So picture this: its August of 2012 and authorities raid the Stockyard Flea Market on South Church Street and recognize one of the sellers as a woman who has been busted two months before for selling counterfeit gear.

The seller, Xiao Xu Wu, evades police and takes off, but officials seize more than $1 million in purses, belts and shoes from her. Authorities are able to identify her and obtain charges of possessing, storing and selling counterfeit items. They put out a BOLO, but hear crickets for more than a year.
Fast forward to a hotel casino in Connecticut on Tuesday. Wu's 5-year-old son calls 911 to report his mom left him alone in the hotel room while she went to the casino. Authorities respond and put the child in custody of the Connecticut Department of Children and Families then arrest Wu.
Connecticut officers run her fingerprints and name through national law enforcement databases and learn this 38-year-old woman is wanted by police in North Carolina and on a detainer by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement.... Talk about a nice bust.
Wu was charged with risk of injury to a minor and held in a Connecticut correctional institute under a $200,000 bond. Let's hope she doesn't post that bond and skip out on an ever-expanding list of charges across state lines.
What more do you think could be done to avoid suspects wanted by other state and federal agencies from avoiding justice? Do you think they should be denied bond? Is it unconstitutional to refuse to give these suspects bond? What do you think?












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