Hamilton County Municipal Court's records show that the defendant in the Indian Hill real estate case was issued an arrest warrant after cutting off her electronic monitoring device.
Cincinnati reported that Pleatman cut off her electric monitoring device last Sunday and refused to report to the police when she was contacted by the staff from the county's Electronic Monitoring Unit.
"No! I'm like Rosa Parks today," Pleatman said. "I'm not wearing that bracelet for tweeting."
Pleatman also failed to show up in the office on Monday.
According to the past report of Cincinnati, Judge Fanon Rucker of Hamilton County Municipal granted the State of Ohio permission to place a monitoring device on the defendant, Crysta Pleatman, after violating her order not to contact any parties in the case or to post on social media.
"I'm going to make this crystal clear," Rucker said during the trial. "If there is proof that you continue to contact people, you will be jailed. And you will sit in jail until this case is over."
The electric monitoring device was ordered to be worn by Pleatman until Nov. 3.
Pleatman allegedly continued to contact parties in the case against a judge's orders. Because of this, the State of Ohio filed a separate criminal case against Pleatman and charged her with telecommunications harassment, a first-degree misdemeanor.
Pleatman and her husband are facing a civil suit for breach of contract which was filed by homeowner and businessman, Grant Troja.
The case was filed two years ago due to the backing-out of Pleatman and her husband in their contract with Grant Troja to buy a $1.2 million home in Indian Hill.
Reports state that Pleatman and her husband backed out of the contract because they got cold-feet when they learned that the man living next door was convicted of attempted murder a decade ago.