we will seek to have these criminals

incarcerated for life so that they can’t further victimize Delawareans,” said Deputy Attorney General

R. David Favata, who prosecuted this case.

Under Delaware law, offenders convicted of three separate violent felonies can be declared a

“Habitual Offender” and sentenced to the mandatory term of life in prison without parole. Prosecutors

sought that declaration and today’s sentence based on Drummond’s previous convictions for rape

(March, 1998) and Burglary 2nd Degree (March, 2000) and his July 2010 conviction for Burglary 2nd

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Career criminal sentenced to life in prison

Criminal Division | Department of Justice | Date Posted: Thursday, August 26, 2010



Attorney General Beau Biden announced that Dover resident Dallas Drummond has been sentenced to life in prison as a “habitual offender”.

Following a two-day trial in Superior Court,  a Kent County Jury last month convicted Drummond of Burglary, Theft by False Pretense, Theft, and Criminal Trespass. After his conviction, prosecutors petitioned the Court to declare Drummond aDegree.

“habitual offender” and this morning Superior Court Judge Robert B. Young did so and sentenced him

to the mandatory term of life in prison without parole.

Drummond, age 31, a registered sex offender, has been arrested more than 70 times and has

been charged with more than 100 criminal offenses. He has failed to complete probation multiple

times and has previously been convicted of rape, assault, burglary, conspiracy, harassment,

endangering the welfare of a child, failure to register as a sex offender, criminal impersonation, and

other offenses. The Attorney General’s office argued that Drummond is a substantial risk to the

community and a danger to his family and to society.

“Career criminals do not belong in our communities, they belong behind bars where they

cannot be a threat to public safety,” Biden stated.

On January 19, 2009, Drummond broke into the Smyrna apartment of his estranged wife, who

had previously obtained a No Contact Order against him, and stole a computer which he later sold.

While free on bail awaiting his July, 2010 trial for these offenses, he was arrested on April 14, 2010

and charged with committing a rape which occurred in April 2009. He has been in prison since his

April, 2010 arrest.

“The Department of Justice is committed to protecting the citizens of Delaware from violent

habitual criminals like Dallas Drummond, and when appropriate we will seek to have these criminals

incarcerated for life so that they can’t further victimize Delawareans,” said Deputy Attorney General

R. David Favata, who prosecuted this case.

Under Delaware law, offenders convicted of three separate violent felonies can be declared a

“Habitual Offender” and sentenced to the mandatory term of life in prison without parole. Prosecutors

sought that declaration and today’s sentence based on Drummond’s previous convictions for rape

(March, 1998) and Burglary 2nd Degree (March, 2000) and his July 2010 conviction for Burglary 2nd

image_printPrint


Graphic that represents delaware news on a mobile phone

Keep up to date by receiving a daily digest email, around noon, of current news release posts from state agencies on news.delaware.gov.

Here you can subscribe to future news updates.