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LUSTER-BUSTER
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Capture In Mexico Of One Sick Son Of a Bitch:

Luster's Last Stand... A Summary Of The Mexico Luster Capture
Andrew Luster Jumps Bail In Rape & Drugging Charges
Duane 'Dog' The Bounty Hunter Wants Luster

June 18, 2003
Dog Tracks Luster To Mexico
Hawaii Poll: Should Dog' Get Bail Money On Luster Capture?

June 19, 2003
Luster Trial Continues In U.S. In His Absence
Dog, Tim and Leland Capture Luster
Hawaii Poll: Should Dog Get Reward Money For Capturing Luster?
Mexico Police Arrest Dog, Tim and Leland For Capturing Luster
Luster's Journal Found In Mexico Motel

July 3, 2003
Duane, Tim and Leland Released From Mexico Jail

July 17, 2003
The FBI Earns Another Black Eye... This Time From Dog'

August 6, 2003
No Bail Money For Dog's Capture Of Luster

August 12, 2003
Wanted Poster Issued For Duane, Tim and Leland
Dog, Tim and Leland Wanted In Mexico For Kidnapping

August 9, 2006
Hawaii Legislature Calls Emergency Hearing In Support Of Dog and Possee

September 14, 2006
Federal Marshals Arrest Duane, Tim and Leland In Early Morning Raid In Hawaii

September 15, 2006
Duane, Tim and Leland Hearing; Free On $300,000.00 Bond

September 16, 2006
A&E Special; DOG, The Family Speaks
Cornered Pit Bull Becomes Prey, The Dog Arrest

September 20, 2007
"I'd Do It Again"

September 29, 2006
Dog Released From Ankle Bracelet

February 16, 2007
Mexico Denies Injunction Request

March 8, 2007
House Committee Votes Unanomously To Support Dog

March 25, 2007
Popularity, Precedent Could Keep Dog Free

July 30, 2007
Mexico Drops All Charges!

Where Is Andrew Luster?
Serving 124 Year Sentence

Research, Composition, Layout & Design By Terry Gene Hembree




Andrew Luster Press Releases & Articles

Dog The Bounty Hunter... the Luster-Buster!

Luster's Last Stand


After being returned to California by plane June 19, 2003
Luster (left) heads back into custody to begin serving his 124 sentence.


Convicted rapist and cosmetics heir Andrew Luster
was apprehended early Wednesday morning in Puerto Vallarta, Mexico,
by bounty hunter Duane "Dog" Chapman and his crew.


Luster was convicted of drugging and raping three women and sentenced
in absentia to 124 years in prison.
The night his five-month escape ended, Luster was actually captured twice...
first by the bounty hunters, and then by local Puerto Vallarta police, who snapped this mug shot.


Duane "Dog" Chapman and his four-man crew were also taken in by police.
The Honolulu-based bounty hunter had been chasing Luster since the cosmetics heir skipped bail in January.
Chapman was acting on a tip from a vacationing couple that had seen Luster in Puerto Vallarta.


Chapman brought with him his two sons, including Leland Blaine Chapman.


The bounty hunter's friend and colleague, Tim Chaler Chapman was also in on the bust.


In late 2002, Luster's lawyer, Roger Jon Diamond, secured his client's release from jail during the trial
on a $1 million bond. Luster skipped a scheduled check-in with authorities during a recess in his trial,
packed away some of his belongings, and hit the road.


Luster brought his dog with him. The animal was later found at his mother's house.


Luster's green 1999 Toyota SUV was found in Santa Monica.
How the playboy obtained the gray Volkswagen Jetta he drove in Mexico is unknown.


Luster's trial continued in his absence. His lawyer argued that the sex was consensual,
and that the women in the video were acting.
The jury didn't buy the story.Luster was convicted and sentenced to124 years in prison.


The smoking gun in Luster's trial was the "date rape drug,"
Prosecutors, who showed jurors a tape labled "Shauna GHBing,"
said Luster raped his three victims while they were unconscious


Andrew Luster, 39, was convicted of 86 counts
including multiple rape charges connected to assaults in 1996, 1997 and 2000
Police say he videotaped sexual romps with unconscious women after drugging them with the date rape drug GHB.



Bounty Hunter Hopes To Add Cosmetics Heir Luster To Résumé

A Hawai’i-based bounty hunter who said he has been involved in more than 6,000 captures is looking for California fugitive and cosmetics heir Andrew Luster, who is wanted for several rape convictions.

Bounty Hunter Duane “Dog” Chapman shows photos of his next target: California fugitive Andrew Luster.

Duane “Dog” Chapman, who has been a bounty hunter for 25 years, is one of many trying to find the 39-year-old Luster, a Max Factor heir who disappeared Jan. 6 during his California rape trial.

Luster was convicted in absentia Jan. 21 for 86 counts of rape and related charges for allegedly using the date-rape drug gamma hydroxybutyrate to render three women immobile at his Ventura County oceanfront home before sexually assaulting them. On Tuesday, a judge sentenced Luster to 124 years in prison.

Chapman, 50, flew back to the Mainland last week to try to find Luster, who federal law enforcement authorities believe could be hiding out in California, Mexico or Hawai’i.

“We’ve talked to family members of one of his victims, and this guy has got to be found,” Chapman said from his downtown Honolulu office earlier this month. “It’s a cat-and-mouse game, but someone will catch him.”

State Deputy Sheriff Tommy Cayetano, who has tracked parole violators, said Chapman has been helpful to local law enforcement officers in catching numerous fugitives.

“He is one of the very few local bail bond operators who literally tracks down his own clients if they take off,” said Cayetano, who has known Dog since 1990. “A lot of bail bondsman hire guys like Dog to look for the bail jumpers. If he can take some of the guys off the streets, then it makes our job a little easier. He’s also managed to provide us tips on fugitives that he’s not looking for.”

Born and raised in Denver, Chapman knows what it’s like to be on the other side of the chase. As a youth, he had his share of run-ins with the law from Colorado to Mexico, including 18 arrests for armed robbery.

Released 25 years ago from a Texas prison, a judge ordered Chapman to pay thousands of dollars in back child support payments. When Chapman said he didn’t know how a former convict like himself could come up with the money, the judge suggested he track down fugitives for a living.

“I only needed about a week to find the first guy,” Chapman said. “When I caught up with him, I tied him up with my belt and I took him back to the judge’s court.”

Chapman, co-owner of Da Kine Bail Bonds in Honolulu, has lived in Hawai’i since 1991. He visited here two years earlier as a seminar speaker with motivational speaker Anthony Robbins. Chapman now spends most of the year in the Islands, and the rest of the time chasing fugitives in Denver and Los Angeles.

Chapman said bounty hunting doesn’t always involve “kicking down doors, barging into someone’s home and other physical stuff.”

Chapman cannot carry a gun because he is an ex-felon, but carries a pair of handcuffs and Mace spray. He said most fugitives surrender quietly once he tracks them down.

“Sure, it involves a lot of running around looking for these guys, but there’s also a lot of investigative work in gathering tips and learning these guys’ habits so we have a better chance of tracking them down,” Chapman said. “You learn as much as you can about the guy so you start thinking like this person.”

Chapman appeared on Court TV and Fox News Channel last month to discuss Luster’s disappearance. The A&E Channel was also in the Islands earlier this month to film Chapman for a television special called “It’s A Living.”

Chapman said the capture of Luster would be a nice feather to add to his already crowded cap.

“Snagging this guy would be awesome,” Chapman said.

He said he’s now thinking of pursuing only high-profile fugitives. “I just turned 50 (last) week and I’d like to slow down a bit,” he said.

Chapman said he has Luster’s pager number and has a rough idea about his whereabouts.

“We had been checking out a tip that he could be on the North Shore because he is known to be an avid surfer,” he said. “He’s got the money to travel, that’s for sure.”

Luster was arrested in July 2000 after a University of California-Santa Barbara student told police he drugged and assaulted her. A search of his home turned up videotapes of Luster having sex with women who appeared to be either asleep or unconscious.

After a Jan. 9 federal warrant was ordered for Luster, California bail forfeiture laws give Chapman and anybody else 180 days to capture Luster to get 15 percent of the $1 million bail, or $150,000.

“If I catch him one day after the 180-day limit, I don’t get one cent,” Chapman said with a laugh.




Luster's Ass Is Mine Said Dog' The Bounty Hunter

Fugitive rapist and cosmetics heir Andrew Luster, with new facial hair in this Puerto Vallarta mugshot, was collared Wednesday

June 18, 2003

Andrew Luster, the fugitive rapist and cosmetics heir who skipped out on his trial in January, was apprehended in a Puerto Vallarta nightclub by bounty hunter Duane "Dog" Chapman. Hours later, Mexican police tossed both men in jail, said a Chapman colleague.

"They got him," said Beth Smith, who works with the Honolulu-based bounty hunter. "Duane was taking him to a more secure location and the local cops grabbed him."

A spokesperson with the FBI's Los Angeles bureau confirmed that Luster was being held in Puerto Vallarta by Mexican authorities and said a legal attache was working toward an extradition.

Luster, great-grandson of cosmetics king Max Factor, skipped town after his prospects at trial grew bleak: One victim had already testified about the alleged abuses, and the jury was about to view a videotape labeled "Shauna GHBing." That label may be a reference to the date rape drug, gamma hydroxybutyrate, or GHB, that Luster was accused of using.

Luster fled with his dog, later found at his mother's, in his Toyota 4-Runner, which was found last week.

With Luster on the run, and Chapman on his trail, the trial continued. Luster, 39, was convicted in absentia of 86 counts, including multiple rape charges connected to assaults in 1996, 1997 and 2000. Police say he videotaped sexual romps with unconscious women after drugging them with the date rape drug GHB.

Fleeing his crumbling case certainly didn't help Luster's chances at an appeal. Last week, an appellate court struck down an appeal by his attorney, Roger Diamond, who has said in published reports that his client's return will nonetheless reinvigorate his appeal chances.

Diamond could take Luster's case to the California Supreme Court, where he could face an uphill battle.

"I think he's blown his chances at the appeal," said Laurie Levenson, a professor at Loyola Law School in Los Angeles. "You can't have it both ways. You can't seek the benefits of an appeal but not subject yourself to the punishment."

A spokesperson with the U.S. State Department told Courttv.com that the FBI would likely broker Luster's extradition to the United States. The State Department would handle any charges facing bounty hunter Chapman, which could include kidnapping Luster.

While Ventura authorities employed conventional methods, Chapman used private investigator techniques, such as shadowing Luster's mother, Elizabeth Luster, who had her son's dog.

Chapman shortened his leash on Luster... he estimated that he was five days behind the fugitive's trail when he began — when he found Luster's ditched SUV in Santa Monica, Calif.

Boasting 6,000 successful captures, Chapman had his eye on Mexico as early as January. "All these rich guys have their hole in the wall," he said. "There's always a place where they think there's no cops."

Chapman said that, in Mexico, money talks. Resort employees and local residents often respond to one timeless tactic: Handing a potential tipster half of a torn hundred-dollar bill, and promising the other half when their tips pay off.

A Puerto Vallarta newspaper reporter, Angela Corelis, said that fugitive take-downs are commonplace in the resort town. "Once a week they pick someone up down here," said Corelis. "They get drunk and cry about [what they did] in bars."

The fee from the bail bond company for Luster's capture may have spurred the Honolulu-based Chapman in his chase, but the man hunter told Courttv.com in January that he wasn't in it for the money.

"I'm a bounty hunter, this is the number one fugitive in America, and I'm on his ass," Chapman said. "This one has become personal. If one of the victims comes up to me and says, 'Dog, thank you,' that's it, I'm paid."




Bounty Hunter Tracks Max Factor Heir To Mexico

June 19, 2003

The heir to the Max Factor cosmetics empire and fugitive convicted rapist, Andrew Luster, has been captured by a bounty hunter in Mexico. Luster and the bounty hunter, Duane “Dog” Chapman, were being held yesterday in Mexico after six people were seized in a street brawl following a car chase.

The 39-year-old great-grandson of Max Factor was grabbed at night in Puerto Vallarta, a Pacific coast resort popular with American tourists. “According to witnesses [the bounty hunters] used a spray with an irritant, maybe teargas, to subdue him. They handcuffed him and bundled him into a truck,” a police spokesman said.

Mr Chapman, who calls him self “Dog the bounty hunter” and is based in Honolulu, arrived in Mexico a few days ago with two of his sons and two crew members from the US television show America’s Most Wanted.

“They got a tip-off last week,” Beth Smith, Mr Chapman’s wife and business partner, told the Guardian yesterday. “We have no idea why Duane is being held but we think they probably just put them all inside until they could figure out who was who.”

Mr Chapman, 46, a former biker, ex-convict, born-again Christian and father of 12, had appealed for information about Luster on his website, dogthebountyhunter.com.

His slogan is “born on a mountain, raised in a cave, arresting fugitives is all I crave” and he claims to have tracked down 6,000 people, mainly bail jumpers.

The normal fee for a bounty hunter, or “bail enforcement agent” as they are officially called, is between 15% and 20% of the bail, which in Luster’s case was $1m. Ms Smith said the fee on this occasion should be around $150,000, “plus expenses”. She said Mr Chapman had an arrest warrant so there were no grounds for the Mexican authorities to hold him.

But the Mexican authorities could charge Mr Chapman, as bounty hunting is considered illegal kidnapping under Mexican law.

Luster vanished during his trial for a series of rapes in which he was alleged to have drugged his victims into unconsciousness and then filmed himself having sex with them.

He was convicted in his absence in January and sentenced to 124 years. Luster’s lawyer, Roger Diamond, said he was awaiting confirmation of his identity. The capture, he added, would aid his pending appeal, which could not be held in his absence and he was about to forfeit his right to appeal had he remained on the run.

At his trial Luster claimed the women had been pretending to be unconscious for the purpose of making a pornographic film. But before the verdict he fled after bail restrictions were relaxed.

The FBI was yesterday seeking his extradition.


Hawaii Channel Poll On What You Think Dog Deserves For Capturing A Convicted Rapist In Mexico... He deserves all the money 378 votes 55%... He deserves some of the money 233 votes 34%... He deserves none of the money 80 votes 12%... Total Votes 691


The Trial Must Go On:

Conviction In Absentia Andrew Luster Jumped Bail Mid-Trial, But Was Convicted In Absentia January 21 Of 86 Counts.


June 19, 2003

Days after cosmetics heir Andrew Luster ditched his Ventura County, Calif., rape trial, his truck was found, his dog was found, and on Jan. 21 Luster was found guilty of raping three women. So now it's only Luster himself who remains to be found, a convicted felon on the lam three weeks and counting.

Luster's disappearance may have hurt him at trial, but it could help him in the long run. His attorney, Roger Jon Diamond, says the jury was prejudiced by Luster's absence, providing one of many grounds for appeal.

"They were given the instruction that flight could be construed as consciousness of guilt," said Diamond. "It did impact it."

Luster is not the only defendant to jump a sinking ship. In August 2001, a Bronx couple jumped their $5,000 bail after being charged with snatching and imprisoning a 12-year-old girl in March 1998. They were convicted in absentia in September, sentenced to 25 years, and hit with additional felony bail-jumping charges after being nabbed in November 2001.

In 1993, the Pennsylvania legislature granted a new trial to hippie guru Ira Einhorn, who was convicted while on the lam in France of murdering his girlfriend in 1979. French officials refused to extradite him, not recognizing convictions in absentia. But the new trial led to the same result. In 2002, Einhorn was convicted and sentenced to life in prison.

Not every state instructs a jury that a defendant's absence may be considered consciousness of guilt, as in California. As veteran criminal defense attorney Pamela Hayes points out, some, like New York, actually do the opposite.

"Sometimes it helps," said Hayes, former chief of the sex crimes division with the Brooklyn district attorney's office. "We call it trying an empty chair. The judge tells the jury, 'Don't speculate.'"

Luster, 39, was convicted in absentia of 86 counts, including multiple rape charges connected to assaults in 1996, 1997 and 2000. Police say he videotaped sexual romps with unconscious women after drugging them with the date rape drug gamma hydroxybutyrate, or GHB.

The great grandson of cosmetics giant Max Factor skipped town after his prospects at trial grew bleak: One victim had already testified about the alleged abuses, and the jury was about to view a videotape labeled "Shauna GHBing." He took with him his pet dog, later found at his mother's, and his Toyota 4-Runner, which was found last week.

Diamond, whose defense suggested Luster's victims were play-acting in the videos, says he has no idea where his client is. "He hasn't called but if he did, I would keep it confidential," said the lawyer. "My presumption is it's protected by attorney-client privilege."

Diamond plans to fight the conviction on a number of fronts. First up is the sentencing, scheduled for Feb. 18. Diamond says his client, who could recieve the equivalent of a life sentence, shouldn't be sentenced in absentia.

For Luster's appeal bid to take off, he'll have to turn himself in to the authorities. In California, a fugitive is not allowed to appeal a conviction. If he's not back within 60 days of his sentencing, he will lose the right to appeal.

But many are hoping to see him back behind bars much sooner. California police and even the FBI have been involved in a national search for the fugitive. Also hunting Luster is Duane "Dog" Chapman, a Honolulu-based bounty hunter who boasts more than 6,000 captures.

Chapman now says that Luster's mother is the key to reeling him in. He plans to scout Elizabeth Luster's properties for her son. Elizabeth Luster did not return calls to her Sonoma, Calif., home.

Chapman and Luster's attorney have sparred, in part over Chapman's motivation for hunting Luster.

But Chapman, who has sent mugshots of Luster as far as Bali and plans to scour the coast for the fugitive, insists he's not a media hound (no pun intended) and is not hunting Luster to get rich.

"I'm a bounty hunter, this is the number one fugitive in America, and I'm on his ass," he said. "This one has become personal. If one of the victims comes up to me and says, 'Dog, thank you,' that's it, I'm paid."


Dog the Bounty Hunter
Catches Serial Rapist Andrew Luster In Mexico



June 19, 2003

Authorities have confirmed that Andrew Luster, the fugitive rapist and Max Factor cosmetics heir, is in custody in Puerto Vallarta, Mexico.

Ventura County, Calif., district attorney's investigator Richard Haas told The Associated Press the FBI has notified him that Luster is being held.

A spokeswoman for Honolulu-based bounty hunter Duane "Dog" Chapman said Luster was found at a nightclub overnight. Luster is now in the custody of Mexican authorities.

Chapman said he's been on Luster's trail since he jumped bail in January.

The wealthy fugitive was spotted in a Mexico nightclub. He and Dog had gotten into a tussel and when Mexican police arrived they not only arrested Luster, but Chapman as well. Under Mexican law, arrests by bounty hunters are considered kidnappings.

Chapman said no reward money is involved in the capture of Luster. He said he was in the hunt for the publicity.

Luster is the 39-year-old great-grandson of makeup legend Max Factor who disappeared during his January trial and was sentenced in absentia to 124 years in prison for rape, poisoning and drug possession involving three women.

When asked what happens next, Haas said Luster apparently has no legal standing to be in Mexico.







SPECIAL REPORT
Inside The Take-Down Of Andrew Luster... Duane "Dog" Chapman's Puerto Vallarta Mug Shot

Fugitive rapist and cosmetics heir Andrew Luster, with new facial hair in this Puerto Vallarta mugshot, was collared Wednesday.

Duane "Dog" Chapman, the bounty hunter who took down fugitive rapist Andrew Luster in a Mexico showdown Wednesday, beat an FBI attache to the case by mere hours, said an FBI official as details of the frantic struggle emerged late Wednesday.

The scramble for Luster, who skipped out on a crumbling California trial on rape and drugging charges, came down to an early morning confrontation in the street.

After more than five months on the case, Chapman caught up with Luster in Puerto Vallarta, Mexico, a resort town of cheap drink specials, discos and American tourists. The bounty hunter brought his sons, Leland and Tim Chapman, and a two-man camera crew.

Leads generated from his Web site had fueled Chapman's five-month search, but this time it was a tip from an American tourist couple who had been in contact with Luster in Puerto Vallarta that set him off.

The couple later tipped off the FBI as well, but Chapman, who boasts 6,000 collars and had followed Luster's trial from Ventura to Santa Monica and beyond, had a head start.


He found the fugitive heir, who had been using the alias David Carrera, in Zoo Bar, near the intersection of avenues Mexico and Honduras. Using mace and handcuffs, Chapman and his crew seized Luster. As the men wrestled Luster outside and piled into two trucks, a Chevrolet Suburban and a Chrysler Voyager, local merchants alerted police to the scuffle.

Chapman's spokesperson, Beth Smith, told Court TV she was on the phone with the burly bounty hunter as he snatched Luster. "(Luster) freaked out a little when he saw Dog," said Smith. "Dog never carries a weapon of any kind, only mace," and it didn't seem like anyone got hurt.

After the take-down, said Smith, the crew headed for the airport. Then the abduction went wrong.

"Duane was taking him to a more secure location and the local cops grabbed him," said Smith.


Law enforcement officials bristled at the mention of Chapman in a press conference late Wednesday, chastising him for going too far, and signaling that they would not help the bounty hunter dodge potential kidnapping charges.

"I think his actions are just beyond the bounds that I can condone," said Ralph Boelter the assistant special agent in charge of the FBI's Ventura office. "He's out there acting on his own ... Certainly it is not something the FBI would condone. We will not be acting on his behalf."

Chapman had his eye on Mexico as early as January. "All these rich guys have their hole in the wall," he said then. "There's always a place where they think there's no cops."

In Mexico, he said, resort employees and local residents often respond to one timeless tactic: handing a potential tipster half of a torn hundred-dollar bill, and promising the other half when their tips pay off.

A Puerto Vallarta newspaper reporter, Angela Corelis, said that fugitive take-downs are commonplace in the resort town. "Once a week they pick someone up down here," said Corelis. "They get drunk and cry about (what they did) in bars."

Ventura County Sheriff Bob Brooks, who said he had six officers working leads on the Luster case at some points in the investigation, told reporters he wasn't embarassed that Chapman scooped his department.


"We were surprised but not embarassed," said Brooks. "He's off the streets."

Just how long it will take before Luster is returned to the U.S. remains to be seen. If Mexican immigration authorities confirm that he was in the country illegally, he could be deported... a quick process. Extradition proceedings would likely take longer.

When Luster does touch down in California, Ventura County authorities will take custody of him.

Officials said Wednesday that it was unclear whether Chapman would qualify for a $10,000 reward for Luster's capture, or for any of the $1 million bond he posted before skipping bail.

"His arrogance was his downfall," said Beth Smith, Chapman's spokesperson and companion. "This is an arrogant person and his his arrogance was his downfall as Dog said it would be."

Luster, the 39-year-old great-grandson of cosmetics king Max Factor, was convicted in absentia of 86 counts, including multiple rape charges connected to assaults in 1996, 1997 and 2000. Police say he videotaped sex with unconscious women after drugging them with the date rape drug GHB.


Luster Journal Found In Motel; Seeks 'Payback' Against Victims & Prosecutors


June 23, 2003

VENTURA, Calif Convicted rapist Andrew Luster sought to justify his crimes and listed his victims and prosecutors under the word "PAYBACK" in a notebook left in Mexico following his capture, according to a published report.

"To want to take a good man's life and destroy his family ... was nothing short of ruthless and much more to the point of unforgivable," said an entry in the notebook, according to the Ventura County Star.

The 13 pages also listed topless bars in Puerto Vallarta, Mexico, the names of people Luster hoped would send him money, and notes on how to pick up women in Spanish, the newspaper reported Sunday.

Luster, 39, is the great-grandson of cosmetics magnate Max Factor. He jumped his $1 million bail and spent nearly six months on the run until he was captured by a bounty hunter Wednesday in the Mexican beach resort. He was returned to California to begin serving a 124-year prison sentence for drugging and raping three women at his home northwest of Los Angeles.

Reporters for the Star and other media outlets fished the notebook from a trash can in Luster's motel room and looked at it Saturday, motel manager Oscar Lopez said. Lopez told The Associated Press on Sunday that motel staff later threw the notebook out.

California authorities came to the motel Sunday looking for the notebook but were told it was gone, Lopez said.

The notebook listed names of those who prosecuted him, the women he raped, detectives and an investigator. All the names were under the heading "PAYBACK," which was underlined, the Star reported.

In several entries, Luster attempted to justify his actions and criticized authorities for prosecuting him.

"Yes they were in an extreme state of inebriation ... But this... as any actively sexual person (player) knows is not outside the grounds of ethical play," Luster wrote in one entry.

Editors at the Star said the paper's reporter had covered Luster's trial and recognized his handwriting.

Laura Bosley, an FBI spokeswoman in Los Angeles, declined to say whether the FBI knew of the notebook or was trying to obtain it. She said the bureau does not comment on ongoing investigations.

Luster's attorney Roger Diamond said he knew nothing about any notebook his client had, but said its contents would have no bearing on his efforts to reinstate Luster's appeal. The appeal had been dismissed June 10 on the grounds Luster had forfeited his right to appeal by jumping bail.


Duane "Dog" Chapman returns to the United States after being held in Mexico
A news conference showcasing bounty hunters Duane "Dog" Chapman, left, half brother Tim, center, and son Leland was held yesterday at the Four Seasons hotel in Los Angeles. The three were credited with tracking down fugitive rapist Andrew Luster in Mexico and were subsequently held on misdemeanor charges of deprivation of liberty.



July 3, 2003

BEVERLY HILLS, Calif... The Hawaii-based bounty hunter facing charges in Mexico for capturing fugitive rapist Andrew Luster said yesterday that he expects to be exonerated.

"I'm sure the Mexican authorities will decide this to go my way," said Duane "Dog" Chapman, who called a press conference at Beverly Hills' Four Seasons hotel after his return to the United States.

Chapman, wearing a poncho and snakeskin boots, sported a blackened right eye that he occasionally hid under sunglasses but would not explain.

"Many of the people in Mexico came up to me and thanked me and said, 'My daughters, my wives are safer because of you, El Perro, and your family,'" Chapman said tearfully, using the Spanish translation of his nickname.

On June 18 the bounty hunter and companions found Luster in the Mexican resort of Puerto Vallarta and seized him. Residents alarmed by the commotion called local authorities who took all of them into custody. Chapman said Luster spit on the bounty hunters while they were in custody.

Luster was quickly deported and imprisoned in California, where he had been convicted in absentia of drugging and raping women in his Ventura County home. The great-grandson of cosmetics legend Max Factor had jumped his $1 million bail during a January break in his trial and vanished.

Mexican authorities ultimately decided that Chapman, son Leland and brother Timothy would be charged with "deprivation of liberty." Authorities briefly detained but did not charge two men who were along to videotape the capture. All five were released from custody on June 21.

Chapman told reporters that he feared Luster was preying on U.S. and Mexican women in Puerto Vallarta. He said his brother spotted Luster in a disco.

Bounty hunter Duane "Dog" Chapman, center, wife Beth, right, and half brother Tim, left, departed a news conference yesterday in Los Angeles. The men were back on U.S. soil after being held in Mexico on misdemeanor charges related to their capture of U.S. fugitive Andrew Luster.

"My brother came and said, 'He's in the club right now, and the flashing lights are on him and the girls are 17 years old walking around. He's like the troll on the bridge, rubbing his hands.' He said, 'He's looking at the prey,'" Chapman said.

The bounty hunter choked up as he described the decision to apprehend Luster.

"There's a song by Eminem that says, 'Take the moment, it's your chance.' We had to protect everyone, we thought," he said.

Chapman said he intended to return to Mexico "soon." He said he never thought he was breaking Mexican law.

"We still don't think we broke the law," Chapman said.

Chapman's U.S. attorney, James Blancarte, said he did not expect his client would have to serve any more time in custody in Mexico. Chapman said his Mexican attorneys were "working on all legal issues."

Boris Krutonog, part of the video crew that taped the capture, said after the press conference that he did not know if there had been any discussion among the bounty hunters about the legality of apprehending Luster in Mexico.

"Dog always does the same thing. He picks up his guys and takes them to the police station. This was supposed to be no different," Krutonog said.

While Chapman would not answer a reporter's question about the black eye, the bounty hunter's entertainment lawyer, Les Abell, said his client told him it was "the cost of doing business."



Duane "Dog the Bounty Hunter" Chapman
Released From Mexico & Returns To U.S.

July 3, 2003

Hawaii bounty hunter "Dog" Chapman returned to the United States Wednesday night after being held in prison for capturing an escaped fugitive.

Chapman captured the millionaire-fugitive and Max Factor heir, Andrew Luster.

Chapman said he couldn't be happier to be back on American soil.

Mexican authorities had detained Chapman along with his son and brother for two weeks because under Mexican law bounty hunting is illegal.

Chapman captured Luster in Puerto Vallarta. The wealthy fugitive was convicted of drugging and raping three women.


Chapman had been on Luster's tail for five months, since his escape from California.

He was asked what was going through his head when he spotted Luster in a Mexican resort nightclub.

"Oh my God. It's Andrew Luster. What a big guy. Six foot three, 245 … didn't know he was that big," Chapman said. "My brother said... 'He's in the club and the flashing lights are on him and the girls are 17 years old and he's like a troll on the bridge, rubbing his hands. He said he's looking at the prey."

Chapman said his attorneys remain in Mexico working out his legal troubles with authorities there.

He praised Mexican authorities, saying they were just doing their job, but at the same time he said he believes he was operating in a legal manner in his capture of Luster.


Every Dog' Has It's Day!

The FBI earns another black eye
This time from the roughneck illegal bounty hunter who captured wanted rapist Andrew Luster in Puerto Vallarta



July 17, 2003

Makeup magnate Max Factor may have been a genius in his day. But his great-grandson Andrew Luster is quite another story.

After abandoning his Ventura beach house in January during a trial on charges that he raped three drugged women, recording the rapes on videotape, Luster chose to hide in tourist-rich Puerto Vallarta – in a room at the Motel Los Angeles, next door to the offices of the town’s district attorney.

Luster was convicted of the rapes and sentenced in absentia to 124 years, and was then featured on the TV program America’s Most Wanted, and on the FBI’s website. The FBI sent “Wanted” posters in Spanish to Mexican authorities. But that didn’t deter the convict from living large, surfing and bar-hopping every day with American tourists and expatriates.

The fact that this went on for nearly six months, with Luster living very much a public life, was enough of an embarrassment to the FBI. But the way that he was captured gave the bureau a glaring shiner. For Luster was fairly easily tracked down and literally tackled, not by a federal agent, but by an arrogant, scrappy bounty hunter named Duane “Dog” Chapman (Dog, by some accounts, because it’s “god” spelled backwards).

Chapman not only brought along a loud, obvious posse composed of his own family, but also a couple of people apparently looking to make a TV program about him. Witnesses said that, after Chapman and his crew found Luster, they threatened him with Chapman’s preferred method of subduing a target – a fire-extinguisher-size can of pepper spray – then wrestled what appeared to be handcuffs on him and drove away in two cars. Taxi drivers notified local police.

Within minutes after the capture, confused Mexican authorities arrested everyone in both vehicles, including TV producer Jeff Sells, actor Boris Krutonog, Chapman, his son Leland, and his brother Timothy. Luster was then deported in record time. Within about 36 hours of his capture, Luster was fitted with an orange jumpsuit and assigned a cell at a Central California prison. The Feds completely ignored Chapman and company. however, who began a strange legal journey, which has taken several bizarre twists and is ongoing.

All five were released from custody June 26, about one week after Luster’s capture. A Mexico judge let Sells and Krutonog off the hook but ordered the three Chapmans to stay local and face trial. Instead, all three returned to the U.S., reportedly crossing legally at Tijuana. Some Mexican authorities said Chapman flauted his bail conditions, issues Chapman’s attorneys were trying to ameliorate. On July 7, the day Chapman was due to check in with the Mexican judge, he was at the Ventura County courthouse demanding his portion of the $1 million bail skipped by Luster. Outside, residents cheered and asked him for his autograph.

When he first captured Luster, FBI officials hastily threw together a press conference in Ventura and shrugged off questions about the way Chapman beat them to the punch – even though, by some accounts, both he and the FBI got the same tip from a Seattle couple eight days earlier.

“We were surprised, but not embarrassed. He’s in custody and that’s the bottom line,” said supervising FBI agent Bob Mack, who, along with other officials, offered several excuses for not getting to Luster before Chapman: There’s lots of fugitives in Mexico. They were unsure of the legitimacy of the tip. They were hours away from catching him themselves. And, to top them all, Luster was a rapist, not a terrorist.

“Terrorism is our No. 1 priority,” explained Ralph Boelter, the assistant special agent in charge of the FBI’s Los Angeles office. “Any terrorism lead is going to be investigated before any fugitive lead.”

FBI spokeswoman Laura Bosley later added that the FBI captures dozens of fugitives in Mexico each year, and had brought in about 30 already this year. “There are more agents assigned to counterterrorism than violent crime, but our agents in violent crime do so aggressively,” said Bosley.

Some suggest otherwise. Min Labanauskas, a real-estate developer near Puerto Vallarta, told CNN that Luster came to him looking for property, but Labanauskas soon realized his client was an American fugitive. Labanauskas says he and his attorney “contacted the FBI here and the American consulate to find out what we should do, but we couldn’t make contact.” So, he said, he called Chapman.

The FBI had expressed no concern that Chapman and his posse remained in the custody of Mexican officials, where he still faces charges of unlawful detention and deprivation of freedom. If convicted, Chapman could get four years in prison. But Chapman’s partner, Beth Smith, told reporters last week that Chapman was not going back to Mexico “under any circumstances.”

“His actions are just beyond the boundaries of what I can condone,” Boelter told reporters. “We will not intervene on his behalf.”

Smith has complained that U.S. authorities seem unwilling to help. She said the hunt cost Chapman thousands from his own pocket, in the hopes of collecting a $150,000 reward. “I love what I do and am honest with what I do, and I don’t get paid unless I catch a guy. So I must catch the guy,” Chapman told Good Morning America in an interview conducted at the height of the search for Luster.

Chapman, owner of Da Kine Bail Bonds in Honolulu and self-proclaimed “greatest bounty hunter in the world,” boasts more than 6,000 captures over the past two decades – a dubious claim, as that would total a bust per day for almost 20 years. The self-proclaimed modern-day Billy the Kid once served time in a Texas prison for first-degree murder – a conviction he claims was unfounded.

Not only does the FBI frown on his tactics, so do many fellow bounty hunters, who say Chapman should have known better than to tackle a fugitive in Mexico. “He represents all of the things that bail agents are trying to get away from – the cowboy image, the renegade, bring ’em home dead or alive,” said Penny Harding, executive director of the California Bail Agents Association, which represents 500 bail bondsmen.

Luster reportedly spat at Chapman before their separation in jail.

Ventura County prosecutors said that Luster took women to his home between 1996 and 2000 and raped them after giving them GHB, known as a “date-rape” drug. A search of his home after his arrest turned up videotapes of Luster having sex with women who appeared to be either asleep or unconscious. In one tape played in court, Luster is seen on camera having sex with a woman and saying, “That’s exactly what I like in my room: a passed-out beautiful girl.”

Luster’s attorney Roger Diamond insists that the sex was consensual, and suggests that the women were feigning sleep to help Luster film pornographic videos. “They were all party girls. It was all consensual. They were all taking drugs,” Diamond said after his client’s capture, as he filed a petition asking the state Supreme Court to reverse a lower court’s ruling that Luster lost his right to appeal when he fled.

A Ventura County Star reporter fished one of Luster’s notebooks out of a trash can outside the motel where he’d been staying. In it, Luster had jotted down Spanish translations for pickup lines and sexual references, wrote names of people whom he expected to send him thousands of dollars, and criticized Ventura County authorities for prosecuting him.

He even made a “payback” list with the names of sheriff’s detectives, his three victims, and prosecutors, including former District Attorney Michael Bradbury. “They were trying to do him in for having sex with two of his past girlfriends, lock him up forever for being with two girls he had slept with over 100 times each,” Luster wrote, referring to himself in the third person. “Yes they were in an extreme state of inebriation and a vid [sic]. But this – as any actively sexual person (player) knows is not outside the grounds of ethical play.”

The notebook ends with May entries, a month or so before his capture, and with specific information about Puerto Vallarta, including names of topless bars.

While in Mexico, Dog growled when reporters encountered him at the jail and asked his feelings about Luster.“Nothing about Luster. Nothing about Luster. That’s it,” he said. “I’m done.”




Duane "Dog the Bounty Hunter" Chapman
Recieves No Bail Money For Rapist Capture

August 6, 2003

Bounty hunter Duane "Dog" Chapman, of Hawaii, was one of several parties hoping to collect some bail money from convicted rapist Andrew Luster at Tuesday's court hearing in Ventura, Calif., but just about everyone came away disappointed, including Chapman.

Chapman and his entourage were not pleased with the ruling in the Ventura County courtroom. Chapman bolted out of court after the judge ruled the professional bounty hunter illegally apprehended Luster and was not entitled to any of the $1 million.

"I can't condone vigilanty justice from the law," Judge Edward Brodie said.

Luster is now serving a life sentence in state prison after Chapman tracked down and captured him in Puerto Vallarta, Mexico in June. Chapman, who calls himself the greatest bounty hunter in the world, was seeking $320,000 in compensation and expenses after being arrested for efforts in Mexico.

"Does this make the criminals now want to run, is this a good message to send to the California criminals? No matter what whether we get paid or not we come to get him," Chapman said.

Chapman is among five parties that laid claim to the bail money after Luster was apprehended for his conviction of drugging, raping and videotaping three women in his Mussel Shoals beach home.

The judge also ruled the bail money belonged to the convicted Max Factor heir and not his mother, Elizabeth, which opened the door for others to lay claim to the funds.

"The whole notion it belongs to his mom was a way to keep it from his victims," victims' attorney Bill Daniels said.

While Chapman didn't receive a dime, the county was awarded $165,000 for their efforts to locate the wanted fugitive. Despite the ruling, Chapman said I will continue to hunt down convicted criminals on the run.

"When we first got in this case it was not about the money. It was about Andrew Luster versus the Dog. Andrew Luster lost and Dog won," Chapman said.




Duane "Dog the Bounty Hunter" Chapman
His Son Leland & Brother Tim
Wanted In Mexico

August 12, 2003

Duane "Dog" Chapman is now a wanted man in Mexico. Authorities in Puerto Vallarta Tuesday issued an APB for Chapman, his son Leland, and his brother Tim in violation of their bail.

The group is charged with criminal association and deprivation of liberty after they captured fugitive Andrew Luster. Chapman and the group were jailed for several days in Mexico.

Mexican authorities had detained Chapman along with his son and brother for two weeks because under Mexican law bounty hunting is illegal.

Luster is now serving a life sentence in state prison.

Mexican authories want the men to be extradited so they can appear in court. Chapman said he left Mexico thinking he was not required to stay there and that it was sufficient for his lawyers to stay in touch with Mexican officials. The bail required them to sign in at court every week.

Chapman, who calls himself the greatest bounty hunter in the world, was seeking $320,000 from a California court for Luster's capture. However, his request was denied.




Hawaii State Legislature Calls Emergency Hearing
To Support Dog The Bounty Hunter Trio
& Fight Their Extradition

August 9, 2006

The nicknamed “Chapman Resolution” to be heard in the House of Representatives tomorrow, Wednesday, March 7th, at 9 a.m. This is a special concurrent resolution which will also include the Senate.

HONOLULU – A much-anticipated emergency hearing in the Hawaii House of Representatives supporting DOG THE BOUNTY HUNTER trio Duane “Dog” Chapman, Timothy “Youngblood” Chapman, and Leland Chapman, regarding the extradition charges against them, is scheduled for tomorrow, as follows:

WHO: Duane “Dog” Chapman and the Chapman family will be in attendance.

WHAT: Hearing on House Concurrent Resolution 50, introduced by State Representative Gene Ward (Rep.-Hawaii Kai-Kalama Valley)

WHEN: Wednesday, March 7, 2007 • 9:00 a.m.

WHERE: Hawaii State Capitol, Room 329 (International Affairs Committee)

HOW: Supporters are welcome to join us at the hearing. Those unable to make it can still send testimony to (e-mail) PAR@capitol.hawaii.gov or (fax) 808-587-0793. (NOTE: Please do not send testimony to Rep. Ward’s office, at it is past the deadline and must go directly to PAR.)

Last month, Rep. Ward introduced House Concurrent Resolution 50, requesting that the Hawaii State Legislature stand up and support the Chapmans, and ask the government and courts of Mexico to drop their extradition proceedings against them. Duane “Dog” Chapman committed to personally appear before the International Affairs Committee which is hearing the measure. Once Resolution 50 passes the committee, it will be referred to the House Judiciary Committee for a second hearing, and then is expected to move forward to passage.

Ward said he has been receiving testimony “from all over the world on this issue.” Ward added, “It is not something the people of Hawaii and the nation are taking lightly; the Dog needs to be free from a Mexican jail.”

Dog, his wife and partner Beth Chapman, Tim, Leland, and the rest of the Chapman ‘ohana will be in attendance at the hearing.

“We are humbled and extremely grateful to Rep. Ward and the entire Hawaii State Legislature for stepping forward with this resolution,” said Chapman. “It means so much because this is our home and we love Hawaii, so to have such an official show of support like this is overwhelming. God bless them for giving us hope during this challenging time, despite their already busy schedules. Thank you from the bottom of our hearts!”

Background

Duane “Dog” Chapman, star of the top-rated A&E television show DOG THE BOUNTY HUNTER, was arrested on September 14, 2006, by U.S. marshals in Hawaii on charges of illegal detention in his June 18, 2003 capture in Mexico of cosmetics heir Andrew Luster. Also arrested were Leland Chapman, Duane’s son, and Timothy Chapman, their associate. The three spent one night in the Federal Detention Center in Honolulu, and were released after posting bail.

Since the arrest, hundreds of thousands of fans from across the country and around the world – including over 50 members of Congress – have been pleading with the U.S. and Mexican authorities for their freedom, holding them up as heroes for bringing serial rapist Luster to justice. Luster is serving a 124-year prison sentence for his heinous crimes against the women he drugged, raped, and videotaped.

Most recently, the Federal Court for the Second District in Guadalajara, Mexico, issued a ruling which was not in the Chapmans’ favor. However, they have filed an appeal with the federal circuit court and continue to pray for justice and full exoneration. They currently remain free.




Duane "Dog the Bounty Hunter" Chapman
Arrested By Federal Marshalls At His Home
After Capturing Rapist Andrew Luster In Mexico


September 14, 2006

Federal marshals arrested bounty hunter Duane "Dog" Chapman and two relatives early morning, September 14, 2006 at his home on Oahu.

The arrest involves Chapman's capture of Max Factor heir Andrew Luster three years ago in Mexico. Luster was wanted in connection with a series of rapes.

Mexican authorities arrested Chapman, his son Leland and brother Timothy on kidnapping charges. Mexican authorities consider their bounty hunting efforts illegal detention and conspiracy.

Chapman's wife, Beth, arrived at federal court Thursday afternoon to attend her husband's first court appearance.


"If we did something wrong then we will stand up and face it. If Duane has to return to Mexico to take care of any misunderstanding, then that's what we will do," Beth Chapman said.

In the courtroom, Chapman appeared upset. Beth Chapman could be seen trying to calm him down before the hearing.

His attorney asked that Chapman have access to his medication. Then tried to get an immediate bail hearing, but U.S. attorneys argued for no bail.

The details of the extradition and whether it will be granted will be worked out in future court hearings.

"We have extradition treaties with Mexico, but it's usually for serious criminals not someone who was chasing down a serious criminal," Chapman's attorney Brook Hart said.

Hart said he is trying to get a reasonable bail set. That will not happen until another hearing on Friday afternoon. The judge indicated that he is inclined to allow the Chapmans out on bail.

The high-profile case launched Chapman into celebrity. Chapman now has his own reality TV series on the A&E cable channel.

Chapman's publicist, Mona Wood, released a statement to the media Thursday morning.

“This is obviously a very upsetting time for the Chapman family. Duane “Dog the Bounty Hunter” Chapman is a true modern-day hero. He arrests the bad guys... he is definitely not one of them. He shall be vindicated,” Wood said in the statement.

Mexican immigration authorities issued an alert for Chapman and two relatives after they failed to show up in court. The judge released them on bail on the condition they show up every Monday to check in with the court, according to Mexican authorities shortly after Chapman left the country.

The arrests came as a shock to the family and their fans.

"It's a shock, it's a sad day. For our country to come for him they should have protected him we need him over here," Dog fan Christa Fernandez said.

"I don't think they should have been arrested for doing something good," Dog fan Barbara Herman said.








Bounty Hunter Duane 'Dog' Chapman Arrested In Hawaii

September 15, 2006

HONOLULU... TV reality star Duane "Dog" Chapman and two co-stars on his show were arrested Thursday in Hawaii on charges of illegal detention and conspiracy in the bounty hunters' capture three years ago of a cosmetics company heir.

Chapman, son Leland Chapman and associate Timothy Chapman were taken into custody and did not resist arrest, said Mark Hanohano, U.S. Marshal for the district of Hawaii. "It went down without incident," Hanohano said.

Mona K. Wood, a publicist for the star of the popular cable series "Dog The Bounty Hunter," said Chapman would be vindicated. "He arrests the bad guys -- and he is definitely not one of them," she said.

The charges stem from Chapman's capture of Max Factor heir Andrew Luster on June 18, 2003, in Puerto Vallarta, Mexico, said Marshals spokeswoman Nikki Credic in Washington.

Chapman's capture of Luster, who had fled the country while on trial on charges he raped three women, catapulted the 53-year-old bounty hunter to fame and led to the reality series on A&E.

Chapman, shackled at his ankles and wearing a blue muscle T-shirt at his first court appearance Thursday, said the government was jealous of his success in hunting down criminals.

"You see what the American government is doing to us? They throw us in jail," Chapman said in a federal courtroom. "I'm so upset about this."

The three are being held in Honolulu. Bail has not been set. They will face an extradition hearing to Mexico under terms of treaties between the U.S. and Mexico, Credic said.

Chapman's son Leland, 29, and Timothy Chapman, 41, no relation, assist Chapman in exploits chronicled for the TV show around the Hawaiian Islands. The show focuses on Chapman's family as much as the bounty hunting, which generally involves tracking down bail jumpers, often creating emotional scenes with repentant captives.

Charges have been pending against the three since local police in Mexico arrested them shortly after they roped in Luster. They posted bail but never returned to Puerto Vallarta for their court hearing on July 15, 2003, Credic said.

Mexican authorities demanded that the Chapmans transfer Luster to Mexican police. Their refusal to do so led to their initial arrest.

A U.S. warrant for their arrest was signed by a federal judge in Honolulu on Wednesday.

Chapman's wife, Beth, said he didn't do anything wrong.

"If Duane has to return to Mexico to take care of any misunderstanding, then that's what he will do," she said outside the courthouse.



'Dog the Bounty Hunter' Arrested In Hawaii

September 15, 2006

Dog The Bounty Hunter star Duane "Dog" Chapman and two of his cohorts were arrested early Thursday in Hawaii, PEOPLE has confirmed.

Chapman, 53, his son Leland, 29, and Timothy Chapman (no relation), 41, were captured on charges of illegal detention and conspiracy stemming from their 2003 capture of Max Factor cosmetics heir Andrew Luster in Mexico.

Chapman and his team won fame – and an A&E reality show – after they caught Luster, a fugitive convicted of raping three women, in Puerto Vallarta. But they were arrested for not turning Luster over to Mexican police, and then skipped bail, U.S. Marshals Service spokesperson Nikki Credic said.

Jay Bieber, public affairs officer for the U.S. Marshal's office in Hawaii, tells PEOPLE the three are slated for extradition to Mexico after a scheduled hearing on Friday.

"The warrant was based on a formal request based on a diplomatic note from the government of Mexico," said Bieber, who said the arrest occurred "around 6:30 a.m., (when) seven deputy marshals went to Chapman's home in Honolulu County."


Chapman's rep, Mona K. Wood, called the arrest shocking, and vowed that the bounty hunter's name would be cleared.

"This was a shock, and is obviously a very upsetting time for the Chapman family," Wood said in a statement. "Chapman is a true modern-day hero. He arrests the bad guys – he is definitely not one of them. He shall be vindicated."

Conflicting accounts of the arrest have already emerged: Chapman's wife, Beth, told MSNBC's Rita Cosby that heavily armed marshals "burst in our door and they just came right in and took him. … (They) didn't even treat him as kind as he treats his own prisoners."

However, Bieber tells PEOPLE the marshals "were not heavily armed but had their standard equipment. They knocked on the door and announced the arrest warrant. The second time they knocked, the door slipped opened on its own. There was no forced entry. As far as I know, none of the marshals drew their weapons."

Bieber described Chapman as "compliant and very respectful. We handle every warrant we receive seriously, and this investigation was handled just like any other."

According to the Associated Press, Chapman was shackled at his ankles and wearing a blue muscle T-shirt at his initial court appearance Thursday. Speaking in a federal courtroom, he claimed the government was jealous of his success in hunting down criminals.

"You see what the American government is doing to us? They throw us in jail," he said. "I'm so upset about this."

Outside the courthouse, Beth Chapman (in a T-shirt reading in sequins, "Got Dog?"), said her husband committed no crime. "If Duane has to return to Mexico to take care of any misunderstanding, then that's what he will do," she said.

A rep for Chapman's network said in a statement, "A&E supports Dog and his family during this difficult time and is proud of his role in helping to bring a convicted serial rapist to justice."



‘Dog’ Wants Leash Loosened With Bail

The bounty hunter's defense asks that he be free on bail before an extradition hearing

September 15, 2006

The "Dog" spent last night in the federal pound.

Duane "Dog" Chapman, the well-known bounty hunter made even more famous by his A&E reality show, was arrested yesterday at his Portlock Road residence in connection with his June 2003 capture of convicted rapist and Max Factor heir Andrew Luster in Puerto Vallarta, Mexico.

Also arrested in different locations were his son Leland and partner, Timothy Chapman.


Honolulu attorney Brook Hart, who represented all three yesterday at an initial appearance in U.S. District Court, said the Chapmans are alleged to have violated Mexican law that prohibits the capture of fugitives by persons not authorized under Mexican law. The Mexican government is seeking to extradite the trio.

The three Chapmans, barefoot and shackled, filed unsmiling into a federal courtroom that was standing room only. Some were federal employees curious to see the "Dog" in person.

U.S. Magistrate Judge Barry Kurren is expected to hear arguments today and will decide whether to set bail and release the trio or have them held without bail pending an extradition hearing.


Beth Chapman arrived with family members at federal court yesterday afternoon for an initial court appearance by her husband, bounty hunter Duane "Dog" Chapman. Chapman, son Leland and partner, Timothy Chapman, were arrested yesterday morning for extradition to Mexico.

The United States has an extradition treaty with Mexico, and the two countries extradite people all the time. "But usually, they're extraditing serious criminals, not somebody who assisted in arresting a serious criminal -- so it's an unusual case," Hart said.

He said the three men did the world "a great service" by capturing Luster, who fled during his trial and was convicted in absentia of drugging and raping three women. Luster was returned to the United States to serve a 124-year sentence.

Flanked by family members and her husband's associates, Chapman's wife, Beth, exited the federal courthouse yesterday clutching the steel-toed boots her husband had been wearing when he was arrested.

As a throng of reporters and cameras surrounded them, she thanked all their supporters and vowed to clear the Chapman name.

"The Chapman name stands for something," she said, her voice breaking. "If we did something wrong, we will stand up for it, and if Duane has to return to Mexico to take care of any misunderstandings, then that's what we will do."

"We love Hawaii," she said. "We will never hurt anyone on this planet; we will never hurt anyone on this island."

Assistant U.S. Attorney Ron Johnson noted the case is not a domestic criminal case and that the right to bail does not apply to extradition cases. "Since this is an international issue between two governments, there is a presumption against bail unless in special circumstances."

Hart argued this is an unusual case and that Chapman put his efforts and time, and at considerable risk, to find Luster.


Defense attorney Brook Hart talked to news reporters outside federal court after yesterday's proceedings.

If released, Hart said Chapman is "happy" to check in with the federal pretrial services office as often as several times a day if he has to. He described Chapman, owner of Da Kine Bail Bonds in downtown Honolulu, as an internationally known figure who has lived in Hawaii since 1979.

"He wants to go home with his wife and family and continue to film two times a week the TV program for A&E," Hart said. "If there's one person who can't be missed, it's Duane Chapman."

Attorneys for Chapman in Mexico are currently trying to resolve this issue, which could negate the need for an extradition hearing and allow him to return to Mexico, Hart said.

U.S. Magistrate Judge Barry Kurren indicated that the defense would have to make a good argument that special circumstances exist to allow bail in this case, and requested they return with more information. "I'm inclined, with appropriate cash bail requirement, to consider releasing the Chapmans," he said.

"They certainly have strong family ties here given their notoriety, and the financial stake they have in their business operation makes it unlikely they will risk all of that by fleeing," Kurren said.

Among those attending yesterday's hearing were California visitors Jack and Sharon and Jack Phillips' cousin Paulette Lollar, who heard of Chapman's arrest while visiting Da Kine Bail Bonds and came to support him.

"I'm a big fan, and I came to show my support for Dog and his family," Lollar said.

"He's great," said Sharon Phillips. "He's doing the work that somebody else doesn't want to do."



Bounty Hunter 'Dog' Free On $300,000 Bail

September 16, 2006

"Dog The Bounty Hunter" star Duane "Dog" Chapman and two of his cohorts are now free on bail after spending Thursday night in a federal detention center for their 2003 capture of Max Factor cosmetics heir Andrew Luster in Mexico.

Before a packed Honolulu courtroom on Friday, Chapman, 53, his son Leland, 29, and Timothy Chapman, 41, were ordered to wear electronic monitoring devices and not leave their homes, except for work, until their extradition hearings to face trial in Mexico, the Associated Press reports.

Bail was set at $300,000 for "Dog," and $100,000 each for the other two men.

Chapman and his team won fame – and an A&E reality show – after they caught Luster, a fugitive convicted of raping three women, in Puerto Vallarta. But bounty hunting is illegal in Mexico, and the men were arrested for not turning Luster over to Mexican police, and then skipping bail, officials said.

Luster, meanwhile, is now serving a 124-year sentence for his crimes.

During Friday's 1-hour, 10-minute hearing, Chapman reportedly made the sign of the cross and mouthed "I love you" to his wife, Beth Chapman, who was sitting in the front row. The judge said that the men do not pose flight risks, while defense attorney Brook Hart argued that the electronic monitors were "overkill."

"It's ironic that the bounty hunter would go around with a bracelet while arresting people. But so be it," said Hart.

Speaking to reporters after the hearing, Duane Chapman, vowed he "absolutely" would be cleared.

"We're glad for our support," he said, according to the Honolulu Advertiser. "We're glad for everything. Everyone loves us, thank you very much. If it wasn't for the people that love us, we don't know what would have happened."

He also added: "We love America. The federal marshals treated us with great respect. But let me tell you, you never want to go to a federal prison because it's terrible."

Outside the federal courthouse, fans of the reality show star – whose legal process is being filmed for his series – waved placards of support. Among their messages: "Let go our hero" and "In Dog we Trust."

"Our whole family likes Dog. He captures people who do wrong," a Bounty Hunter-shirt-clad Shannon McNamara, 11, of Los Angeles, told AP. "Plus my older sister wants to marry Leland."




Dog The Family Speaks Special To Air On A&E

September 16, 2006

Dog, Leland and Tim Chapman were taken into custody by U.S. Marshals early Thursday morning in connection with charges stemming from their 2003 arrest of convicted serial rapist, Andrew Luster. Andrew Luster, the famed heir to the Max Factor cosmetics fortune, was convicted of drugging and raping three women over a four year span. During his trial in 2003, Luster fled the country to Mexico.

In June 2003, Dog and his team tracked the fugitive Luster in Puerto Vallarta, Mexico, where he was living under an alias, and arrested him. As bounty hunting is illegal in Mexico, Dog, Tim and Leland were arrested by the Mexican authorities and Luster was handed over to the United States government by the Mexicans, he was subsequently found guilty and is currently serving a 124 year prison sentence. After being released on bail, Dog, his family and team, returned to Hawaii and to their lives as bounty hunters.

Thursday at 6:00am, U.S. Marshals stormed Dog’s home and took him into custody. They then did the same to Leland and Tim. The three are being held in Honolulu where they will face an extradition hearing to Mexico. There will be a hearing in Hawaii today at 3:00pm local time. At that point we will have more details to share with you.


Dog, Leland and Tim were all released on Friday night on bail, as the judge concluded they are not flight risks. While out on bail, they will be required to remain in the state and wear electronic monitoring devices until they return to court for extradition hearings to face trial in Mexico. No date has been set for those hearings, and we will continue to update you as more details become available.

Hear Dog and Beth tell the full story in their own words on Tuesday at 10PM/ET exclusively on A&E’s original presentation... “DOG: THE FAMILY SPEAKS”

The special features post-release interviews and behind-the-scenes footage from the trying ordeal. Additionally, tune in to NBC’s Today Show on Monday morning to see Dog and Beth interviewed live by Matt Lauer.




A Cornered Pit Bull... Bounty Hunter Becomes Prey

September 18, 2006

At the crack of dawn eight or so men crept quietly up to the house in the Portlock neighborhood of Hawaii, the woman inside was making school lunches for her children and noticed them too late. They bum-rushed the bedroom, capturing their target in cuffs before he knew what hit him.

Dog the Bounty Hunter is wanted in Mexico for a capture there.

Duane Chapman, known as Dog, the premier American bounty hunter, would have appreciated their artistry had he not been the guy in handcuffs. Mr. Chapman, the star of A&E’s highly rated “Dog the Bounty Hunter,” was transported to the federal detention center in Honolulu to await extradition to Mexico on a three-year-old charge stemming from his capture in Mexico of Andrew Luster, the Max Factor heir who was eventually convicted of raping three women.

Back in 2003 Mr. Chapman and his colleagues were charged by Mexican authorities with “deprivation of liberty” and held in jail in Puerto Vallarta before they made bail and slipped out of the country. Now, with less than a month before the warrant would have expired and in the midst of filming the fourth season of his enormously successful reality series, Mr. Chapman was the one being brought to justice. (Yesterday the Chapman family suggested that some horse trading was under way, pointing out that Francisco Rafael Arellano Félix, part of a Mexican drug cartel, was handed over to United States authorities.)

As American symbols go, Mr. Chapman is a pretty epic one. He has had 4 wives, 12 children, 18 robbery convictions, a conviction for being an accessory to murder, and, according to his math, more than 7,000 fugitives brought to justice. He belonged to a biker gang, but cries easily and enjoys vacuuming. His show, filmed mostly in Hawaii, is a mix of tweaking meth-heads and postarrest moralism, a business built on repossessing human flesh. But with Mr. Chapman, the drama always seems to continue after the cameras shut off. On the day he was to be married this spring in a filmed ceremony, his estranged daughter died. And now this.

“He leads a complicated, edgy life,” said Lucas Platt, the supervising producer of the show. “Going after Andrew Luster was a risky decision, but he thought it was the right thing to do. Now it has taken an unfortunate turn.” The turn won’t hurt ratings. A&E plans a special for tomorrow night, and the stories about his travails will only add to the legend. The man who brought vengeance to thousands of bail jumpers found himself on the wrong end of justice.

“I was totally freaked out,” Mr. Chapman said on the phone Saturday after he had posted a $300,000 bail to await a hearing on extradition. “There were guys that I had put in there that were yelling all sorts of things at me.”

His wife Beth, a co-star in the series, worked frantically for his release.

The 2003 Luster arrest, which catapulted Mr. Chapman to a new level of celebrity and eventually resulted in A&E signing him for the series, led to a lasting grudge on the part of Mexican authorities, who demanded that the United States extradite the bounty hunter.

On Thursday night the Mexican attorney general released a statement suggesting that what Mr. Chapman had done was an affront to national sovereignty.

Larry Butrick, chief of the criminal division for the United States Attorney’s Office in Honolulu, said that his staff was merely executing a valid warrant that came from headquarters in Washington.

“The court here really will just be looking at the legality of the extradition and if there is a fit under the treaty we have with Mexico,” he said.

One of Mr. Chapman’s lawyers is hoping that the matter can be settled somewhere short of a Mexican prison.

“I have a high level of confidence that we will be able work with the good will and good faith of the Mexican authorities in resolving this satisfactorily,” said William C. Bollard, who represents Mr. Chapman, his son Leland and Tim Chapman (no relation), a bounty-hunting colleague, all of whom helped apprehend Mr. Luster. For now the Dog is at large, complete with an ankle bracelet.

“If I have a fugitive on the run and have to go out at night, I have to notify them,” he said, referring to federal officials. “I have no problem with that.”

In the month before his arrest, Mr. Chapman was busy hunting jumpers for the benefit for those who posted bond, and for a nimble A&E camera crew that jogged after them. The show’s template is simple and effective: The quarry is selected, a plan is made among the family members who make up most of his crew, the hunt commences and then capture, usually followed by a hug at the end, although a handcuffed one.

A bad guy made good by an 18-month stint in prison on the accessory-to-murder charge, Mr. Chapman sees an arrest as a kind of intervention, a way to let the runner face the music and begin a new life.

“We put families back together,” he explained, even though they often do that by putting one of the heads of the household behind bars. It has been wildly popular... “Dog the Bounty Hunter” is A&E’s most-watched show... partly because his mix of mayhem and moralizing has a kind of outlaw sweetness. It is a bit of Ward Cleaver, though accompanied by multiple cans of Mace, just in case.

On television, or in person during a recent visit by a reporter to Mr. Chapman’s headquarters in Hawaii, the hunt is a spectacle to behold. On a hot day near the end of August, Mr. Chapman laid out the agenda for the day. Item first and last: putting bond jumper Monalisa Hartsock in cuffs.

“She has the letter R tattooed on her left breast,” Dog told his colleagues at Da Kine Bail Bonds, which he and his wife own on Queen Emma Street in Honolulu. Speaking from behind major sunglasses that play MP3’s including “I Fought the Law” and thumping an ornate American Indian walking stick for emphasis, Dog warned that Ms. Hartsock was one of the many island inhabitants who got lost in smokable meth: “She knows she is going to jail.” The lowdown on Ms. Hartsock is followed by a shout-out to Jesus, who always rides point on any hunt.

Hawaii is a near-perfect ecosystem for bounty hunting. It is a rock, after all, thousands of miles out in the ocean, so a person can hide in only so many places. Meth has overtaken the island, so there is no shortage of bail-jumping, tweaky perps. Dog crossed over after his prison time, but just barely, still working the corners of the law to substantial effect. The rest of his crew could not be cast any better: Beth, a large sexpot with brutal intelligence and an oft-hidden heart of gold; Tim, the wizened sensei who works himself into a quiet rage; Duane Lee, the normal guy with abnormal biceps who loves taking down bad guys; Leland, the wayward son swaddled in tattoos and mail from adoring fans, and “Baby” Lisa, the up-and-coming toughie.

Mr. Chapman sees himself as a fisher of men, an enforcer who brings people to justice in what he calls “the cuffs of love.” He first turned it around as the number one Kirby vacuum cleaner salesman in the country during the early 1970’s and now has taken his dust-busting ways to cleaning up the culture at large.

In a single episode he works the gutters for data, deploys phony accents and white lies on the phone, and physically tracks a runner in a way that seems a bit supernatural. It helps that most crooks are dumb as a box of rocks, but still.

The name Monalisa has Beth Chapman humming the song recorded by Nat King Cole. She has a lovely voice and is paired with a top-heavy endowment that borders on the architectural and a tendency to go junkyard dog when cornered. All honey for the time being, she convinces one of Monalisa’s pals who posted bail to help them find her.

Beth gently explained to Desiree that while it is hard to give up a pal, “the alternative is you have to pay the bond.” A call finally went through to Monalisa... Desiree convinced her to meet at a 76 gas station. The trap is set.

Right on schedule, Monalisa pulled in. “That’s her,” Desiree said. But Beth’s car was momentarily blocked in by Tim’s so she could not come around the other side, Monalisa saw Dog... tough to miss in his stunt mullet... hop out of Tim’s car, and she began backing up.

Leland flew out of Beth’s car and filled the fleeing car with Mace, as did Duane Lee, but Monalisa tore out in reverse and careened through an intersection toward the highway, cars squealing to avoid her. Beth, in hot pursuit, filled the car with expletives “Of all the rookie moves in the world!” she said. She fruitlessly crisscrosses the nearby neighborhood at high speed, while the car driven by Tim does the same. Mistakes were made. (Monalisa was finally captured by Dog and company early this month.)

Dog freely admits later to messing up Monalisa’s capture. He pleads guilty as well and to rolling around in his 15 minutes. “I always wanted to be the good guy in the black hat,” he said.

Despite the success of his show, his team had to scrape together money to bail him. Each member of the crew has a hard-knock history, no one assuming they deserve or can depend on success. They may have gone Hollywood, but their trashy roots are never painted over with peroxide.

By definition, anybody Mr. Chapman catches is having a bad day, but when the chase is over, Dog always gives them a cigarette and The Talk, an echo of a life-changing discussion he had with a deputy who was taking him to jail so many years ago.

Earlier that same week in August the hunting was more fruitful. After looking all over Oahu, they found Jacob Falenofoa, another meth casualty, with the help of his wife, who co-signed the bond. They found him at the house of a girlfriend’s parents in Pearl City. Riding back on H1, a highway that heads back to Honolulu, Dog went all biblical on Jacob, talking about how the drugs he was doing “ate his brain” and how deep down he was a good family man. This being Hawaii, a rainbow bloomed to the north as the speech peaked.

Dog said he was happy with the day’s outcome.

“I believe in what I do, I am good at what I do, and I want to be able to say that Jesus played a role in it,” he said. “Never, ever, has anyone ever escaped.”

Not even Dog. A few short weeks later, the cuffs of love found Mr. Chapman.




Dog the Bounty Hunter: 'I'd Do It Again'

September 20, 2006

Calling himself "a prisoner of war in a war against crime," Duane "Dog" Chapman says that, despite his arrest for bounty hunting in Mexico and the prospect of jail time, "I would absolutely do it again."

On Tuesday night's A&E special Dog: The Family Speaks Out, Chapman said, "You sit all alone in your cell and you wonder, Is this karma?" and admitted, "My biggest fear is going back to Mexico and doing time." He faces six months to four years in a Mexican prison.

Chapman, 53, his son Leland, 29, and brother Timothy Chapman, 41, were arrested by U.S. marshals in Hawaii on charges of depravation of liberty and illegal seizure for their 2003 capture of convicted serial rapist Andrew Luster in Mexico.

Though Luster is now serving a 124-year prison term in the U.S., bounty hunting is illegal in Mexico, and the three face extradition.

The raid on Chapman's home took place just before dawn on Sept. 14. On the TV special, Chapman said that when his wife Beth told him marshals were there to arrest him, his response was, "No. My taxes are paid. What have I done?"

He added, "They arrested me the way I would have arrested them … with respect." But, he said, he heard the words he dreaded most: "The Mexican government wants you back."

Chapman spent the night in a federal lock-up before posting $300,000 bond at a Sept. 15 bail hearing. "I was put in a cell – if you can imagine what Hannibal Lecter went through, minus the collar," he said.

Leland Chapman said the other prisoners, many of whom had been put behind bars by the bounty hunters, "were screaming at us, saying they were going to kill us."

Now wearing an ankle monitor and required to stay in his house between 11 p.m. and 5 a.m., Chapman joked about being under his wife's supervision, and wondered what she might do if he doesn't finish his spaghetti. Said Beth, "I got him where I want him. … This is going to work out splendidly."

Still, the family is worried. Chapman's lawyers said they hoped the matter would be resolved without going to trial, though that may not be possible.

Meanwhile, Chapman's defense could cost hundreds of thousands of dollars. To help, one of Andrew Luster's victims is starting a legal defense fund.

At the end of the show, Chapman said, "I tell my kids, Your daddy's going to die with his boots on. … Truth and justice have to prevail."




Chapman Released From Ankle Bracelet

September 29, 2006

HONOLULU... TV reality star Duane "Dog" Chapman, out on bail while international criminal charges are pending, had his electronic monitoring ankle bracelet removed Thursday for a trip to New York.

A judge agreed to temporarily free Chapman, the star of "Dog The Bounty Hunter," of the ankle bracelet so he could attend previously scheduled appearances on the East Coast, said his attorney, Brook Hart. Chapman will return to Honolulu on Wednesday.

"As a practical matter, traveling around with an ankle bracelet is not a very efficient practice," Hart said.

Chapman was released on $300,000 bail Sept. 15, a day after he and two co-stars were arrested for illegal detention and conspiracy in the capture of a cosmetics company heir in Mexico.


The trio had ensnared convicted rapist Andrew Luster, the Max Factor heir, on June 18, 2003, in Puerto Vallarta, Mexico. But they, too, were arrested by Mexican authorities.

Chapman must attend extradition hearings to face trial in Mexico, where bounty hunting is considered a crime.

"Mr. Chapman should have stayed in Mexico to resolve the matter" when he was arrested there in July 2003, Hart said.

Chapman's capture of Luster, who had fled the country during his trial on charges he raped three women, catapulted the 53-year-old bounty hunter to fame and led to the reality series on A&E. Luster is now serving a 124-year prison term.




Mexico Stated That A Mexican Federal Court
Has Denied Duane "Dog" Chapman's Injunction Request

February 16, 2007

An Associated Press report out of Guadalajara, Mexico stated that a Mexican federal court has denied Duane "Dog" Chapman's injunction request and has ruled that the star of A&E's "Dog the Bounty Hunter" should be extradited and stand trial for deprivation of liberty

A charge stemming from Dog and his posse's 2003 capture of convicted serial rapist, Andrew Luster in Puerto Vallarta.

Mexican authorities had asked for Chapman's extradition from Hawaii and U.S. Marshals took Dog, son Leland Chapman and associate Tim Chapman into custody back on September 14th for their role in bringing Luster to justice.

Dog, Leland and Tim were released on bail and have been awaiting a ruling on their request to stop the extradition proceedings, which would otherwise require them to face trial in Mexico.

"Our attorneys have not even been formally informed of the court's decision, as of yet," Dog and wife Beth Chapman said.

"We are obviously deeply disappointed and fearful of what will happen, and are currently absorbing the news and discussing our options at this time."

Andrew Luster, the notorious heir to the Max Factor cosmetics fortune, was convicted of drugging and raping three women over a four year span.

During his trial in 2003, Luster fled the country, leading to an international manhunt. In June 2003, Dog and his team tracked the fugitive Luster in Puerto Vallarta, Mexico, where he was living under an alias, and seized him.

Luster was subsequently found guilty in the US and is currently serving a 124 year prison sentence.

At that time,in June 2003, Dog, Tim and Leland were arrested by the Mexican authorities for unlawful deprivation of liberty and released on bail.




House Committee Votes Unanimously to Support Dog Chapman & Family

March 8, 2007

HONOLULU – The much-anticipated emergency hearing in the Hawaii House of Representatives supporting DOG THE BOUNTY HUNTER trio Duane “Dog” Chapman, Timothy “Youngblood” Chapman, and Leland Chapman, regarding the extradition charges against them, was supported unanimously today by the members of the House International Affairs Committee. Indeed, the members marked their enthusiastic support when asked for their votes of “Aye” or “Nay”, with “Strong Aye” and even “Super-sized Aye” votes.

House Concurrent Resolution 50, nicknamed the “Chapman Resolution,” was introduced by State Representative Gene Ward (Rep. Hawaii Kai-Kalama Valley), to call on the President of Mexico and the courts in Mexico to drop extradition efforts against the Chapmans, and show the State of Hawaii’s support for the Chapmans. At today’s hearing were Duane, Tim and Leland, Duane’s wife and partner Beth Chapman, and Duane Lee Chapman, Jr. and Lyssa Chapman, who are also regular featured cast members on the popular A&E reality television show.

Several people submitted testimony in person, including Dog, but it was noted by Committee Chair Rida Cabanilla, that hundreds of written testimonies were received, and she and her committee members had also received numerous calls re the resolution. They were overwhelmingly in support of the resolution, with only a scant minority against it, according to Cabanilla.

Among those against was the lone testifier at today’s hearing who called the hearing a “publicity stunt,” and mocked the proceedings as a waste of time.



Luckily, his words had no affect on the vote with the committee members, as evidenced by their unanimous vote in favor of the resolution. Committee Co-Chair Representative James Kunane Tokioka ended discussion among the committee by praising Dog for his compassion, noting that he has to deal with some rough criminals out there, but he does it with aloha.

To the committee, Duane Chapman said, “You guys represent the people and I just want to tell you thank you from the bottom of my heart. I will always make you proud. I didn’t start this to be a hero. I just wanted people to see what I do for a living. But I’m going to show you, and I promise you (this), what a hero is.”

Supporters from Hawaii, Michigan, California, and other states were present, including Make-A-Wish teenager Dean Luciano. The Chapmans try to grant Make-A-Wish requests whenever they can, and Luciano said this was his dream come true. He posed for photos with Dog and Beth, got their autographs, and was able to chat with them for a while before he had to leave. Luciano and his family returned to Michigan today after the hearing.

Now that Resolution 50 has passed the committee, it will be referred to the House Judiciary Committee for a second hearing, and then is expected to move forward to full passage by the State Legislature.

Despite some saying this measure will be ineffective in the overall fight against extradition, as this is on a State level, the Chapmans feel just the opposite. Having support from their home state has been spiritually uplifting for them, and they also feel the State’s initiative of support will be heard throughout the country, and all the way to Mexico.

Duane “Dog” Chapman, star of the top-rated A&E television show DOG THE BOUNTY HUNTER, was arrested on September 14, 2006, by U.S. marshals in Hawaii on charges of illegal detention in his June 18, 2003 capture in Mexico of cosmetics heir Andrew Luster. Also arrested were Leland Chapman, Duane’s son, and Timothy Chapman, their associate. The three spent one night in the Federal Detention Center in Honolulu, and were released after posting bail. of thousands of fans from across the country and around the world – including over 50 members of Congress – have been pleading with the U.S. and Mexican authorities for their freedom, holding them up as heroes for bringing serial rapist Luster to justice. Luster is serving a 124-year prison sentence for his heinous crimes against the women he drugged, raped, and videotaped.

Most recently, the Federal Court for the Second District in Guadalajara, Mexico, issued a ruling which was not in the Chapmans’ favor. However, they have filed an appeal with the federal circuit court and continue to pray for justice and full exoneration. They currently remain free.

For more information and ways you can help support the Chapmans through petitions and letters, please visit www.dogthebountyhunter.com. Season 4 of DOG THE BOUNTY HUNTER premieres on A&E on April 10th.




Popularity, Precedent Could Keep ‘Dog’ Free

March 25, 2007

A U.S. judge could keep bounty hunter Duane Chapman out of Mexican prison

Revered at home for his capture in Mexico of millionaire serial rapist Andrew Luster, Hawaii-based bounty hunter Duane "Dog" Chapman might be a bitter reminder to Mexican law enforcement of a controversy concerning a 1990 abduction south of the border.

Mexico was angered two years later when the U.S. Supreme Court approved of the Drug Enforcement Agency's hiring of several Mexicans to capture a doctor in Guadalajara to stand trial in the United States in the slaying of a DEA agent. The first Bush administration promised not to engage in transborder abductions again.

Although the two governments also agreed to recognize transborder captures by bounty hunters as extraditable offenses, the proviso never was incorporated into extradition treaties.

Chapman is charged in Mexico with deprivation of Luster's liberty, an offense for which he could be extradited. However, U.S. judges have differed in civil and criminal cases about whether abductions under such circumstances are extraditable.


Public opinion is not supposed to count for much in a court of law, but it might be critical in the battle over Mexico's attempt to extradite Hawaii bounty hunter Duane "Dog" Chapman for his capture of Max Factor heir and sexual assailant Andrew Luster.

If the issue of Chapman's extradition comes to U.S. federal court, a judge could exercise wide discretion on how to rule, because the issue might fall outside the extradition treaty between the United States and Mexico. For now, the case against Chapman is pending in the Mexican court system. Public pressure could come into play in either country -- Chapman's charisma has captivated millions of viewers of his Hawaii-based hit television show, "Dog the Bounty Hunter," which in turn has fueled his notoriety.

A state House resolution on Tuesday praising Chapman and his wife, Beth, is important "because it makes clear that people who are clear thinkers and careful about enforcing and making the law are supportive of the Chapmans and what they did," said Brook Hart, Chapman's attorney. "They want justice for the Chapmans, and the more people who want justice for the Chapmans, the more we hope that Mexico will give justice to the Chapmans."

Indeed, Chapman is seen by many Americans as a true hero who brought to justice a despicable serial rapist who had been on the run. Luster was in the habit of incapacitating women with the date-rape drug gamma hydroxybutyrate, or GHB, and was on trial in California when he fled the United States. He was convicted in absentia and now, thanks to Chapman, is serving a 124-year prison sentence.

The perspective from south of the border is somewhat different. Mexican law enforcement still might be smoldering about a 15-year-old U.S. Supreme Court ruling that essentially made American bail-jumpers in Mexico fair game to be caught and hauled back across the Rio Grande. U.S. administrations since then have tried to reduce the friction.

The legal issues concerning extradition are controversial. Although bounty hunting is legal in Hawaii, "that doesn't mean that a bounty hunter can go anywhere in the world to gather up his quarry," said Russell Covey, an assistant professor at the Whittier Law School in Costa Mesa, Calif. "A police officer is authorized to make an arrest in Hawaii but can't go to another country or even another state and arrest people. That would be considered a criminal offense."

Chapman is charged not with kidnapping but with "deprivation of liberty," which may be punishable by as little as six months in jail and as long as four years. If charged at the lower level, he would stand no risk of being extradited for such a minor offense.

The facts also are in dispute concerning Chapman's capture of Luster on June 18, 2003, in Puerto Vallarta, a resort town on Mexico's Pacific coast.

Chapman included in his ranks Timothy Chapman (no relation), son Leland and a man who Chapman claims to have thought was a Mexican police officer who moonlighted as a cab driver. A local law-enforcement official needs to be present during such a capture, and Chapman has said the man, named Filiberto, had shown him his badge and gun as proof of his authority.


Legislators lined up to greet Duane "Dog" Chapman, top right, wife Beth, in the House chambers last Tuesday afternoon. State Rep. Gene Ward, standing next to Beth, presented the Chapmans with a state of Hawaii Certificate of Commendation for their service to the Hawaii community for the cause of justice and public safety.

However, resort owner Min Labanauskas, who introduced Filiberto to Chapman, has said he is not an officer but merely a cab driver who once was a tourism security guard, according to Kent Black, co-author of Chapman's 2005 book, "You Can Run But You Can't Hide: The Life and Times of Dog the Bounty Hunter."

Filiberto was present when Chapman captured Luster near a taco stand in Puerto Vallarta, and, in his cab, led the caravan destined for what Chapman says he intended to be a police station. According to one account, the car carrying Chapman and Luster was stopped at a roadblock that Filiberto had passed through, two blocks short of the police station and past the airport where he supposedly intended to board Luster for a U.S.-bound plane.

Labanauskas told Black that Filiberto had gone home while the Chapman car mistakenly had followed another cab. Luster and Chapman's entourage were taken into custody at the roadblock.

The 1978 U.S. extradition treaty with Mexico, similar to a treaty with Canada, allows accused offenders to be sent from one country to the other to face justice offenses that are criminal in both countries. A Virginia-based federal appeals court handed over a bounty hunter to Canada in 1983 for his seizure of a bail jumper in that country. Unlike that case, however, Chapman did not bring Luster back to the United States; Mexican police turned Luster over to U.S. authorities.

The United States and Mexico collided over a capture stemming from the 1985 torture and bludgeoning to death of Enrique "Kiki" Camarena Salazar, a U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration agent, in Guadalajara, Mexico. The DEA hired several Mexicans five years later to kidnap Humberto Alvarez-Machain, a Guadalajara physician accused of prolonging Camarena's life so others could further torture and interrogate him. Alvarez challenged the charge against him, maintaining that his abduction in Mexico violated the 1978 extradition treaty between the United States and Mexico.

The Supreme Court rejected Alvarez's argument. In its 1992 ruling, then-Chief Justice William Rehnquist wrote that the treaty "says nothing about the obligations of the United States and Mexico to refrain from forcible abductions of people from the territory of the other nation, or the consequences under the treaty if such an abduction occurs."

Mexican officials were angered by the ruling, and the White House tried to mollify them. President George H.W. Bush quickly gave his assurance in a letter to Mexican President Carlos Salinas that his administration would "neither conduct, encourage nor condone" such transborder abductions from Mexico in the future.

Alan J. Kreczko, then deputy legal adviser to Secretary of State James Baker, said in congressional testimony less than three weeks later that his boss and Mexican Foreign Secretary Fernando Solana exchanged letters "recognizing that transborder abductions by so-called 'bounty hunters' and other private individuals will be considered extraditable offenses by both nations."

Two years later, the two countries' administrations agreed upon such a Treaty to Prohibit Transborder Abductions. However, it defines such abductions as those "by federal, state or local government officials" from the country where the person is wanted "or by private individuals acting under the direction" of government officials. Not only are bounty hunters unaffected by such an agreement, it never was sent to the Senate for ratification.

While post-Bush I administrations might have honored the agreement between Baker and Solana, a judge might ignore it.

"There is a role to play by the executive (branch) in deciding whether or not to extradite somebody," said Covey. "The executive branch has discretion on whether or not to deliver somebody who is found to be extraditable by a judge.

"The defense could argue that this policy does not establish any legal precedent that makes it clear that kidnapping somebody pursuant to bounty hunting is an extraditable offense," Covey added. "The court is still going to have to find that the offense qualifies as one that is extraditable."

In a civil lawsuit in which Alvarez, who later was acquitted, sought redress for his abduction, U.S. District Judge Stephen V. Wilson dismissed a tort claim against the DEA agents on the basis that the abduction was legal. The applicable law, he noted, was that of California, which allows bounty hunters and gives them the right to make a citizen's arrest in Mexico.

The 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals also rejected Alvarez's claim that he was illegally abducted. "The United States does not recognize a prohibition against transborder kidnapping," the appeals panel ruled, "nor can it be said that there is international acceptance of such a norm."

In a footnote in the Supreme Court's 2004 rejection of the Alvarez claim, Justice David H. Souter wrote that Francisco Sosa, one of his abductors, "might well have been liable under Mexican law" despite Wilson's assertion, but the high court did not address the question, which was not at issue in its ruling.

The Supreme Court rejected all of Alvarez's claims for compensation for his detention. "It is enough to hold that a single illegal detention of less than a day, followed by the transfer of custody to lawful authorities and prompt arraignment, violates no norm of customary international law so well-defined as to support the creation of a federal remedy," Souter concluded.

The question might come down to whether the courts view such a brief detention in a criminal case the same as in civil proceedings.

Events affecting ‘Dog’ Chapman case

The following are key occurrences that might affect the fate of Hawaii bounty hunter Duane "Dog" Chapman, who is facing extradition to Mexico for what authorities there claim was his illegal detention of an American. fugitive within their borders.

1978: U.S.-Mexican extradition treaty is signed into law by President Jimmy Carter.

1985: U.S. Drug Enforcement Agent Enrique "Kiki" Camarena Salazar is tortured and slain in Mexico.

1990: Mexicans hired by the DEA capture Mexican physician Humberto Alvarez-Machain in Guadalajara, Mexico. Alvarez is brought back to the United States to stand trial for his alleged involvement in Salazar's killing.

1992: U.S. Supreme Court rules the Alvarez abduction was legal, not in violation of the extradition treaty. Secretary of State James Baker promises no further such abductions by the government or bounty hunters, but the agreement is not incorporated into the treaty.

2003: Dog Chapman captures Andrew Luster in Puerto Vallarta, Mexico. Luster is taken by U.S. officials back to serve his prison sentence, and Chapman is charged with deprivation of liberty for detaining Luster.




‘Dog’ Chapman Off The Hook In Mexico

Judge Orders Halt to Bounty Hunter Duane Dog Chapman’s Extradition to Mexico

Chapman on Wednesday apologized for using a racial slur repeatedly in a profanity-laced tirade during a private phone conversation with his son that was recorded and sold to the National Enquirer who posted the recording online.

Television bounty hunter Duane “Dog” Chapman, who had his reality show taken off the air after getting caught using a racial slur, will not be extradited to Mexico to face a pending appeal of kidnapping charges against him, a judge ruled Monday.

The U.S. government had been trying to send Chapman, his son Leland Chapman and a third man to the resort town of Puerto Vallarta, where they were charged with kidnapping Andrew Luster, a Max Factor heir who had jumped a $1 million bond on charges that he drugged and raped three women.

Luster’s disappearance during his trial in California set off an international manhunt by police, FBI and bounty hunters trying to recoup some of the bond money. In June 2003, Chapman and the others apprehended Luster, and the fugitive was taken back to the United States to serve the 124-year sentence he was given while on the lam.

But because bounty hunting is illegal in Mexico, prosecutors in that country charged the three with kidnapping and asked U.S. authorities to arrest the trio and ship them to Puerto Vallarta.

A Mexican judge dismissed the kidnapping charges in July, ruling that Mexican prosecutors had taken too long in their attempts to bring the trio to trial. But Mexican prosecutors appealed the ruling, and the U.S. attorney’s office in Honolulu, where the senior Chapman lives, declined to dismiss the extradition proceedings pending the outcome.

Still, U.S. Magistrate Judge Barry Kurren in Honolulu on Monday dismissed the extradition attempt because the judge said the three are no longer charged with any offenses, despite the appeal.

“I don’t think they have any regrets whatsoever in facilitating the capture of Mr. Luster, who is a known and convicted rapist,” his San Francisco lawyer, James Quadra, said Monday. “Though this has been a difficult process, they are proud of what they have done.”

Quadra declined to comment on the tempest that Chapman created last week when he was caught on tape using the racial epithet.




Mexico Drops All Charges Against Dog and the Gang!

As reported, on July 30th, the First Criminal Court in Puerto Vallarta, Mexico dismissed all criminal charges pending against Dog, Tim and Leland Chapman on the grounds that the statute of limitations had expired.

However, A&E has learned that Dog and his Posse are not in the clear quite yet.

Although the cancellation of the warrant still stands, on August 1st, an appeal was filed by the prosecution to overturn the lower court's decision. VA&E has been told that in Mexico, rulings against the prosecution are generally appealed as a matter of principle.

In the meantime, our thoughts and best wishes are with the Chapman family as they await the outcome of the appeal which could take many months.



DOG' FANS... BOYCOTT THE NATIONAL ENQUIRER & THE ADVERTISERS THAT HAVE THREATENED TO PULL THEIR ADS... Wayne Perry, president of SiCap Industries LLC dba Sinus Buster' Capsaicin Pepper Nasal Spray... Ameriprise Financial... Virginia Ferguson, a spokesperson for Yum! Brands, Inc... Yum! Brands, Inc... Taco Bell... Pizza Hut... KFC... Dr. Kenneth Frank, owner of Dr. Frank's pain relief... Dr. Frank's Pain Relief...Drew Palmer, owner of Palmer Advertising in San Francisco... Thank you for your consideration, Publisher/Terry Hembree



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