It has been nine months since bounty hunter and cop-wannabe Wayne Lozier was sentenced to ten years in prison on federal kidnapping charges after barging into a woman’s home without a warrant and driving her across state lines over a missed court date from a misdemeanor charge.
And by now it should be sinking in that he will not receive the same favorable treatment from the courts usually provided to actual law enforcement officers.
After all, a federal judge denied his motion to be released pending appeal earlier this year — a courtesy normally extended to police officers arrested for violating people’s rights — and last month, another judge expressed skepticism over his argument that he was wrongly convicted because of improper jury instructions.
Lozier, who has a history of impersonating police, was licensed as a bails bondsman in Louisiana but not in Missouri where he and his partner seized the woman from the home she was staying at after leaving an abusive relationship in …