Police: Fake cop arrested
Police say a man
impersonating an officer with a flashing red light in his car has been arrested
after he pulled over the wrong driver — the mayor of Shreveport, La.
Police think the suspect was
using the in-dash light to maneuver through traffic Monday night in northwest
Louisiana. Mayor Cedric Glover says he pulled over when the drove behind him,
but the fake officer then sped away.
Glover says he followed the
car and called police. Daniel Niederhelman, 21, of Shreveport has been charged
with false personation of a peace officer.
Police seized the light and
a handgun from Niederhelman’s holster. Authorities say
Niederhelman works for a private security company, but wasn’t authorized
to use the light.
Booking records did not list
an attorney for Niederhelman.
Vienna abuzz over plan for cafe
Talk about a caffeine high.
Coffee enthusiasts will be
able to get a cup — and a slice of cake — in a makeshift cafe being
set up inside a tower of Vienna’s stately St. Stephen’s Cathedral.
Organizers say the cafe will
offer sweeping views of the Austrian capital from its perch in the tower, which
is 72 meters (236 feet) high.
The lofty cafe won’t be
permanent. Vienna’s Coffeehouse Association said Tuesday it’s a one-day deal to
help mark the city’s annual Coffee Day on Oct. 1.
Trash bin tryst thwarted
A tender moment in a trash
bin went all wrong for a couple who found themselves
being held up at pocket knifepoint.
Wichita police say two
44-year-olds had climbed into a Dumpster to be alone just after 6 p.m. Saturday
when two men interrupted them and demanded their belongings.
Officers say the man and
woman were engaged in “an intimate moment’’ when they were robbed of their
shoes, jewelry and the man’s wallet.
Police say one of the
robbers was a 64-year-old man who egged his 59-year-old companion on during the
robbery.
The suspects were found a
short time later and the stolen property was returned.
Wrong house, different suspect
A northeast Tennessee deputy
sheriff who went to the wrong house came back with his man anyway.
The incident occurred Friday
evening when Carter County Sheriff’s Deputy Richard Barnett responded to a
domestic disturbance call, but mistakenly knocked on the door of the wrong
house.
The Johnson City Press reported
33-year-old Daniel Hubert Taylor Jr. invited him in. Then, Taylor put his hands
behind his back for handcuffing and told Barnett he was ready to go to jail,
saying he had an outstanding arrest warrant.
Taylor appeared in court
Monday and was sentenced to 40 days.
He was found guilty of
contempt and violating probation for failing to pay fines and complete an anger
management course from an earlier incident.
Soldier alive
Military officials say
they’re investigating why a western New York man was told his son had been
killed in Afghanistan when in fact the soldier was alive and well.
Ray Jasper of Niagara Falls
says he was camping Sunday when he received a call on his cell phone from a
woman who said she was a military liaison. He says the woman told him his son,
Staff Sgt. Jesse Jasper, was killed in action Saturday.
The father says he later
called military officials to get details of his son’s death and was told that
his son was alive. Ray Jasper says the officials couldn’t explain the earlier
call.
The father says his son
later called from Afghanistan and said he would talk to his commanding officers
about the call reporting his death.
Chase ends on chief’s yard
A Maine woman attempting to
get away from police in Conway, N.H., picked the wrong yard to drive through,
crashing within feet of the town police chief and his daughter.
Twenty-two-year-old Eliza
Billings of Limerick, Maine, was charged with drunk driving and felonious
reckless conduct with a deadly weapon following the Sunday night chase. Police
said it started when she allegedly failed to stop for speeding near an
intersection.
Police said Billings drove
over Police Chief Ed Wagner’s yard, coming close to Wagner and one of his
daughters, who were outside working on a school project.
Wagner assisted in taking
Billings into custody. She also was charged with disobeying an officer and
marijuana possession and was arraigned Monday. Bail was set at $4,000 cash.
Huntsville boy fakes kidnapping
An 11-year-old Huntsville
boy gets high marks in storytelling after staging a hoax to cover up his bad
grades.
Police say the boy faked his
kidnapping Friday to avoid bringing home a bad report card, saying that a man
with a pistol snatched him after he left Ed White Middle School.
The boy said the man forced
him into a “beat-up car’’ and threatened to kill him.
The student said he escaped
by jumping out of the car but wasn’t able to grab his bookbag, which contained
the report card.
He ran to his grandparents’
house and later confessed to lying. His grandfather called
police to apologize.
Sgt. Mark Roberts said
police were suspicious that the boy was able to “escape’’ with his band
instrument, but not his bookbag.
Roberts said the boy faces
no charges at this time.
Chunk of ice falls from sky
A Detroit man says a
softball-sized chunk of ice fell from the sky and knocked a hole into the roof
of his west side home.
Gerald Young tells WJBK-TV
that he believes the grayish lump originated from a plane flying overhead about
6:15 p.m. Sunday.
The television station
reports that a party was under way outdoors next to Young’s home, but no one was hit by the ice. Young tells the station that he
reported the incident to the Federal Aviation Administration.
A neighbor says they heard a
whistling sound before the ice crashed into the roof and rolled to the ground.
FAA spokesman Tony Molinaro
says the agency is investigating the incident. He said there is a better chance
of tracing the ice’s origin if it was saved by the homeowner.
Stuffed bear arrives in Cobb
Things have gotten a bit
wild at Cobb County’s recreation department.
The stuffed body of a black
bear killed by a car in summer 2008 along a busy road in the north
Atlanta suburb has arrived from the taxidermist this month. The bear will soon
go to the county’s Cato Environmental Education Center in Austell, but for now
it’s greeting visitors to the Parks, Recreation and Cultural Affairs office.
State officials estimate
about 2,200 black bears live in Georgia.
Man apologizes after assault
A New York man has been
arrested on assault and weapons charges after police say he threatened a Lowell
gas station clerk with a knife, then returned later to apologize.
Despite the apology,
31-year-old Juan Carrion was arrested Sunday on two counts of assault with a
dangerous weapon and a violation of the city’s dangerous-weapon ordinance.
According to police, Carrion
pulled a knife during an argument with the clerk at Moujaes Inc. gas station.
Police were first called to
the business in what was originally thought to be a robbery attempt.
After the first encounter,
the suspect returned to the gas station to apologize, leading a clerk to call
police.
It was not immediately known
if Carrion has an attorney.
Anti-cigarette butt effort
airs
After a summertime public
service campaign about cigarette butts in Knox County there are more of them,
not fewer.
The group Keep Knoxville
Beautiful launched the campaign after a canvass of 0.2 miles of Maynardville
Highway on June 1 turned up 1,386 butts.
Volunteers collected the
spent cigarettes again on Aug. 31 and found 1,493 of them.
Beautification group
executive director Allison Teeters told The Knoxville News Sentinel she hopes
the increase was because of the summer tourist season.
But Teeters said some people
who would never think of throwing out other trash don’t think twice about
flipping a cigarette butt from a vehicle.
Teeters said the group plans
to do another scan at the end of September.
Crabber nets baby blue crab
On a recent crabbing run up
the James River near Craney Island, a crab plopped out of a pot that caught
Sally Epps’ eye. The crab was shell-to-claw baby blue, like he’d been turned
upside down and dipped in paint.
Epps has never come across
an all-blue blue crab in 11 years of crabbing.
The typical Atlantic blue
crab has blue claws and the female has distinctive swatches of red at the tip
of the claws.
Epps handed the crab over to
the Virginia Institute of Marine Science. The crab soon died but was frozen for
research purposes.