ELYRIA, Ohio -- A 25-year-old Elyria man and a 24-year-old Avon Lake woman are charged with violating Ohio’s stay-at-home coronavirus order during an altercation at an Elyria convenience store and later at a Subway, police say.

The incidents happened about 2:30 p.m. Saturday at Convenient Food Mart and at the neighboring Subway on Chestnut Ridge Road, just east of Defiance Avenue in the city’s Chestnut Heights neighborhood, according to an Elyria police report.

Jeffrey Wheeler and Precious Bailey were both charged with inducing panic, domestic violence, assault, obstructing official business, the report says.

Wheeler was additionally charged with abduction and resisting arrest. Bailey also faces charges of illegal conveyance or weapons and breaking and entering, the report says.

Wheeler is still in the Lorain County Jail on a $16,750 bond, jail records say. He is scheduled for his initial appearance Tuesday afternoon. Bailey is free on a $12,500 bond, Elyria Municipal Court records say.

Both are also charged with something called “violations prohibited,” which refers to the statewide stay-at-home order put into place.

Under Ohio Revised Code, “No person shall violate any rule the director of health or department of health adopts or any order the director or department of health issues under this chapter to prevent a threat to the public caused by a pandemic, epidemic, or bioterrorism event.”

A convenience store employee called police and said a man, later identified as Wheeler, was seen dragging a woman, later identified as Bailey, by her hair and trying to get her into a truck, the report says.

The convenience store owner told police the couple walked into his store, started arguing and causing a scene, the report says.

The owner intervened and told both of them to leave the store. They continued to argue and walked next door to Subway and started fighting inside of the dining room.

An employee pulled the silent alarm and Wheeler dragged Bailey out of the restaurant, the report says.

Police found the two about an hour and a half later on Purdue Avenue near Case Avenue.

Wheeler struggled with officers, but the police eventually took them both into custody, according to the arrest report.

Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine implemented the statewide stay at home order at 11:59 p.m. March 23. The order will be in effect until 11:59 p.m. Monday unless it needs to be extended or lifted earlier.

DeWine also has shutdown dining in at restaurants and bars and also shut down barber shops, malls, nail salons, spas and other “non-essential businesses.”

Read the order here.

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