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Intruder gets into woman's shorts

| January 29, 2020 4:00 AM

Kalispell Police Department received a report about someone who allegedly went into a woman’s room while she was at an appointment, wore her clean shorts, “made a mess in them” and put them back in her drawer.

A woman who was reportedly assaulted a couple of nights ago by a man believed he put out a “hit” on her and set it up. She told police she had texts to back up her allegation.

A driver was turning into an apartment complex when two young children allegedly jumped out in front of his truck and laid down. He alleged the children did the same thing to four or five other vehicles. He reportedly went to speak to their father and smelled a “strong odor of marijuana.” Everything appeared OK to police, who saw several kids in the area being supervised by an adult.

A hotel manager saw a man allegedly hitting a screaming woman and trying to pull her out of a truck while a dog was barking and getting agitated. The man then walked toward Main Street. Eventually a tow truck was called and a hypodermic needle was reportedly found on the driver’s side floor and was seized for destruction.

A young man was spotted sleeping at a light on Main Street and was allegedly not responding when other vehicles honked. The man’s eyes purportedly “snapped open” and he “took off” when someone got out to check on him. They called police out of concern he was under the influence.

Someone called police to report a “random lady” got into her vehicle and was possibly intoxicated. While the owner took the keys to the vehicle, the lady stayed in the passenger seat.

Someone saw four young men in a “beat up” pickup who were trying to jump-start a white pickup. He was unsure if they were trying to steal it or not.

A man wearing a knit hat and green coat reportedly told a man the outside lights were out and when he went to go check they “ripped open” a drawer, breaking the lock and stole $130 in cash.

Someone thought two people wearing backpacks were acting suspiciously. They reportedly could not tell dispatchers what exactly they were doing that was suspicious — just that they were walking around with backpacks.