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Stutsman County Court Records: Sentences, Fines, and DUI Cases Filed April 4

Erik John Eggert, 44, of Valley City received 143 days in North Dakota's 24-7 Sobriety Program among sentences and DUI filings recorded in Stutsman County on April 4.

James Thompson2 min read
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Stutsman County Court Records: Sentences, Fines, and DUI Cases Filed April 4
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Erik John Eggert, 44, of Valley City drew one of the more layered dispositions in the April 4 Southeast District Court docket, ordered to complete a chemical dependency evaluation, finish all recommended treatment, and enroll in North Dakota's 24-7 Sobriety Program for 143 consecutive days. The court also imposed $1,500 in fines and fees, $125 in administrative fees, $100 in costs, and a $25 victim-witness fee. Of a 20-day incarceration term, 10 days were suspended and 10 were recorded as served.

The 24-7 Sobriety Program, a statewide initiative, requires participants to submit to twice-daily sobriety monitoring through breath testing or transdermal alcohol-detection ankle bracelets. Courts frequently layer it alongside chemical dependency treatment, as Eggert's sentence illustrates, creating a multi-track supervision structure that runs from intake evaluation through post-treatment monitoring.

Nathan Scott Gunderson, 37, of Medina appeared in the same docket on a charge of DUI, Aggravated First Offense, with a recorded blood-alcohol concentration greater than 0.16, which triggers the aggravated classification under North Dakota law. Details of Gunderson's sentence conditions were not included in the April 4 filing summary.

The April 4 roundup, which reflects actions from both the Southeast District Court and Jamestown Municipal Court under Judge Lawrence Kropp, also included traffic cases, lower-level misdemeanor dispositions, and administrative items. All defendants are listed as Jamestown residents unless otherwise noted; Eggert's Valley City address and Gunderson's Medina address placed them among the out-of-county residents whose cases were processed through Stutsman County's docket. Valley City, the seat of Barnes County, falls within the Southeast Judicial District, which spans multiple counties with chambers in Jamestown, Valley City, and Wahpeton.

Readers interpreting these listings should keep two legal benchmarks in mind. A North Dakota Class C felony carries a maximum penalty of five years in prison and a $10,000 fine. A deferred imposition of sentence, which appears frequently in these compilations, means the underlying charge is dismissed entirely at the end of the deferral period, provided the defendant meets all conditions ordered by the court.

The $25 victim-witness fee, $100 in costs, and separate fines categories visible in Eggert's entry are standard cost structures applied across most North Dakota criminal dispositions and appear consistently throughout the docket.

Full case records, including probable cause affidavits and sentencing memoranda, are held by Clerk of District Court Wanda Auka at the Stutsman County Courthouse, 511 2nd Ave SE, Jamestown, during regular courthouse hours of 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. The North Dakota Court System's public-access portal at ndcourts.gov/public-access allows searches of criminal, traffic, and civil cases statewide, though restricted case information is not included. State's Attorney Frederick R. Fremgen and Sheriff Chad Kaiser oversee prosecution and law enforcement operations tied to cases appearing in the docket; Maureen McGilvrey serves as county Recorder.

Stutsman County's court listings carry particular weight given the county's geography: at 2,298 square miles, it is the second-largest county in North Dakota by area, and many residents who cannot travel to Jamestown rely on published docket summaries to track case progress.

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