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Chicago Man Receives Additional 14-Month Sentence for Failing to Surrender to Serve Mail Theft Time

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Published on February 28, 2025
Chicago Man Receives Additional 14-Month Sentence for Failing to Surrender to Serve Mail Theft TimeSource: Unsplash/Tingey Injury Law Firm

A Chicago man has been handed a consecutive prison term following his guilty plea for failing to surrender to serve a previously imposed sentence, federal authorities said. Nurldon Green, III, age 32, received an additional 14 months to follow up his current 27-month stint in the clink for mail theft, plus two years of supervised release, as decreed by U.S. District Court Judge Philip P. Simon, Acting U.S. Attorney Tina L. Nommay announced.

Green had been originally sentenced on February 22, 2024, after having been found guilty of Theft of Mail, a crime that mandated 27 months of incarceration. The expectation was for Green to initiate this term on April 4, 2024, but he did not appear at the designated Bureau of Prisons institution or report to the United States Marshals Service in Hammond, Indiana, as required. After he failed to report, Green was finally apprehended on August 31, 2024, and has been detained ever since.

Per the U.S. Attorney's Office for the Northern District of Indiana, the investigation into Green's initial offense and consequent failure to surrender was a collaborative effort between the United States Postal Inspection Service and the United States Marshals Service. Assistant United States Attorney Emily Morgan led the prosecution of this case, resulting in Green's subsequent sentencing.