A 42-year-old woman was arrested early Wednesday morning for suspicion of felony eluding and four misdemeanor offenses following a brief pursuit, according to a Carson City Sheriff’s Office booking report.
The driver, Jessica Glover, was taken into custody at 1:50 a.m. following an investigation. She was also booked for suspicion of misdemeanor no proof of insurance, failing to obey a stop sign, expired registration and obstructing a peace officer.
According to the report, a deputy was dispatched to 1400 Medical Parkway to investigate an unwanted person on the property. The reporting party said there was a subject sleeping inside a vehicle. The person refused to respond to the reporting party. The RP stated the subject had been trespassed from the property before.
A deputy arrived on scene when dispatch advised the subject left in an unknown direction. The deputy conducted an area check and located the vehicle in the 1500 block of Medical Parkway, the report states.
The deputy approached the vehicle, which did not have a license plate displayed on the rear. The deputy knocked on the front passenger side window. Inside the vehicle the deputy observed the sole occupant, Glover, who was seated in the driver seat. The woman turned the vehicle on, backed up and drove around the deputy’s patrol vehicle, which was not blocking her movements.
The deputy got into their patrol vehicle and attempted to catch up to the vehicle, going southbound on Medical Parkway. The deputy noted the street is a loop and caught up to the vehicle prior to it passing through the stop sign and crosswalk without stopping.
The vehicle then went eastbound on Medical Parkway, toward North Carson Street. The deputy initiated a traffic stop. The vehicle did not stop and turned southbound onto North Carson Street while running a red light and going through a crosswalk, the report states. The vehicle continued southbound on north Carson Street and finally yielded on the shoulder. The report notes there were multiple opportunities and places for the vehicle to pull over prior to where it yielded.
The deputy approached the passenger side and directed the driver to roll the passenger window down and turn her vehicle off. The woman rolled the window down half way and turned her vehicle off. She began to record their interaction with her cellphone and said the deputy was harassing her. The deputy informed her the reason for the stop was a lawful reason, the report states.
She began yelling and continued to say the deputy as harassing her. The deputy asked the woman multiple times for her driver’s license. She eventually provided a driver’s license. A records check showed the woman had a valid license and the vehicle had expired and suspended registration.
After learning the status of her registration the deputy asked her for proof of insurance. She refused to provide proof of insurance, grabbed a dictionary and started to read the officer the definition of “harass,” the report states.
The deputy asked the woman why she was delaying and obstructing them. She said she was not delaying or obstructing. Deputies were able to open the driver door, where she was arrested for suspicion of felony eluding likely to endanger property or people and misdemeanor obstructing a peace officer, no proof of insurance, failure to obey a stop sign and expired registration. Bail: $20,000.
In other arrests:
— A 48-year-old Carson City woman was arrested early Wednesday for suspicion of misdemeanor DUI. According to the booking report, at 11:58 p.m. a deputy was dispatched to a south Carson City casino for a report of a vehicle accident.
A deputy arrived and saw a vehicle facing south that had crashed into the traffic light pole on the corner of South Carson and Old Clear Creek Road with a male laying on the ground and the female driver sitting on the ground outside the car. The deputy asked both parties if they needed medical attention. The woman declined to be seen by medics.
The deputy asked for her driver’s license and she handed the deputy a wallet and told the deputy they can find it. The deputy told the woman she needed her to remove it for them and she handed the deputy her debit card. The deputy handed the debit card back and asked her for her driver’s license. She provided the deputy with a Nevada driver’s license, the report states.
The officer asked the woman to stand up and speak with them. The deputy had to help her stand up and had to hold her up due to her being unstable on her feet while standing, the report states.
She swayed side to side and back and forth while trying to stand. While speaking, the deputy could smell an odor of alcohol coming from her person and she also had red, watery eyes. The deputy asked where she was coming from. She advised of a restaurant on Winnie Lane. The deputy asked if she had any alcohol while she was there and she said “a couple drinks,” the report states.
The deputy asked if she would submit to standardized field sobriety tests and she said yes. The deputy noted she struggled to answer most questions including not knowing where her location was, the time of day and telling the officer the last time she slept was in 2017, the report states.
A deputy attempted to perform the horizontal gaze nystagmus test three times but the woman was unable due to lack of focus and excessive crying. The officer also determined the woman was too unstable on her feet to attempt the one leg stand and walk and turn tests, the report states. The deputy felt there was a risk the woman would fall and hurt herself during the course of the tests, the report states. She provided a preliminary breath test of .251 and was arrested for suspicion of DUI. She agreed to voluntary provide an evidentiary blood sample. Bail: $1,137.
— A 33-year-old Pahrump man was booked into Carson City Jail Tuesday for a misdemeanor contempt of court warrant issued March 26, 2025 out of Carson City Justice Court. Bail: $3,000 cash.
— All information for the crime log (unless otherwise noted) comes from the arrest reports supplied by the Carson City Sheriff’s Office, and is considered by law to be public information. All subjects are innocent until proven guilty in a court of law. The policy of Carson Now is to name anyone who is arrested for a felony offense.
