North Kohala standoff suspect ruled unfit

Britany Wolf and Lucas Wolf
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KAILUA-KONA — A woman facing charges in connection with a standoff incident in Hawi was deemed unfit to stand trial.

Britany C. Wolf, 28, was determined to be a danger to herself and others and was committed to the custody of the director of health to be placed in an “appropriate institution for detention, care and treatment.” The ruling was made during a Sept. 7 hearing before Kona Circuit Judge Melvin Fujino.

Her next scheduled court date is Nov. 29.

Britany Wolf was indicted Feb. 12 on two counts of first-degree attempted murder of a law enforcement officer in connection with a Jan. 22 standoff, during which she reportedly fired shots at law enforcement on Alaalae Road, in addition to 14 other charges.

Her husband, Lucas R. Wolf, also was included in the indictment, but not charged with attempted murder. He faces 15 charges.

The husband and wife appeared in court together up to this point. However, during the Sept. 7 hearing, Lucas Wolf was found fit to stand trial and a jury trial was scheduled for Dec. 11.

Lucas Wolf’s new attorney, James Biven, also sought to have his client released on his own recognizance or his bail reduced. Lucas Wolf’s bail has been maintained at $26,000 despite several requests to have it lowered.

Biven’s motion indicated Lucas Wolf would have had a place to live if released and will be employed. If not released on his own recognizance, Biven sought Lucas Wolf’s bail be reduced to $8,000.

Deputy Prosecutor Sheri Lawson filed a motion in opposition to Biven’s request. From the verifiable information before the court, Lawson’s motion reads, there has been no changed circumstance that would warrant a reduction of bail or bail status change to release on his own recognizance.

“The charges in this case are serious with respect to the defendant’s actions and firearms were involved,” Lawson’s motion states.

Fujino denied the request.

The couple both face one count each of first-degree reckless endangering, first-degree terroristic threatening and second-degree terroristic threatening and three counts each of failure to register a firearm when mandatory and permits to acquire a firearm violations, according to the indictment.

In addition to those and the two first-degree attempted murder charges, Britany Wolf was indicted on one count each of first-degree terroristic threatening, fourth-degree criminal property damage and two counts of first-degree reckless endangering, according to the indictment.

The charges stem from a Jan. 22 standoff on the 3500 block of Alaalae Road. Police say the couple exhibited aggressive behavior toward the property owner when he attempted to evict them, and allege Britany Wolf fired a single shot from a weapon. The 56-year-old property owner was not injured.

The department’s Special Response Team responded to the scene. As the incident continued, police say, Britany Wolf fired two additional gunshots, one of which struck the team’s armored vehicle.

Both have remained in custody at Hawaii Community Correctional Center since their arrest in January. Bail remains unchanged for Britany Wolf at $303,000.

Email Tiffany DeMasters at tdemasters@westhawaiitoday.com.