Forsyth County jail roster shows April 10 bookings on drug, theft charges
Moneka Carol Carter appears on the April 10 inmate catalog facing a felony cocaine possession charge with bond set at $7,500, part of a roster that day heavy with drug and theft bookings.

Moneka Carol Carter was booked at the Forsyth County Detention Center on April 10 on a felony cocaine possession charge, with bond recorded at $7,500 on the Sheriff’s Police-to-Citizen inmate catalog. That single entry sits among dozens of April 10 roster listings that include drug-possession, misdemeanor larceny, trespass and failure-to-appear charges, showing the jail’s weekend operational picture.
Other named arrests on the April 10 listing include Donald Lee Sapp Jr., Edwin David Marin, both listed with primary charges of DRUGS-POSS SCHED II, Jayquan Tyrone Crockett listed for possession of marijuana with bond $5,000, and Shameka Davonne Gadberry listed for LARCENY/MISDEMEANOR. The roster shows James Troy Merritt booked for 2ND DEGREE TRESPASS and Jose Ivan Chaulizantcollado Jr. listed for FAIL TO APPEAR/COMPL with bond $46,000. Kailin Donri Galloway II appears with an assault with serious injury charge and bond $10,000. Several entries list preliminary court dates, including April 13, 2026 and April 17, 2026.
The Forsyth County Police-to-Citizen inmate catalog provides the public-facing snapshot used by family, attorneys and the public to locate detainees and check basic booking details. Each roster entry records arrest date, primary charge, bond when set, and sometimes descriptive identification details; the catalog shows multiple arrests stamped Arrested 04/10/2026 and links those administrative data to initial court scheduling. These roster listings reflect initial law-enforcement charges and do not, by themselves, record final case outcomes, which are determined through the Forsyth County Clerk of Court and the North Carolina Judicial Branch dockets.
The county jail handling these April 10 bookings is the Forsyth County Detention Center, or Law Enforcement Detention Center, at 201 North Church Street in Winston-Salem. The facility serves the whole county, lists a maximum capacity just over 1,000 inmates, and can be reached through the detention-center main line, 336-917-7600. For diversion and treatment follow-up, county Health & Human Services points to the Stepping Up initiative, the SUPER program and the county Mental Health Court; the county also lists a Mobile Integrated Health referral number, 336-703-2273, and a peer-support specialist contact, Jose Perez.
Operational pressures frame how these bookings are handled. In early April 2026 Sheriff Bobby F. Kimbrough Jr. publicly raised a projected more-than-$1 million budget overrun tied largely to inmate medical costs and overtime and has pressed commissioners for added funding to fill detention staffing vacancies. Local reporting and past television investigations have documented detention-officer shortages and concerns about detainee conditions, factors that affect booking throughput, medical care and access to diversion options.
How many April 10 arrests move to prosecution, diversion or dismissal will be decided in court. District Attorney Jim O’Neill, the Forsyth County Public Defender office led locally by Paul James for indigent defense, and advocacy groups including the ACLU of North Carolina remain central to whether cases tied to the April 10 roster are routed into the county’s treatment-oriented programs or proceed through standard prosecution. The April 10 snapshot, with several drug-possession and larceny bookings alongside high medical and staffing costs, highlights the policy tensions county leaders must resolve between enforcement, care and diversion.
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