LICENSE TO STEAL
Two Kentucky men tried to pull the front off a cash
machine by running a chain from the machine to the bumper of their pickup
truck. Instead of pulling the front panel off the machine, though, they
pulled the bumper off the truck. They panicked and fled, leaving the
chain still attached to the machine, their bumper still attached to the
chain, and their license plate still attached to the bumper.
IN THE BAG
A “tourist,” supposedly on a golf holiday, stood in
line at the customs counter. While making idle chatter, the customs
official thought it odd that the golfer didn’t know what a handicap was.
The officer then asked the tourist to demonstrate his swing. He did –
backwards. A substantial amount of narcotics was found in the golf bag.
MADE FOR TV
Guns For Hire, an Arizona company specializing in
staged gunfights for Western movies, got a call from a 47-year-old woman
who wanted to have her husband shot. She was sentenced to four years in
jail.
DO YOU ACCEPT CREDIT CARDS?
A Texan convicted of robbery
worked out a deal to pay $9600 in damages rather than serve a two-year
prison sentence. For payment, he provided the court a forged check. He
got his prison term back, plus eight more years.
YOU MEAN ME?
A pair of Michigan robbers entered a record shop nervously
waving revolvers. The first one shouted, “Nobody move!” When his partner
moved, the startled first bandit shot him.
DEADHEADS
A man in Orange County Municipal Court had been ticketed for
driving alone in the carpool lane. He claimed that the four frozen
cadavers in the mortuary van he was driving should be counted. The judged
ruled that passengers must be alive to qualify.
THIS WOULD BE ME
The judge called the case of People vs. Steven Lewon
Crook. The bailiff opened the door to the holding cell and called,
“Crook, come forward.” Five of the prisoners entered the courtroom.
LEARN YOUR LESSON
When asked for her occupation, a woman charged with a
traffic violation said she was a schoolteacher. The judge rose from the
bench. “Madam, I have waited years for a schoolteacher to appear before
this court,” he smiled with delight. “Now sit down at that table and
write ‘I will not pass through a red light’ five hundred times.”
AHH, THAT’S BETTER!
A judge in Louisville decided a jury went “a little
bit too far” in recommending a sentence of 5,005 years for a man who was
convicted of five robberies and a kidnapping. The judge reduced the
sentence to 1,001 years.
OOPS! I BLEW THAT ONE!
A lawyer defending a man accused of burglary
tried this creative defense: “My client merely inserted his arm into the
window and removed a few trifling articles. His arm is not himself, and I
fail to see how you can punish the whole individual for an offense
committed by his limb.” “Well put,” the judge replied. “Using your logic,
I sentence the defendant’s arm to one year’s imprisonment. He can
accompany it or not, as he chooses.” The defendant smiled. With his
lawyer’s assistance he detached his artificial limb, laid it on the bench,
and walked out.
STEAL THE RIGHT THING
When a man attempted to siphon gasoline from a motor home parked on a
Seattle street, he got much more than he bargained for. Police arrived at
the scene to find an ill man curled up next to a motor home near spilled
sewage. A police spokesman said that the man admitted to trying to steal
gasoline and plugged his hose into the motor home’s sewage tank by
mistake. The owner of the vehicle declined to press charges, saying that
it was the best laugh he’d ever had.
BRAINS FOR SALE
A woman was reporting her car as stolen, and mentioned that there was a
car phone in it. The policeman taking the report called the phone and
told the guy that answered that he had read the ad in the newspaper and
wanted to buy the car. They arranged to meet, and the thief was arrested.
LIKE HEAVY, MAN
David Posman, 33, was arrested recently in Providence, R.I, after
allegedly knocking out an armored car driver and stealing the closest four
bags of money. It turned out they contained $800 in PENNIES, weighed 30
pounds each, and slowed him to a stagger during his getaway so that police
officers easily jumped him from behind.
WRONG CRIME
The Belgium news agency Belga reported in November that a man
suspected of robbing a jewelry store in Liege said he couldn’t have
done it because he was busy breaking into a school at the same time.
Police then arrested him for breaking into the school.
BATTLE OF THE BULGE
Drug-possession defendant Christopher Johns, on trial in March in Pontiac,
Michigan, said he had been searched without a warrant. The prosecutor
said the officer didn’t need a warrant because a “bulge” in Christopher’s
jacket could have been a gun. Nonsense, said Christopher, who happened to
be wearing the same jacket that day in court. He handed it over so the
judge could see it. The judge discovered a packet of cocaine in the
pocket and laughed so hard he required a five-minute recess to compose
himself.
NEXT TIME USE A SPELL CHECKER
Clever drug traffickers used a propane tanker truck entering El Paso from
Mexico. They rigged it so propane gas would be released from all of its
valves while the truck concealed 6,240 pounds of marijuana. They were
clever, but not bright. They misspelled the name of the gas company on
the side of the truck.
NOT ALL THERE
Oklahoma City – Dennis Newton was on trial for the armed robbery of a
convenience store in a district court this week when he fired his lawyer.
Assistant district attorney Larry Jones said Newton, 47, was doing a fair
job of defending himself until the store manager testified that Newton was
the robber. Newton jumped up, accused the woman of lying and then said,
“I should of blown your [expletive] head off.” The defendant paused, then
quickly added, “-if I’d been the one that was there.” The jury took 20
minutes to convict Newton and recommend a 30-year sentence.
DONT ASK
R.C. Gaitlin, 21, walked up to two patrol officers who were showing their
squad car computer equipment to children in a Detroit neighborhood. When
he asked how the system worked, the officers asked him for a piece of
identification. Gaitlin gave them his driver’s license, they entered it
into the computer, and moments later they arrested Gaitlin because
information on the screen showed that Gaitlin was wanted for a
two-year-old armed robbery in St. Louis, Missouri.
WRONG ALIBI
In Springfield, Mo., in June, Vernon Wayne Richmond, 18, stood
up in court to give the details of his crime as part of a plea bargain
to cocaine possession. Richmond said he found cocaine, put it in
his pocket, and then was arrested by police after a Wal-Mart guard
detained him. Unfortunately, Richmond had misunderstood which
of his cases the plea was for. Actually, the district attorney was
prosecuting him for an earlier arrest for having cocaine in his car
and was unaware of the Wal-Mart arrest.
WHAT HAPPENED TO THE $2000?
Army military policeman Daniel Christian Bowden, 20, was
arrested in June at the Fort Belvoir (Va.) Federal Credit Union as
he attempted to deposit almost $3,000 cash into his account. A
teller had called police on Bowden because she recognized him as
the very man who had robbed the credit union of nearly $5,000 two
weeks earlier.
GUN SAFETY? NOT!
In September in Wichita, Kan., police officers staking out a
convenience store inadvertently unnerved two men parked
innocently at an adjacent liquor store. According to police, a 19-
year-old man in the car had a gun and thought that since police
officers were nearby, he ought to get rid of it, but in the process of
pulling it out of his pocket, he accidentally fired one round, which
hit him in the leg, went through the front seat, and hit the
companion, age 20. According to police Capt. Paul Dotson, the
officers on stakeout, who had until then ignored the liquor store,
had their attention engaged by the gunshot and the gun owner’s
limping out of the car and throwing the gun over a fence. The
shooter was charged with illegal possession of a firearm, and his
companion was treated at a hospital and released without charges.
PLEASE ARREST ME
Carlos Manuel Perez, 21, was jailed in Anniston, Ala., in
October after a series of missteps that almost begged for his arrest.
He stopped in front of a local government building in a stolen car,
which had no license plate. His intention, he told the first person
he saw, was to inquire about getting a non-photo identification
card, since he was not carrying a driver’s license. That first person
happened to be Sheriff Larry Amerson, in uniform. When pressed
for ID, Perez produced a social security card with the name
Matthew Nowaczewski (though Perez has a dark-skinned Hispanic
complexion). He also produced a birth certificate under that name
but with some information erased and rewritten in pen, including
his birthplace of “MiSSSissippi.” Said Amerson later, “I know
we’re from Alabama, but we’re not that stupid.”
TELL THE TRUTH, SON
A 17-year-old motorist was cited for driving without a license in
Springfield, Ill., in September. When stopped, he gave the name
“Johnny Rice,” but police got tough with him when he was unable
to spell “Johnny” in any of the conventional ways. His real name,
he said then, is Dyvon D. Stewart, and after an inquiry of the car’s
owner, police learned that Stewart had legitimately borrowed it and
that despite the false name, he was not wanted by police on any
other matter.
OKAY, SO YOU’RE A MAN
A 38-year-old man passed away in Jenkins Township, Pa., in
November, a couple of hours after going to the home of a friend to
see his snakes. According to the friend, the man had playfully
reached into a cobra’s tank and picked up the snake, and was bitten.
Refusing a ride to the hospital, the man said “I’m a man, I can
handle it,” and instead went to a bar, where he had three drinks and
bragged to patrons that he had just been bitten by a cobra. An hour
later, he was dead.
WHO WAS THAT MASKED MAN
In February, the Connecticut Court of Appeals upheld the
kidnapping-robbery convictions of Michael Carter, thus rejecting
his claim that witnesses’ identification of him should have been
suppressed at his trial. At the time of arrest, according to New
Haven police officer Dario Aponte, Carter had proclaimed his
innocence but resisted being returned to the scene of the crime so
witnesses could see him, asking Aponte, “How can they identify
me? I had a mask on.”
LAY THAT PISTOL DOWN, BABE
In November in Annapolis, Md., during a celebration of Gregory
Johnson’s 32nd birthday, his cousin Darwin Derwood Coates, 21,
tucked a .22-caliber handgun into the waistband of his trousers and
accidentally shot himself in the groin. As guests tried to assist
Coates, Johnson relieved him of the gun and stuck it in the most
convenient place he could find, which was the waistband of his
own trousers. The gun fired again, striking Johnson in the
buttocks. Both men were hospitalized.
This page was last updated April 16, 1998.
Some material taken from
News of the Weird.