crimsonride
huh?
- Location
- Murray
You know, when my cherokee was stolen I reported it. Three days later at four in the morning my phone rings and it's the police telling me I have twenty minutes to pick it up or they're going to tow it. I inform them it was stolen and the response is "Uh...oh, ok well you'll need to pick it up right away or we're going to tow it. It's blocking a driveway."
So I pick it up. It's stripped to the bone and I barely get it home. The next day I call the police to ask them if they are going to finger print it so I can start cleaning it up and the response is "well, now that you've gone through it there's nothing we can do."
So a year passes. My landcruiser is parked out behind my work and at the end of the day a guy pulls up in a old ford, gets out and asks me if I'm interested in selling the cruiser. He chats with me for a while, tells me he does fiberglass repair for a living, blah, blah, blah. So I start the cruiser (there's a special procedure) and I let him test drive it. He says he has to ask his wife for the money and leaves. ...the next morning it's gone.
So here's what I tell the police. I know what he looks like, I know what he drives (quite specifically). I know he was at the DMV that day because he had a one week temp liscence in his truck window that expired in exactly one week. I also know the general area he left to when he left since my sister left at the same time as him and ended up coincidentally following him a few miles on her way home. ....Nothing from the police at all.
Three years later I find my own stolen vehicle in a storage facility with records, security cameras and other vehicles that were brought in with the cruiser and the very most the police do for me is come pick up the cruiser and take it to the impound.
Is it me or does it seem like they can do a little better than that?
So I pick it up. It's stripped to the bone and I barely get it home. The next day I call the police to ask them if they are going to finger print it so I can start cleaning it up and the response is "well, now that you've gone through it there's nothing we can do."
So a year passes. My landcruiser is parked out behind my work and at the end of the day a guy pulls up in a old ford, gets out and asks me if I'm interested in selling the cruiser. He chats with me for a while, tells me he does fiberglass repair for a living, blah, blah, blah. So I start the cruiser (there's a special procedure) and I let him test drive it. He says he has to ask his wife for the money and leaves. ...the next morning it's gone.
So here's what I tell the police. I know what he looks like, I know what he drives (quite specifically). I know he was at the DMV that day because he had a one week temp liscence in his truck window that expired in exactly one week. I also know the general area he left to when he left since my sister left at the same time as him and ended up coincidentally following him a few miles on her way home. ....Nothing from the police at all.
Three years later I find my own stolen vehicle in a storage facility with records, security cameras and other vehicles that were brought in with the cruiser and the very most the police do for me is come pick up the cruiser and take it to the impound.
Is it me or does it seem like they can do a little better than that?