Crime & Safety
Nashua And Merrimack Men Arrested After Granite Shield Operation
Thomas Eosue was arrested on a criminal liability conduct heroin dealing charge while Ryan Moore was arrested on a court warrant.
NASHUA, NH — Two men were arrested in Nashua after police held an Operation Granite Shield initiative in the Gate City on April 30, 2019. Thomas Eosue, 20, pictured left, of Fairway Drive in Merrimack, was arrested and charged with criminal liability for the conduct of another; acts prohibited, sale of a controlled drug-heroin. Also arrested was Ryan Moore, 26, of Pine Street in Nashua, on a capias warrant from the Hillsborough County Superior Court.
The original charge on Moore’s warrant was possession of a controlled drug-felony. Both men were held without bail.
Member of the police department’s Narcotics Intelligence Division, Problem Oriented Policing, and Traffic Enforcement units arrested Eosue and Moore “for various drug crimes, and various crimes frequently associated with criminal behavior related to drug activity,” according to Lt. Brian Kenney of the Nashua Police Department.
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Eosue, according to a previous post on Patch, was previously indicted for felonious sexual assault after an incident in August 2017. In March 2018, when he was living in Hudson, he was arrested in Merrimack on a domestic violence charge. Also that month, Eosue was arrested in Manchester on drug, criminal threatening, and reckless conduct charges, according to Manchester Ink Link.
Moore was arrested in Londonderry in February 2017, on a stalking charge. In September of that year and March of this year, he was arrested on driving charges in Nashua. In January 2018, he was arrested on bench warrants for nonappearance in court.
Find out what's happening in Nashuafor free with the latest updates from Patch.
Kenney urged residents to contact the Narcotics Hotline at 603-594-3597 with any information concerning illegal drug activity in the city.
Editor's note: This post was derived from info supplied by the Nashua Police Department. It does not indicate a conviction. This link explains the name removal request process for New Hampshire’s Patch police reports.
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