Aug. 27—Someone suspected of stealing trading cards was spotted in the store again, and the business wanted him removed from the property. Over two weeks, the suspect reportedly stole trading cards worth hundreds of dollars. Officers watched a day of security footage allegedly showing the man taking trading cards out of a display binder and slipping them into his personal binder before leaving the store. Officers searched his vehicle and reportedly located one trading card worth $4 with the business’ price tag still on it. The man claimed he paid for the card. The business planned to provide an evidence packet.
A man wearing a pink cowboy hat and vest was reportedly standing near a vehicle by the skate park while holding an Anderson AM-15 rifle. It made someone suspicious enough to call the police, although he wasn’t pointing the weapon at anyone or acting disorderly.
A woman allegedly got messages that said that everything she was doing was being watched and told police her online accounts were compromised. She was advised to report the issue to the Internet Crime Complaint Center at IC3.gov.
Fifteen teens allegedly got into a physical fight with a woman’s son. The mother and son got into a vehicle, locked the doors and called the police. She told officers that a bunch of other adults also jumped in to help calm everyone down and keep the group together until officers arrived.
A dog reportedly attacked a woman, biting her middle finger. A property manager called the police, wanting to make sure help was on the way and that they had the dog corralled in the office.
Someone’s friend walked past a parked vehicle and allegedly saw a shirtless man masturbating. They didn’t want to pursue indecent exposure charges, but rather have officers check on the man, afraid children living in the apartments would see him.
A woman allegedly screamed at the top of her lungs, “Get off of me,” and a man yelled back, according to a caller who called the police a second time to report seeing someone with a bike pulling a cart, who “seemed dangerous.” Dispatch told the caller they had already investigated the verbal disturbance.