LEWISTON — Three weeks after vowing to stay sober and crime-free, Norman "Bo" Thompson is back in jail.
Officials at the Cumberland County Jail in Portland said Thompson was booked on two charges Wednesday morning and held on $3,000 bail.
Thompson, 36, was arrested by Portland police after he was found in possession of items reported missing from a car parked at 23 Lamb St. in Westbrook, patrol supervisor Brett Bissonnette said Wednesday night.
Portland police Lt. James Swett confirmed Wednesday night that his department made the arrest in connection with the Westbrook burglary.
The car owner, Bissonnette said, contacted police at 9 a.m. Wednesday to report that debit cards, cash, a phone charger, a GPS device and a driver's license were missing. Westbrook police went to the jail Wednesday afternoon and served Thompson with summonses for charges of burglary of a motor vehicle and violation of bail conditions.
Westbrook police officer James Sarrenkopf is investigating the burglary, Bissonnette said.
Thompson, who listed an address of 509 Cumberland Ave. in Portland, is scheduled to appear in 9th District Court in Portland at 1 p.m. Friday, the jailer said.
It may take little to keep Thompson in jail for a long time.
He is best known for a third-story leap from a Lewiston tenement in 2007 that was photographed by Sun Journal photographer Russ Dillingham, who tackled Thompson as he fled from police. A week later, Thompson was arrested after a 14-hour standoff with police at his mother's house in Mexico.
In May 2009, Thompson was sentenced to 15 years in jail for burglary, theft and other charges. Since nearly all of the sentence was suspended, he could serve another 13 years for the past offenses.
“You have a significant amount of time hanging over your head,” Justice John Nivison told Thompson at the sentencing.
In a July 12 interview with the Sun Journal, Thompson said he was "all set."
“I don’t think I’ll get in trouble again," he said. "I got too much to lose.”
Thompson talked about his move to Portland, where he has been attending an anger management group, meeting with a substance abuse counselor and participating in art therapy.
His therapy followed a diagnosis of bipolar disorder, he said. He took medications to keep his impulses in check.
“I think I’m getting old an’ I got to
retire from trouble.” he said in the recent interview. “I’m 36 an’ I can’t handle it no more.”
While in jail, he had met older prisoners.
“I don’t wanna be them sittin’ in jail
when I’m 50," he said.





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