Tag: blotter

A long mouse tale, fish burglars and more in the Blaine police blotter


Written by | The Bellingham Herald | October 31, 2012

Posted by Caleb Hutton

Text courtesy of the Blaine Police Department, with minor edits for style.

Wednesday, Oct. 24

3:21 p.m. A tavern employee called police mid-afternoon to report a suspicious man in the area had been asked to leave their premises because he appeared to be high. The subject reportedly rode away on a bicycle with no seat. Police intercepted the transient about a block away and found that he was not impaired by drugs or alcohol, but appeared to possibly have minor mental issues. He was not wanted for any warrants, and was asked to pedal with caution on his journey out of town.

4:29 p.m. The 911 call center asked Blaine Police to search out and contact a bunch of boys with a motorcycle who were probably in the area of Sweet Road and the city limits. The dispatchers were tracking a series of calls from a “911-only’ cell phone: The caller would not talk to dispatchers but they could hear boyish chatter and a cycle in the background. A Blaine officer located the group of kids and their adult chaperone. They apologized and terminated the problem by moving the cell phone to a different pocket.

Thursday, Oct. 25

1:05 a.m. A concerned resident called police when they spotted a figure outdoors with a flashlight in the 300 block of E Street. Officers arrived and interrupted masked trespassers who were in the process of stealing fish from an outdoor landscape pond. The suspects were doing their best to dispose of the evidence by consuming it, much to the chagrin of the flashlight-wielding pond owner who was working to reset the breaker switch on his landscape security lighting. In the end the pond was filled with light, but not before the raccoons were filled with fish.

6:20 p.m. Police were dispatched to contact a parent who was reporting her runaway teenage daughter has returned home. An officer met the family and confirmed that the young lady was now physically home. The teen had violated her probation by leaving home without permission, and she was wanted on an juvenile court arrest warrant for an alcohol violation. She
was arrested and booked in to Juvenile Detention.

9:07 p.m. Blaine police were assisted by U.S. Border Patrol agents when they responded to a report of a disorderly person at a restaurant lounge in downtown Blaine. They contacted a belligerent drunk at the business, and learned from witnesses that the stranger had come in to the eatery and threatened to assault an employee for no apparent reason. The drunk directed his confrontational behavior toward the arriving officers as they investigated the incident. The problem was resolved by arresting the 35-year-old Bellingham resident and booking him in to jail for misdemeanor assault, disorderly conduct, public consumption of alcohol and resisting arrest.

Friday, Oct. 26

1:25 p.m. A young man on O’Dell Road was a little more than startled when a large mouse popped up beside him, and fixated on his unexpected visitor. Unfortunately the gent was driving his pickup at the time, and the next thing to pop up was the much larger light pole that he crashed in to while trying to come to grips with the rodent. Man and mouse survived the collision, but the motorist’s desire to exterminate his passenger was overcome by his need to first extinguish his vehicle, because a fire erupted following the wreck. The Blaine officer who arrived at the scene discovered that the truck had careened out of the city limits and in to the county’s jurisdiction before crashing and catching fire, so the final twist of bad luck in the long mouse tale fell to the sheriff’s deputy who had to respond and fit the entire adventure into a traffic collision report.

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Man wanted for assault tried to dodge cops by saying he had an appointment, and more from the Blaine police blotter


Written by | The Bellingham Herald | June 13, 2012

Posted by Caleb Hutton

Text courtesy of the Blaine Police Department, with minor edits for style.

Friday, June 8

6:02 p.m. A student reported a blue 24-inch Roadmaster mountain bike with orange writing had been stolen from the bike rack at the Blaine Elementary School.

Saturday, June 9

11:24 a.m. A girl called the police from Cedar Street and requested transportation to the hospital so she could talk to mental heath staff. The teenager had no transportation and no money for the bus. An officer provided the transport to Bellingham.

2:12 p.m. A knuckle on a southbound freight train broke and left the train blocking the intersection of Bell Road and Peace Portal Drive for more than 70 minutes. Two officers provided traffic control on both sides of the blockage, advising motorists of the situation and providing those not familiar with the area directions for an alternative route.

11:20 p.m. Officers were dispatched to a Blaine business for a report of a disturbance in the bar. Officers arrived and spoke with onsite security who advised they had escorted a man from the bar who was being boisterous and verbally argumentative. It was also reported that the man was unable to pay for his round trip taxi ride from Bellingham back to Blaine. The resident was able to secure funds from an ATM machine to pay for the taxi. The taxi service then took the man to his home, after receiving his money for the trip upfront.

Monday, June 11

9:01 a.m. An officer stopped a vehicle for speeding on H Street. The driver, who was found to be driving with a suspended license, was arrested, cited and released with a mandatory court appearance. The passenger in the vehicle left the traffic stop to attend an appointment. When located a few blocks away waiting for a cab, the passenger was arrested on multiple warrants through multiple agencies, and booked into jail.

Note: Kyle Randall Wheeler was booked by the Blaine Police Department at 11:52 a.m. Monday for failure to appear for several charges, including second-degree assault and second-degree malicious mischief.

2:28 p.m. An officer investigated an assault when a victim reported she had been struck over the past five days by her boyfriend, and had been strangled to the point of unconsciousness. The officer developed probable cause to arrest the suspect for felony assault, and booked him into jail for second-degree assault. He was booked into jail.

Note: Logan Slade Carmona was booked into jail that evening for second-degree domestic violence assault.

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‘Gaggle’ of teens arrested near Blaine Middle School after concert, and more from the Blaine police blotter


Written by | The Bellingham Herald | June 6, 2012

Posted by Caleb Hutton

Text courtesy of the Blaine Police Department, with minor edits for style.

May 30

11:08 a.m. A business on Third Street called police when they discovered three counterfeit $20 bills in their till. An officer met with the cashier who had received the fake notes. She explained she had accepted the counterfeits from a customer she did not know during a very busy spell at the register and had not inspected them at the time. The fraud went undetected until the manager saw them a few hours later and noticed their serial numbers were identical. The counterfeit bills were sent to the U.S. Secret Service.

5 p.m. A resident reported that a vehicle had run off of Parkview Drive next to his house and knocked over one of the large rocks he had placed at his property edge as a boundary. The rock sustained little damage. The vehicle however left behind a hub cap and a plastic fairing from inside a wheel well. Police investigated and found the offending car and motorist, a 23-year-old Blaine resident who had been driving with a suspended license when he fled the scene. The hit and run matter is under prosecutor’s review.

June 3

1:51 p.m. Police were dispatched to Cherry Street for a barking dog complaint. An officer searched the area and could barely hear the barking over the hum of lawnmowers and playing children in the neighborhood. He found the dog in a back yard just as its owner arrived home. The beast was happy to see both men. He’d gotten his leash all bound up by running in circles that his head was barely off the ground. As soon as his tether was unwound the dog became his mellow quiet self.

June 4

2:36 p.m. A person entering the U.S. at the Peace Arch Port of Entry was referred for a secondary inspection. Police were called when Customs officers found that she was in possession of a controlled substance, hashish, and drug paraphernalia, and was carrying other prescribed controlled substances not in their original containers. The Surrey, B.C., resident was issued a citation and mandatory court appearance date.

June 5

12:50 a.m. Police responded to assist a Border Patrol Agent who was contacting a suspicious person in a residential area near the border late at night. The man turned out to be a transient who had been refused entry into Canada earlier. He was not wanted by authorities and not committing any offenses. Officers thanked the man for his time, and he returned to his transience.

7 p.m. A middle school faculty member intervened with a group of teenage boys at an after-school musical event at the Performing Arts Center, near G Street. The uncooperative teens walked away and police were notified they had possibly been drinking alcohol.

Officers contacted the gaggle a few blocks away. A 15-year-old boy was arrested on investigation of possession of drug paraphernalia and for being a minor in possession of alcohol. A 16-year-old boy was in possession of a controlled substance and appeared under the influence of drugs, and was arrested.

A prescription bottle of lithium in someone else’s name, a glass smoking pipe and a partial bottle of whiskey were impounded from the kids. The 16-year-old’s level of consciousness declined during contact and he was transported to the hospital by paramedics. The parents were contacted and took custody of the boys pending their appearance in court.

June 6

12:04 a.m. Police responded to an apartment on Fourth Street after a woman who lived there reported her visiting boyfriend had thrown the furniture around. No evidence of criminal activity was found. The gentleman chose to depart at the same time as the officers, thus ending the evening’s furniture rearrangement.

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