Flashy dresser ‘not fresh out of prison’
Someone called the Whitefish Police Department because they saw a man in a “bright orange jumpsuit.” The man was spotted riding a bike wearing the jumpsuit and sporting bleach blonde hair. The caller pointed out there are “not any prisons nearby.” It turned out the “orange jumpsuit is his daily attire,” and he was “not fresh out of prison.”
A parent called the police about his son for aggressive driving, but then the next day decided he didn’t want to press charges.
Someone called about “his mother being arrested.”
An anxious driver lent her vehicle to a friend and then called the police when it hadn’t been returned one hour later. The vehicle was located in Kalispell and towed.
Someone purchased four watches for more than $4,000 and then suspected he might be caught up in a fraud scam.
Children were seen skateboarding on the ramp at a post office and were asked to move along.
A neighbor was worried about people staying nearby who she said had a lot of visitors coming in and out of the state without sheltering in place. She also suspected these people were throwing a party.
Another bothered neighbor thought someone in her apartment complex was “smoking pot.” She said the smell was “too strong” and it forced her to leave her apartment. She knocked on the door of the residence where she thought the smell was coming from, but she said the people inside didn’t answer.
A real estate agent said she was being continually harassed by a man who said inappropriate things, including threatening to have sexual relations with the girl he was allegedly babysitting.
An “older deaf dog” went missing for two hours.
A man reportedly bought an orange motorcycle and quickly attracted police attention by “test-driving it” up and down a neighborhood street at “approximately 60 miles per hour.”
A man who was slurring his words called the police to ask if he was allowed to pass out in front of a business.
A woman who left her window open heard a man screaming outside. It turned out he was on probation for criminal endangerment and tampering with evidence.
A downstairs neighbor wanted her noisy upstairs neighbor to stop “stomping and banging on the floor.”