Felon Straps GPS Monitor To Stray Dog

Close-up of a dog resting on green grass

A wanted felon charged with illegal weapon possession dodged court-ordered tracking by strapping his GPS ankle monitor to a stray dog’s collar, leaving Albany County residents exposed to a dangerous fugitive on the loose.

Story Snapshot

  • Lamont Alexander Holmes, facing felony loaded weapon charges, removed his court-mandated GPS ankle monitor and attached it to a pit bull mix found wandering near Krouner Road in Nassau, N.Y.
  • A Good Samaritan took the loose dog to a local veterinarian, where staff discovered the tampering device, alerting Schodack police and Albany County Probation.
  • Probation had already detected tampering alarms; a bench warrant now hunts Holmes, who remains at large as of January 15, 2026.
  • This unprecedented evasion tactic underscores failures in judicial release decisions and monitoring systems, risking public safety in urban-rural New York areas.

Holmes’ Bizarre Evasion Tactic Unfolds

Lamont Alexander Holmes faced felony possession of a loaded weapon charges. Albany County Judge William Little released him from custody but ordered a GPS ankle bracelet for monitoring. On a Tuesday morning before January 15, 2026, a woman found a loose pit bull mix near Krouner Road in Nassau, N.Y. She took the dog to a veterinarian office. Staff noticed the unusual device on the dog’s collar and called Schodack police. This chain of events exposed Holmes’ creative bid to evade justice.

Probation Alerts Trigger Manhunt

Albany County Probation Department received tampering alarms from Holmes’ device before the dog’s discovery. Police confirmed the monitor belonged to Holmes after vet staff reported it. Probation officials described the method as something they’ve never seen before, calling it unique among common tampering like cutting or hiding. A bench warrant issued immediately for Holmes’ arrest on violation charges. As of the January 15 WNYT broadcast, he remained at large with whereabouts unknown.

Schodack police notified probation upon device confirmation. The incident occurred in Nassau, near Albany, blending rural roads with urban oversight challenges. Local media provided exclusive coverage, amplifying the “dogged pursuit.” No sightings or arrests followed the warrant issuance in available reports.

Judicial Release Sparks Safety Concerns

Judge William Little’s decision allowed Holmes’ release under monitoring despite serious weapon charges. This case highlights vulnerabilities when felons game the system. Residents now face risks from a non-compliant suspect loose in Albany County. Traditional family values demand accountability, not leniency that endangers communities weary of soft-on-crime policies from past administrations.

Conservatives applaud Trump’s focus on law and order, contrasting Biden-era releases that fueled crime waves. This incident erodes trust in probation efficacy, pressuring courts to prioritize public safety over defendants’ freedoms.

Broader Implications for Monitoring Systems

Short-term, Holmes faces escalated charges for tampering and evasion. Long-term, the stunt may drive upgrades to anti-tampering technology. Albany County communities bear the brunt, with a felon evading capture. Socially, it undermines faith in judicial oversight. Politically, it spotlights release decisions amid frustrations with overspending on flawed systems.

Related precedents like Mobile County’s monitoring failures led to costly shifts from private firms to sheriff units. Here, no direct parallels exist, but the novelty demands tougher enforcement to protect American families from such absurdities.

Sources:

ONLY ON 13: Albany man on the run after ankle monitor found on dog

Ankle monitoring company threatens legal action against Mobile County Sheriff’s Office