Perry Police Report April 27

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April 23, 2018

  • A caller said “she’s having issues with the person who lives there.” The caller said “someone had tried to steal her dog,” and “the situation is getting out of control.” An officer responded.
  • A caller said her neighbor’s dog regularly defecates in the caller’s yard and also “irritates her dogs.” An officer responded.
  • A caller asked whether an officer of the Perry Police Department would conduct a welfare check on his brother. The caller said “he needs to make contact with him to provide him with family information.” An officer responded.
  • A caller said “someone has slashed her driver-side tires.” An officer responded.
  • A caller “reported three little fox kits by their den.” An officer responded and determined the little foxes “are not in danger or a danger to anyone.”
  • A man entered the offices of the Perry Police Department at 908 Willis Ave. and asked whether an officer would accompany him to the residence of another man. The man “said his wife moved in with” the other man “in November, and he is in need to speak with her as she has been using their money.” The man said he believes the other man “is violent,” and he “wants an officer to keep the peace.” An officer responded and escorted the man to the residence. “No one answered the door.”
  • A caller said a dog was running at large. An officer responded and transported the animal to the Perry Animal Holding Facility.
  • Aaron Dean Embrey, 48, 2411 McKinley St., Perry, was arrested on a Dallas County warrant.
  • A caller said “her son just got home from school and informed her that their gaming system was stolen from her residence.” An officer responded.
  • A caller said her neighbor was playing loud music. An officer responded.
  • A caller from a local retail business said they received a counterfeit $20 bill. An officer responded.
  • Steven Lee Jensen, 54, 1714 Fourth St., Perry, was arrested on a Dallas County warrant for failure to appear on an original charge of domestic abuse and on a Marion County warrant for failure to pay child support.
  • A caller asked to speak with an officer about a “no-contact order and removing his belongings from the residence.”
  • A caller said “for the past several days, someone’s been knocking on his door between 1 a.m. and 5 a.m.” An officer responded and advised the caller “to call the police department the next time someone is pounding at his door and to not wait.”
  • Shirley Bailey, 1715 Pattee St., Perry, was issued a citation for first-offense open burning violation.

April 24, 2018

  • A woman entered the offices of the Perry Police Department at 908 Willis Ave. and “reported vandalism at the little league ball diamonds.” The woman said “the water fountain was damaged and signs were torn down.” An officer “responded to complete a vandalism report.”
  • Larry Knox of 1316 Sixth St., Perry, was issued a citation for first-offense nuisance burning.
  • Marcella Villa Tellez of 1306 Sixth St., Perry, was issued a citation for first-offense nuisance burning.
  • A woman entered the offices of the Perry Police Department at 908 Willis Ave. with a billfold she said she found. An officer responded, and the item was “logged into evidence.”
  • A caller said “she has a stalker.” An officer responded and advised the unwelcome male “to stay away from” the caller.
  • A caller said her dog was lost.

April 25, 2018

  • A caller reported a man “on a bicycle that just asked him for a syringe.” The caller said the man “appears to be intoxicated.” Officers responded but did not find the man on the bicycle.
  • A caller “called to report her vehicle stolen.” The caller “said she is homeless and has been living out of her” vehicle. An officer responded.
  • A wireless 911 caller said his bike was stolen. An officer responded and learned the caller’s mother “hid the bike to teach him a lesson. She has asked him to put his bike away so it doesn’t get stolen.”
  • A caller reported “a 10-year-old boy neighbor who is causing all kinds of trouble for her.” An officer responded.
  • A caller said neighbors “were arguing and yelling.” An officer responded and “calmed the situation down.”
  • A woman entered the offices of the Perry Police Department at 908 Willis Ave. and said she “is having issues with her children’s father, who she believes is going to come and take her kids.” An officer responded and referred the caller to Crisis Intervention and Advocacy.
  • A caller said her dog was lost. The caller called again and said her dog was found.
  • An officer issued a solicitor ordinance violation warning to someone “with a compnay called Tonic and trying to sell Direct TV without a permit.”
  • Jocelyn Ochoa was issued a citation for no proof of insurance.
  • A caller reported “someone playing their music really loud.” An officer responded and found “no loud music within the area.”
  • A caller said she was concerned for the safety of “her vehicles due to people walking around at night.” An officer responded.
  • Lane Garrett Pace, 22, 1324 Ninth St., Perry, was arrested on a Dallas County warrant on an original charge of driving under suspension.

April 26, 2018

  • A caller said “she has a question about where she can carry her gun.” An officer responded.
  • A 15-year-old male from Perry was arrested on a charge of possession of drug paraphernalia.
  • A caller reported a phone scam. Officers were advised.
  • A caller said someone “she has issues with” had “opened her UPS mail and then brought it to her.” The caller said “she wanted to press charges for someone opening her mail.” An officer responded and explained that “local law enforcement doesn’t file federal charges for opening someone else’s mail and then delivering said mail.”
  • A caller at a local retail store reported “a gas drive off” valued at $4.61. An officer responded.
  • A patrolling officer of the Perry Police Department “was flagged down by someone” who reported “that there was a leak in the park bathrooms.” The Perry Parks and Recreation and the Perry Water departments were notified.
  • A caller asked to “speak to an officer regarding custody.” An officer responded.
  • A caller said “she has not been receiving her mail in the past month.” An officer responded and determined the issue “might need to involve a postal inspector.”
  • A caller said “that the wrong medication was sent to him and (he) was not allowed to have contact with someone.” An officer responded.
  • A patrolling officer of the Perry Police Department removed debris from the roadway.
  • A caller said “she was just in a physical altercation involving her husband.” The caller said “he tried to grab their daughter and take off with her, and she punched him in the face.” Officers responded.
  • A caller said “after pressing charges on” someone, “his family keeps harassing her.” An officer responded and explained “how to block all of the” harassers “on all social media to prevent contact with them.”

April 27, 2018

  • An officer of the Perry Police Department was asked by a law enforcement agency for assistance in “processing some cell phones in reference to a missing-person case.” The officer responded, “processed” and “returned the phones and a copy of the information that was extracted from them.”

*A criminal charge is merely an accusation, and the defendant is presumed innocent until and unless proven guilty.

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