Hannibal Police Reports, June 8-11
Published 4:43 pm Saturday, June 13, 2026
HANNIBAL — Hannibal police made several arrests over four days for outstanding warrants, driving while intoxicated, failure to register as a sex offender and possession of a controlled substance, while also investigating reports of felony theft, fourth-degree assault and other disturbances.
On June 8, officers arrested a man on an in-state warrant during an information call at 4355 Paris Gravel Road. Later that day, another man was arrested on two failure-to-appear state warrants and one out-of-state warrant after an information report near South 11th Street and Warren Barrett Drive.
Also on June 8, a man was arrested for driving while intoxicated following a possible DWI report on U.S. 61 near James Road. A woman was arrested for DWI in connection with a traffic hazard on Colfax Avenue near Ely Street. A trespass suspect was arrested at 413 Broadway. Officers also responded to a report of unlawful use of a weapon at 533 Walnut Street, where a suspect remained under investigation.
On June 9, police arrested a man on an in-state warrant during a citizen contact near St. Mary’s Avenue and James Road. Officers also took a delayed report of felony theft at 777 Broadway.
On June 10, officers responded to a disturbance in progress near 315 Broadway, where a woman reported being the victim of fourth-degree assault; the suspect was administratively closed. A separate disturbance at 1416 30th Street involved a reported violation of a protective order, with the suspect pending investigation.
On June 11, during an information report at 2400 Chestnut St., a man was arrested for failure to register as a sex offender and possession of a controlled substance. Police also handled a domestic disturbance with no crime at 3650 Stardust Drive.
Throughout the period, officers responded to numerous other calls, including false burglar alarms, traffic hazards and stops, abandoned vehicles, psychiatric issues, civil disputes, animal complaints, property maintenance issues, welfare checks, and trespass reports. Many alarms were determined to be false, and several domestic and disturbance calls resulted in no criminal charges.
