Law roundup: Woman asks police to analyze vitamin bottle
Someone reportedly brought a bottle of vitamins to the police department to inspect, concerned it had been tampered with, and the store might need to recall the product, after opening it to find an “odd powder” inside and on the cap that they thought was fentanyl. Officers didn’t note anything suspicious. The cap had a “normal sealed cover," and the white substance appeared to be from a small section of the cardboard lid that flaked off into the seal.
A man claiming to be in the CIA reportedly wanted to speak to an officer and possibly turn himself in, saying he violated a restraining order when he messaged a woman three minutes ago and was hitting on her.
An extremely intoxicated man allegedly tried to sleep on the ground behind a store’s propane tanks next to a cart full of merchandise and alcohol that an employee suspected he didn't pay for because the items weren’t bagged, and there was no receipt. The man told officers the stuff was not his and it was returned to the store. He slowly moved on and officers told him he would be considered trespassing if he returned.
A woman allegedly called 911 and rapidly fired off that she had a “SOP report that could be retrieved by the marshals” and hung up. Dispatch was unable to call her back.
A dumpster fire was reported on Sixth Avenue in Kalispell.
A red diesel truck, a gray lifted truck, a black truck, a white truck and a black hatchback were reportedly speeding and driving erratically on the highway.
Someone, who wanted to remain anonymous, complained that a black golf cart was parked in a handicapped-designated zone, alleging it was an ongoing issue.
A man stopped for shoplifting was reportedly compliant with authorities while a woman took off into the parking lot and possibly went into a brown trailer near the entrance. She was cited for shoplifting and warned about her warrant.
A dog allegedly charged a man’s wife. The dog was secured in its yard. However, the dog was preventing him from going into his yard to load belongings while moving because it reportedly always attacking flimsy fencing that could be pushed over.