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Law roundup: Man can’t say goodbye to photographs

by Daily Inter Lake
| December 8, 2022 12:00 AM

A man claimed his sister stole photos from him of his time in Alaska although he did not have proof or a confession. An officer with the Kalispell Police Department advised him that she could not be charged because there was no evidence implicating his sister in the alleged crime. The man told the officer he would take his hunch to small claims court.

A man reportedly banged on a business’s door and swore at an employee, unhappy the location was closed because he was from out of town and needed to use the phone. He was also said to be confrontational with responding law enforcement.

A man complained that a 41-year-old woman he described as a “problem child” was refusing to leave after he provided a roof over her head and some food.

An individual allegedly tried to make a mobile deposit of a $5,000 check that was more than two years old into an overdrawn account

Permanent license plates were reported stolen from a truck that had broken down at a location.

A man allegedly got the oil changed in a silver or gray Toyota and drove off without paying. An assistant manager attempted to contact the man several times without success. When an officer called, the man pretended to be someone else and hung up. The officer called him back and left a voicemail. Frustrated with the situation, the assistant manager wanted him prosecuted for theft.

A woman claimed she was the victim of identity theft and had billions of dollars stolen from her over the last five years. She did not know who stole the billions.

A store employee requested assistance in removing a verbally abusive customer.

A man wondered if he could hold onto a debit card an employee accused of theft had sent to the location while the theft case was pending.

A wallet left in a shopping cart was reported stolen after it had not been turned in to the store.

A vehicle was speeding, weaving in and out of traffic and brake-checking vehicles.