So lately the new craze are these little movable balance boards that you can stand on and just move around with. They have a whole bunch of different names: hoverboard, skywalkers, etc. They're such a new craze that people are robbing folks for them and over them.
I met with two friends, both around 19, who were in the mall on my beat and saw a guy riding around on one of these hoverboards. They went up to ask him where he got his and he told them he actually sold them. They exchanged numbers and he told them to hang around the mall and he'd call when he came back with a board. They agreed on a price of $200 (they normally sell for $499). The guy called them about 20 minutes later and said he was outside. It was pouring rain so the pair ran up to the jeep where the guy was in the backseat.
The victim started to count out his money when the guy said "you're good". The victim looked up and the guy had a gun pointed right at him. The guy snatched the money and the driver took off. What the dumb perp didn't know was that he was caught on camera in plain view multiple times throughout the mall and the robbery himself. Hopefully we'll get him identified soon.
Later on in the day I responded to a dispute with a weapon involving pepper spray and roommates. Apparently the girl who rents the apartment took in a friend who was down on her luck. The friend is in a lesbian relationship and brings her girlfriend over quite a bit. The main renter was upset that her friend kept bringing people over, however the lesbian friend had been staying with her for about four months and was paying rent and essentially living there as well. I told her there was nothing I could do. The renter was furious but that's how it goes. The renter was the one who actually threatened the lesbian's friend and the friend said not to threaten her because she had pepper spray. It's amazing how things get twisted between what actually happens and what we get on the 911 call.
Sunday, November 29, 2015
My Thanksgiving Week In The Streets
Well Thanksgiving went amazingly well for me. I was lucky enough to have the holiday off and then my regular days off of Friday and Saturday-not to mention I took Tuesday off to enjoy an NBA game (sadly my team lost). Here's my uneventful week
Sunday I was dispatched to a hot call as soon as I signed on. I was sent to a business silent alarm at a location where I had bee previously hit by burglars. I raced to load my vehicle and rush to the scene but before I could get there, the alarm was canceled. Such a rush to start the day for nothing and then nothing else happened all day.
Monday I had to make a prisoner transport. The previous Thursday, we had a domestic dispute in which a boyfriend and girlfriend were drunk and got to fighting. Somehow both parties were cut up severely all over their bodies. The male was so cut up he ended up at the hospital and passed out. I went to pick him up to take him to jail since he had been discharged. The male asked me what he had been charged with because he honestly didn't remember a thing. He told me he had been drinking vodka straight all day and then he woke up with a tube down his throat and an IV in his arm in the hospital and was stuck on a liquid diet for three days. He swore up and down that he was done with alcohol-and his girl. He was actually a pretty cool guy and joked around all the way to jail about a multitude of things and the fact that he lost all his clothes because they had to cut them all (he wore a hospital gown into jail).
Wednesday we were extremely busy. I got out of work about an hour late due to a late DUI (and I still hit the road for a 7-hour drive out of state for the holiday). I ran call to call to call and got a vehicle break in at a suit store on my beat. The call held for about an hour (due to its low priority) and by the time I got there, the caller was gone. We tried to call him back but it went straight to voicemail on consecutive call backs. We live and work in a major city. Some crimes and calls just aren't as high on the list although they are still important. It's amazing that some people can't understand that after dealing with people on a regular basis though that wind up in the same situation.
Sunday I was dispatched to a hot call as soon as I signed on. I was sent to a business silent alarm at a location where I had bee previously hit by burglars. I raced to load my vehicle and rush to the scene but before I could get there, the alarm was canceled. Such a rush to start the day for nothing and then nothing else happened all day.
Monday I had to make a prisoner transport. The previous Thursday, we had a domestic dispute in which a boyfriend and girlfriend were drunk and got to fighting. Somehow both parties were cut up severely all over their bodies. The male was so cut up he ended up at the hospital and passed out. I went to pick him up to take him to jail since he had been discharged. The male asked me what he had been charged with because he honestly didn't remember a thing. He told me he had been drinking vodka straight all day and then he woke up with a tube down his throat and an IV in his arm in the hospital and was stuck on a liquid diet for three days. He swore up and down that he was done with alcohol-and his girl. He was actually a pretty cool guy and joked around all the way to jail about a multitude of things and the fact that he lost all his clothes because they had to cut them all (he wore a hospital gown into jail).
Wednesday we were extremely busy. I got out of work about an hour late due to a late DUI (and I still hit the road for a 7-hour drive out of state for the holiday). I ran call to call to call and got a vehicle break in at a suit store on my beat. The call held for about an hour (due to its low priority) and by the time I got there, the caller was gone. We tried to call him back but it went straight to voicemail on consecutive call backs. We live and work in a major city. Some crimes and calls just aren't as high on the list although they are still important. It's amazing that some people can't understand that after dealing with people on a regular basis though that wind up in the same situation.
Sunday, November 22, 2015
"Just Don't Shoot Me"
So Monday and Tuesday were pretty easy going days. Monday I had a trainee on his last day in the Zone before he moved on to his next rotation of field training. It was slow so we decided to do a little traffic. We were fishing and saw a car with a broken brake light. We stopped it and the trainee felt confident so I let him handle the stop on his own.
The driver ended up being a young black female. My trainee (who is also black) asked her for her driver's license. She went to reach for it and immediately said to him that she was only reaching for ID. My trainee laughed and shrugged it off but she continued to say "Just don't shoot me, I've seen all that happens on tv.". It's a real shame that that's the impression people have of encounters with us. My trainee just let the female know her light was out with a warning and we continued on with our uneventful day.
Tuesday saw me head to a major department store at the mall on my beat. Loss Prevention had detained a female employee for making fraudulent returns to pocket money. This employee was a supervisor and would take un-purchased clothes off the floor and use the UPC on them to return them as if they were purchased. She did this all the way back from June while Loss Prevention kept investigating to try and find where the losses were coming from. This employee racked up $2,728.87 in 5 months. They pressed charges for the theft and I asked her if she had ever been arrested before and she told me she had....for exactly the same thing. It's amazing she was hired with the previous arrest to work in retail. Even Loss Prevention was surprised by her past. The lady said her son was recently diagnosed with cancer and she had no other way to come up with the money for treatment which cost around $500-1,000 a month. The store was nice in the sense that even though she was going to lose her job, they were organizing support groups for her to try and help her through the medical crisis.
The driver ended up being a young black female. My trainee (who is also black) asked her for her driver's license. She went to reach for it and immediately said to him that she was only reaching for ID. My trainee laughed and shrugged it off but she continued to say "Just don't shoot me, I've seen all that happens on tv.". It's a real shame that that's the impression people have of encounters with us. My trainee just let the female know her light was out with a warning and we continued on with our uneventful day.
Tuesday saw me head to a major department store at the mall on my beat. Loss Prevention had detained a female employee for making fraudulent returns to pocket money. This employee was a supervisor and would take un-purchased clothes off the floor and use the UPC on them to return them as if they were purchased. She did this all the way back from June while Loss Prevention kept investigating to try and find where the losses were coming from. This employee racked up $2,728.87 in 5 months. They pressed charges for the theft and I asked her if she had ever been arrested before and she told me she had....for exactly the same thing. It's amazing she was hired with the previous arrest to work in retail. Even Loss Prevention was surprised by her past. The lady said her son was recently diagnosed with cancer and she had no other way to come up with the money for treatment which cost around $500-1,000 a month. The store was nice in the sense that even though she was going to lose her job, they were organizing support groups for her to try and help her through the medical crisis.
Sunday Driving
Last Sunday I responded to a call about a male passed out in a car in the middle of the street in a subdivision. An anonymous caller called it in. This vehicle was stopped way back where the subdivision was still under development. So it wasn't exactly in an area where people normally go to.
I rolled up and saw a soft top convertible with a male passed out. I knocked on the window and he didn't respond. I knocked harder on the driver's window with my flashlight and he finally woke up. He was definitely intoxicated. He immediately turned the car back on (the keys had still been in the ignition) and I told him to shut it down. The male then opened the door and started talking to me with slurred speech and glassy eyes. I asked him where he was coming from and he told me ( I live at ______). I asked him again since that's not what I asked him and he just repeated himself. I slowed down even more when talking to him and he told me he was watching football at his friend's house at 1pm. I asked him if he had anything to drink and he told me 1 beer. Clearly it was way more than that. I asked him to tell me what time it was without looking at his clock and he just stared at me, finally saying it would make him look bad if he tried. I asked him to do a field sobriety test and he was all for it.
After standing him outside of my car on the dash cam, I asked him if he had any injuries or ailments which I should know about and he said no. I started to give the directions on the walk and turn test and he immediately told me he couldn't do it because both of his knees were bad....I told him I would note that but it would definitely help him to at least give it a try. He flat out he couldn't because he would look horrible on camera. I placed him under arrest and he agreed to blow on a breathalyzer. I took him to a precinct and had an officer certified on the machine to come meet me with him. It turns out this same guy was arrested just two months prior for another DUI-this time with an accident involved on the highway. The officer who did the breathalyzer for him last time was the same one who came out THIS time. She had never had that happen before. We get all set for the test and then the man refuses to take it, wanting to know why he needed the test. His refusal ended up in him automatically losing his license for a year and he was furious because he drove 18-wheelers for a living and had to be at work at 3am. He then told me the only reason he was back there in the neighborhood was because he was meeting his girl and he didn't want his wife to know or her husband to find out. Just call it karma.....Meanwhile, the whole ride to the jail he told me I never should have arrested him because he wasn't actually driving and that I should have given him a ride home....
Wednesday, November 18, 2015
Young and Responsible
So last week had a lot of interesting moments.
Monday was a slow day following my vacation which meant I was out hunting. I was driving along and observed a vehicle occupied two times driving with no lights on at night. I followed behind it for a bit and then vehicle prepared to make a left turn into an apartment complex known for its drug dealers. The vehicle made its turn and I turned on my blue lights.
I approached the vehicle and the driver was EXTREMELY nervous. As soon as I got to the window, the driver apologized for texting, which I hadn't even noticed. I asked him if he had been drinking since I normally catch a lot of DUI drivers with no lights on at night. He said no and kept asking for permission every time he went to grab something since he was "worried about what's on tv". I didn't get the vibe that there were any drugs in the vehicle, I believe they were probably going to buy drugs from the complex. I let the two males go on their way and they immediately left the complex without going to visit their "friend" which they said they were there for. I definitely interrupted a drug deal that day.
Tuesday saw me respond to a roommate dispute at an apartment complex. The roommate stated his female roommate had an ongoing dispute with him. The male caller does not have a car and uses his roommate's car to get to work. The roommate lately has been calling 911 on him saying he stole her car and won't return it, however the male is always at work and cannot leave to return the car. The caller told me he's been living at the apartment for the last 6 months but wasn't on the lease. The female ended up changing the locks while he was gone and he had no way to get inside the apartment. I tried knocking on the door but the female wouldn't answer (she wasn't obligated to). The male then asked me if it was illegal to break into his own apartment. I told him the answer was no but that I definitely couldn't stay behind while he did so. I made sure to leave right about the time I saw him hop the fence to the backyard but we never did get another call back to the location.
Wednesday, I worked a vehicle accident at an intersection on my beat that sees a BUNCH of accidents. There's only a light facing three of the four sides. The fourth side is for an exit of a big apartment complex. This means that anyone trying to exit the complex can't see what color the light is from the other directions and has to chance it trying to leave. The at fault car in this case believed the light to be green opposite hers (which it was, but the light then would have changed to red). A car coming the side adjacent to hers saw his light turn green and he continued (with no fault to him) at his regular pace without ever slowing down. The at fault car had ALMOST cleared the intersection when it was plowed into by the second car.
I've been telling people forever that I wish the city would fix the light at that intersection and install another light, however it has been the same way for the past three years and definitely longer before the beat became mine. I didn't cite the driver since she basically would have followed her light if she had one. She just unfortunately didn't clear the intersection fast enough. The second car was a brand new vehicle that really got tore up (losing its entire front bumper). Thankfully nobody was hurt. A couple of seconds earlier and both cars would have ended up in what would have been a horrible t-bone accident.
Thursday, my Friday, I was dispatched to a medical call at a home. An 83 year old woman who was watching her grandkids fell unresponsive due to a diabetic episode. The 5 year old girl at home called her parents to say that grandma had fallen. The parents quickly called 911 and responded to the house. I went along just in case the fire department had to force entry into the home. Luckily, family members arrived quickly enough to open the house for us. The little girl was so cute, talking to all of us (fire, paramedics and myself) telling us Hi! and welcome to the house. She even told us "shhhhhh grandma's sleeping". The father was holding his mother and amidst his tears and concern, you could tell he really appreciated how well the little girl was treating the situation. At one point when fire went to grab the stretcher for the paramedics she yelled out to us "Bye everybody! see you soon!" Thankfully the lady was brought back to consciousness once she was put on the stretcher. It was so great to see a little girl treat the situation well and know enough to call her parents for help at that age.
I finished up my night and week, just around the corner from the medical call on an abandoned car at an apartment complex. The vehicle had been there for over a month. The car had suspended registration and no insurance and security was worried it was stolen. It wasn't and they decided to do their thing and tow it from the property.
Not a bad week back after a much needed international vacation!
Monday was a slow day following my vacation which meant I was out hunting. I was driving along and observed a vehicle occupied two times driving with no lights on at night. I followed behind it for a bit and then vehicle prepared to make a left turn into an apartment complex known for its drug dealers. The vehicle made its turn and I turned on my blue lights.
I approached the vehicle and the driver was EXTREMELY nervous. As soon as I got to the window, the driver apologized for texting, which I hadn't even noticed. I asked him if he had been drinking since I normally catch a lot of DUI drivers with no lights on at night. He said no and kept asking for permission every time he went to grab something since he was "worried about what's on tv". I didn't get the vibe that there were any drugs in the vehicle, I believe they were probably going to buy drugs from the complex. I let the two males go on their way and they immediately left the complex without going to visit their "friend" which they said they were there for. I definitely interrupted a drug deal that day.
Tuesday saw me respond to a roommate dispute at an apartment complex. The roommate stated his female roommate had an ongoing dispute with him. The male caller does not have a car and uses his roommate's car to get to work. The roommate lately has been calling 911 on him saying he stole her car and won't return it, however the male is always at work and cannot leave to return the car. The caller told me he's been living at the apartment for the last 6 months but wasn't on the lease. The female ended up changing the locks while he was gone and he had no way to get inside the apartment. I tried knocking on the door but the female wouldn't answer (she wasn't obligated to). The male then asked me if it was illegal to break into his own apartment. I told him the answer was no but that I definitely couldn't stay behind while he did so. I made sure to leave right about the time I saw him hop the fence to the backyard but we never did get another call back to the location.
Wednesday, I worked a vehicle accident at an intersection on my beat that sees a BUNCH of accidents. There's only a light facing three of the four sides. The fourth side is for an exit of a big apartment complex. This means that anyone trying to exit the complex can't see what color the light is from the other directions and has to chance it trying to leave. The at fault car in this case believed the light to be green opposite hers (which it was, but the light then would have changed to red). A car coming the side adjacent to hers saw his light turn green and he continued (with no fault to him) at his regular pace without ever slowing down. The at fault car had ALMOST cleared the intersection when it was plowed into by the second car.
I've been telling people forever that I wish the city would fix the light at that intersection and install another light, however it has been the same way for the past three years and definitely longer before the beat became mine. I didn't cite the driver since she basically would have followed her light if she had one. She just unfortunately didn't clear the intersection fast enough. The second car was a brand new vehicle that really got tore up (losing its entire front bumper). Thankfully nobody was hurt. A couple of seconds earlier and both cars would have ended up in what would have been a horrible t-bone accident.
Thursday, my Friday, I was dispatched to a medical call at a home. An 83 year old woman who was watching her grandkids fell unresponsive due to a diabetic episode. The 5 year old girl at home called her parents to say that grandma had fallen. The parents quickly called 911 and responded to the house. I went along just in case the fire department had to force entry into the home. Luckily, family members arrived quickly enough to open the house for us. The little girl was so cute, talking to all of us (fire, paramedics and myself) telling us Hi! and welcome to the house. She even told us "shhhhhh grandma's sleeping". The father was holding his mother and amidst his tears and concern, you could tell he really appreciated how well the little girl was treating the situation. At one point when fire went to grab the stretcher for the paramedics she yelled out to us "Bye everybody! see you soon!" Thankfully the lady was brought back to consciousness once she was put on the stretcher. It was so great to see a little girl treat the situation well and know enough to call her parents for help at that age.
I finished up my night and week, just around the corner from the medical call on an abandoned car at an apartment complex. The vehicle had been there for over a month. The car had suspended registration and no insurance and security was worried it was stolen. It wasn't and they decided to do their thing and tow it from the property.
Not a bad week back after a much needed international vacation!
Tuesday, November 3, 2015
"I'm Not Watchin' Them!"
So this week I only work two days before I take a much anticipated and needed international vacation. Sunday was interesting when I was hit with an abandoned child call early in the shift.
The call remarks stated a female came home to move her stuff out of the house and found eight kids ranging in age from 1 year to 9 years alone. Obviously we treat this type of call as high priority. I arrive on scene and find out the female is a tenant and the man supposedly watching the kids is the landlord who also lives at the location (which is essentially a rooming house). As bad as it sounds, no law was broken. The man, who is the grandfather of the kids. Left the house with an adult of legal age home. The kids were never "abandoned". He just should have told someone he was leaving. The female got upset that she was de facto placed in charge of the kids and flat out told me "I'm not watchin' them!". I told her if she just left and left the kids alone, she would actually be the one facing charges in the situation.
I called the man on his phone and found out he was at the pharmacy grabbing his blood pressure medication and he told me he never left the kids alone because there was an 80 year old male tenant in the house. I checked with the male and found out he was there, but had no idea the landlord was gone. I waited around to talk to the male to let him know he needs to at least tell people he's leaving. The kids were fine and not injured but then the real story came out.
The female tenant was in the process of being evicted for allegedly stealing items from the landlord (keys and a computer). She and the landlord had been feuding in and out of court and when she realized the male was gone she called 911 to get even with him. It wasn't enough to charge her but she got a good education on the meaning of child abandonment. She gathered her items and left.
The call remarks stated a female came home to move her stuff out of the house and found eight kids ranging in age from 1 year to 9 years alone. Obviously we treat this type of call as high priority. I arrive on scene and find out the female is a tenant and the man supposedly watching the kids is the landlord who also lives at the location (which is essentially a rooming house). As bad as it sounds, no law was broken. The man, who is the grandfather of the kids. Left the house with an adult of legal age home. The kids were never "abandoned". He just should have told someone he was leaving. The female got upset that she was de facto placed in charge of the kids and flat out told me "I'm not watchin' them!". I told her if she just left and left the kids alone, she would actually be the one facing charges in the situation.
I called the man on his phone and found out he was at the pharmacy grabbing his blood pressure medication and he told me he never left the kids alone because there was an 80 year old male tenant in the house. I checked with the male and found out he was there, but had no idea the landlord was gone. I waited around to talk to the male to let him know he needs to at least tell people he's leaving. The kids were fine and not injured but then the real story came out.
The female tenant was in the process of being evicted for allegedly stealing items from the landlord (keys and a computer). She and the landlord had been feuding in and out of court and when she realized the male was gone she called 911 to get even with him. It wasn't enough to charge her but she got a good education on the meaning of child abandonment. She gathered her items and left.
Sunday, November 1, 2015
Lies and Truths
So Tuesday was insane. It honestly would have been the best day for anyone to ride along. We were given in roll call before the shift a BOLO (Be On The LookOut) for a white pickup that was involved in vehicle break-ins and had shot at victims earlier in the day. The vehicle itself was stolen out of a neighboring county and had a gun inside when it was stolen.
Sure enough, about an hour into the shift, someone spotted it. We waited until the vehicle pulled into a gas station before we attempted to make contact with it. It immediately realized what was going on and tried to ram an officer before hitting the street and taking off. The chase was on! The vehicle went all throughout our zone and into another zone before coming back in and taking the highway. This roughly around rush hour when it went onto a major interstate. We were requesting assistance from our air unit but the weather wasn't cooperating for them to get airborne. The roads were even wet and we had a nice drizzle from a passing storm. We requested assistance from the state patrol (who will chase ANYTHING until the wheels fall off). They were about 30 seconds away from joining the chase when we lost the truck on the interstate amongst the traffic. It was a huge let down to a big rush for the most part.
Wednesday, I had a ride along who was a real estate developer in my city. He's currently working on a project to redevelop a part of the zone I work in and wanted to see what goes on in the area. The day was unfortunately less thrilling than the previous day with the car chase. I felt really bad he didn't get to see anything majorly exciting. We responded at one point to a shoplifting at a convenience store where the clerk said a guy who shoplifted the day before was back inside. I found a guy matching the description walking out of the store eating a bag of chips. I approached him and asked him for his identification while another officer went in to talk to the store clerk. The guy was 35 years old and said he had never had an ID. I didn't buy it for a second and really thought he was lying to me and might have a warrant. It turns out-he was really 35 years old with no ID. He had been arrested NUMEROUS times before for dealing and possession of powder cocaine. The only way I was able to prove he was telling the truth was checking the arrest records. Crazy stuff. I can see never having a driver's license but I was shocked about not even having an ID card.
Thursday saw the first two hours of my day roped into a parking lot detail in front of a gym in the zone that has seen a lot of vehicle break-ins lately. People leaving all their bags and precious items in plain sight in their car while they go work out and come back to find their cars broken into.....I was bored out of my mind and so excited when I got relieved to go back into the fray of 911 calls. I was pulling out of the parking lot when I spotted a car with no working brake lights. I pulled the car over and approached to find a female driver and a male passenger. The female didn't have her driver's license on her and the male didn't have any ID. I had them both write down their information and when I ran it, I found out the male's name was an alias for a guy with a warrant for a probation violation warrant on a DUI charge. I detained the male and looked back at the warrant hit. It told me the man had multiple tattoos including one on his neck that had a name on it. I walked over to my backseat and opened the back door asking the male if he had any tattoos. He said no and then I went to look at his neck and there was the big ass tattoo with the name from the warrant hit. I really don't know why he even bothered to try lying to me. I charged him with lying to me on top of the warrant he had. Meanwhile I did ask the female driver (his girlfriend) what his name was and she kept running with his fake name. I didn't take her to jail for lying to me too because she was pregnant. She did however get tickets for not driving with her license on her and the brake lights not working.
Sure enough, about an hour into the shift, someone spotted it. We waited until the vehicle pulled into a gas station before we attempted to make contact with it. It immediately realized what was going on and tried to ram an officer before hitting the street and taking off. The chase was on! The vehicle went all throughout our zone and into another zone before coming back in and taking the highway. This roughly around rush hour when it went onto a major interstate. We were requesting assistance from our air unit but the weather wasn't cooperating for them to get airborne. The roads were even wet and we had a nice drizzle from a passing storm. We requested assistance from the state patrol (who will chase ANYTHING until the wheels fall off). They were about 30 seconds away from joining the chase when we lost the truck on the interstate amongst the traffic. It was a huge let down to a big rush for the most part.
Wednesday, I had a ride along who was a real estate developer in my city. He's currently working on a project to redevelop a part of the zone I work in and wanted to see what goes on in the area. The day was unfortunately less thrilling than the previous day with the car chase. I felt really bad he didn't get to see anything majorly exciting. We responded at one point to a shoplifting at a convenience store where the clerk said a guy who shoplifted the day before was back inside. I found a guy matching the description walking out of the store eating a bag of chips. I approached him and asked him for his identification while another officer went in to talk to the store clerk. The guy was 35 years old and said he had never had an ID. I didn't buy it for a second and really thought he was lying to me and might have a warrant. It turns out-he was really 35 years old with no ID. He had been arrested NUMEROUS times before for dealing and possession of powder cocaine. The only way I was able to prove he was telling the truth was checking the arrest records. Crazy stuff. I can see never having a driver's license but I was shocked about not even having an ID card.
Thursday saw the first two hours of my day roped into a parking lot detail in front of a gym in the zone that has seen a lot of vehicle break-ins lately. People leaving all their bags and precious items in plain sight in their car while they go work out and come back to find their cars broken into.....I was bored out of my mind and so excited when I got relieved to go back into the fray of 911 calls. I was pulling out of the parking lot when I spotted a car with no working brake lights. I pulled the car over and approached to find a female driver and a male passenger. The female didn't have her driver's license on her and the male didn't have any ID. I had them both write down their information and when I ran it, I found out the male's name was an alias for a guy with a warrant for a probation violation warrant on a DUI charge. I detained the male and looked back at the warrant hit. It told me the man had multiple tattoos including one on his neck that had a name on it. I walked over to my backseat and opened the back door asking the male if he had any tattoos. He said no and then I went to look at his neck and there was the big ass tattoo with the name from the warrant hit. I really don't know why he even bothered to try lying to me. I charged him with lying to me on top of the warrant he had. Meanwhile I did ask the female driver (his girlfriend) what his name was and she kept running with his fake name. I didn't take her to jail for lying to me too because she was pregnant. She did however get tickets for not driving with her license on her and the brake lights not working.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)