Law roundup: Grand theft kayak caught on camera
Someone reportedly managed to steal a 30-foot fiberglass racing kayak and the theft was caught on a neighbor’s camera.
Someone allegedly picked up two high school girls they didn’t know who asked for rides home. They dropped them off at a gas station and called the police, saying the pair seemed distraught and one girl told them a friend overdosed in a pedestrian tunnel, but didn’t say who.
Officers responded to a report of a man allegedly covered in blood and requested medics check a cut on his hand.
A man complained about neighbors repeatedly coming up to him and taking photos of him. A dispatcher gave him the non-emergency phone number to report any similar incidents that weren’t in progress.
Officers responded to a few DUI calls. One man driving a white Chevy Bolt reportedly almost hit a few cars head on. A silver Toyota Tacoma was allegedly unable to stay in its lane. A woman reportedly received a text about a swerving white super duty truck that grazed guard rails in Somers.
Dispatch called back a phone number associated with a 911 hangup a few times and was caught in hold music hell. On the third callback, a front desk answering machine picked up.
Dispatch received a later 911 hangup from a deactivated phone. A woman answered on the callback and said she didn’t have an emergency, she just wanted to know if she could call 911.
Officers ticketed a driver for no proof of insurance or registration and warned them about a headlight.