Law roundup: Woman goes buggy over pesticides
A woman called the Kalispell Police Department with suspicions that her neighbor was using an overabundance of pesticides and ether to kill bugs in his apartment. She also complained that he wouldn’t stop bugging her for cigarettes.
A man was allegedly yelling at cars that he would kill people and kept trying to fight individuals.
Someone told a drunk man to leave a location and never come back, then called the police when he refused. Law enforcement was not needed when he finally left.
Yelling was heard from what someone thought might be a physical disturbance in their neighborhood where a lot of cars were parked. Officers located the disturbance and the commotion turned out to be over a stuck vehicle.
A man was heard cursing on a call to 911 before the line disconnected. He said a 3-year-old was playing with the phone.
A Columbia Falls Police Department officer visited the townhouse of a man who requested to speak to an officer in person about neighbor issues. The man, who was drunk, wanted the officer to check out his bathroom because of an alleged ammonia odor coming from the neighbor’s residence. The officer did not smell anything out of the ordinary.
The milkman reportedly set off a motion detector alarm during a delivery.
An irate woman called the police to complain about getting multiple phone calls from family she didn’t want to talk to, saying she couldn’t live her life because they wouldn’t leave her alone. She believed the solution was a temporary restraining order. She was advised to block the phone numbers and then go to the city court to obtain the orders.
The seller of a snowblower called officers for help because they expected a confrontation with the prospective buyer after deciding not to sell it to the man. The buyer had missed an initial meeting to get payment and then attempted to pay with a check that was turned down.
An unoccupied minivan with its hazard lights on was sitting at a location for nearly three hours and someone thought officers should check it out.
A woman alleged that a man driving recklessly almost hit her on purpose at a Coram gas station. Although the other driver’s lack of control may have been due to icy road conditions, she drove to the police department when she thought the exact vehicle was following her home.
.