SALINE CO.— An Eldorado man already serving a 2015 sentence for Unlawful Restraint and Strangulation has been arrested after police find out the teenage girl he brutalized was living with him.
On Monday, October 17, at approximately 2:08 a.m., Eldorado officer Ryan Ward was dispatched to 2915 Locust St., after police were contacted by 20-year-old Ashley N. Stuby, who reported that Christopher Lars Goolsby, 23, of 2905 Temple St., Eldorado, and two other females had been to her house fighting with her.
Upon arrival Stuby told officer Ward that the two females with Goolsby were Alesha Makayla Ann Frailey and Katie Edwards.
Frailey was 17 years old when she reported that Goolsby, 22, of the 2900 block of Temple St., Eldorado, lured her to a camper trailer he had been sleeping in and when she arrived he began beating her in the head and face.
At that time he had also been accused of strangling Ashley N. Stuby, identified as a family member.
Stuby said that Edwards attacked her and she fought her and then Frailey jumped in and she fought her as well.
Stuby after she was finished with Frailey that Goolsby ran at her and hit her so hard she fell to the ground.
She said the reason for the fight may have been that she had been “dating Gooslby for a long time” and that he was currently living at his mother’s house, on Temple Street.
Officers checked the status of an Order of Protection handed down in the wake of the 2015 criminal case keeping Goolsby from being anywhere near Frailey, and found it to be in effect until January 15, 2017.
When lawmen arrived at Goolsby’s mother’s house they found him there with Frailey.
Frailey told officers that she had come to the Temple Street home of her own volition and that she and Christopher were “still” dating.
Goolsby’s mother said she had told Frailey to stay away from her house.
Be that as it may, authorities discovered that Frailey was staying with Christopher Goolsby in his room.
The unemployed Mr. Goolsby was taken into custody and charged with two counts of Violation of an Order of Protection.
Cash bond in his most recent case was set at $500.