xtratabasco wrote:Grand Junction port-a-potty peeper sentenced to 4 1/2 years in prison
GRAND JUNCTION, Colo. - A repeat peeping tom has been sentenced to 4 1/2 years in prison for taking hundreds of photographs and videos of women inside a Grand Junction port-a-potty.
Mesa County District Judge Valerie Robison sentenced 37-year-old Joshua Vohs Monday after rejecting his public defender's request for probation instead. Lawyer Matt Mulch argued that Vohs would be more likely to get treatment for his problem outside of prison.
and this gem.
Florida gym coach arrested for stealing money from students' lockers
'Operation: Sticky Fingers,' which partnered with the Volusia County Sheriff's office and New Smyrna Beach High School, led to the bust of 43-year-old Rodney Barnes on felony charges Monday. Authorities credited a luminescent theft detection kit to catch the crook in the act.
BY NINA GOLGOWSKI NEW YORK DAILY NEWS Tuesday, May 13, 2014, 9:16 PM A A A
New Smyrna gym coach Rodney Barnes, 43, was arrested and charged with felony charges of burglary and grand theft after Volusia County deputies say he was caught stealing money from students' lockers.
New Smyrna gym coach Rodney Barnes, 43, was arrested and charged with felony charges of burglary and grand theft after Volusia County deputies say he was caught stealing money from students' lockers.
Coaching apparently doesn't pay the bills — but stealing from children does.
A Florida gym teacher suspected of stealing money from students' lockers was allegedly caught with ultraviolet powder coating his thieving hands after an elaborate months-long sting.
"Operation: Sticky Fingers," an investigation partnering with the Volusia County Sheriff's office and New Smyrna Beach High School, led to the bust of 43-year-old Rodney Barnes on felony charges Monday.
The probe using a luminescent theft detection kit was launched after students reported to a school resource deputy of money going missing from their lockers over several months.
Nine students in all reported thefts of nearly $950 total, according to the sheriff's office.
The students claimed that their lockers were secured and you couldn't see their valuables from outside. Somehow, still, they were being broken into.
The school consequently purchased the kit, which they used to coat $141 cash with the ultraviolet powder. The substance is detectable under an ultraviolet light source which turns hands covered in it a fluorescent yellowish-green, according to the sheriff's office.
A wallet containing the cash was then planted in a student's locker as bait.
It took several weeks after its April 25 set up, but on Monday a student reported the wallet's contents as partially gone when he went to check on it.
The school resource deputy along with a school administrator immediately locked down the gym and had the students go in pairs under an ultraviolet light, according to the sheriff's office.
Each student was cleared of detection and allowed to leave. It was then that Barnes' hands were scanned.
"The result was a plainly visible yellowish-green fluorescent glow on both of his hands," stated the sheriff's department.
During his questioning Barnes allegedly admitted to taking $50 from the wallet as well as $170 at other times.
Deputies believe Barnes may be behind other thefts, however, and say their investigation is ongoing.
Barnes was booked into the Volusia County Branch Jail in Daytona Bach on felony charges of burglary and grand theft.
He was being held on $3,000 bond.
Read more: http://www.nydailynews.com/news/nationa ... z31f9fjO7O
Ok, you hate the school system.