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The contractor is faced with more criminal charges that are accused due to older exploitation

Several criminal complaints are charged against a local contractor who was the focus of an NBC 10 I team examination.

Cranston's police arrested and accused Jonathan Enright, 43 by Cranston, with a money contract with false advance and exploitation of an oldest of more than 100,000 US dollars.

The alleged victim is a man in the late 1960s.

His sister said NBC 10 News that he showed visible signs of a cognitive decline. And according to Cranston's police report, the investigators received the reports of his doctors about the dementia state of the alleged victim.

At that time, Enight was the tenant of the man, as can be seen from the report received from NBC 10 News.

The sister of the home owner, who asked not to be identified, told NBC 10 News that she believes that Enight was friends with her brother to take advantage of him.

The police report claims that Enight had torn a floor and walls out to repair a simple leak and did not end this work or chimney repairs.

The report states that the home owner's bank had been withdrawn his account in the course of a year after 170,000 US dollars had been withdrawn, and this Enight even went to the bank with the man to get money out.

The homeowner and his sister complained to Cranston Police in April last April.

According to the report, the civil servant advised them that it was a civilian affair and they should sue enright and turn the state contractor board member.

According to the first report by NBC 10 on customer complaints against Enight, which was broadcast at the end of September, sister NBC 10 news contacted the situation of her family.

NBC 10 News then called the police chief of Cranston, Michael Winquist, to inquire about it.

Winquist sent the officials back to speak to the family. An investigation began, which led to the criminal charges.

“The initial delay was caused by the initial case, which was classified as a civilian matter by the respondent representative and was not forwarded to detectives for follow-up,” Winquist wrote to NBC 10 News.

NBC 10 News for the first time in September reported that the state supervisory authorities were accused of enright without working without registering a contractor, using the registration of another contractor and false advertising and describing him as a “threat to the well -being of the public”.

Four customers informed NBC 10 News that Enight did bad work and had done jobs unfinished after they were paid.

The day after the initial NBC 10 messages were broadcast, Enight approved a distance order from the state contractor registration and license authority for the state contractor.

NBC 10 News reported at the beginning of this month that the police from East Providence Enight charged in one of these cases in which he was accused of illegally describing himself as homeowners in the work permit for the project.

Enights lawyer was asked about an answer to the charges in Cranston and again told NBC 10 News that she had no comment on how she had for each of the previous stories after Enright refused to get a comment.