Perry Police Report Nov. 4

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3269

November 2, 2017

  • A caller said he caught a dog running at large. The caller said “his daughter knows someone who would take the pitbull in.” An officer responded.
  • A caller said he caught a cat running at large. “It’s been around the neighborhood a while, but it’s getting cold,” the caller said, so he “brought it in.” The caller said he now “wants an officer to pick it up.” An officer responded.
  • A caller from a mobile home complex said a “farmer to the west drove equipment through the park.” The caller “requested someone make contact with the farmer and ask them not to drive through the park.” An officer responded and made contact with the landowner, who said “they had a farm service company come into the field.” The farmer said “he will contact them and ask them not to enter the field through the” mobile home complex.
  • A caller said her neighbor “had some type of emergency yesterday and left,” and the neighbor’s “dog had been in the apartment barking and howling since then.” The caller called again and said the neighbor “was on her way home and should be there within 10 minutes.”
  • Aaron David Mallicoat, 30, 1911 Fifth St., Perry, was arrested on a Dallas County warrant for probation violation on an original charge of harassment.
  • A man entered the offices of the Perry Police Department at 908 Willis Ave. and said “his wife was at the elementary school on Monday to pick up their granddaughter, and a woman with sandy blonde hair, driving a white SUV, was flipping her off. They were both trying to get into the same parking area.” An officer responded.
  • A “911 caller spoke limited English,” and officers responded. Two parties were “brought to the police department for investigation,” and a Tigrinya translator was provided by Crisis Advocacy and Intervention.
  • A caller reported “a small dog that was hit by a car.” The caller said the “dog’s collar has a phone number.” An officer made contact with the dog owner and informed the owner “about the dog and its location.”
  • A Nebraska caller “requested a welfare check on her mother.” The caller “said she’s been calling her for several hours.” An officer responded, “forced and gained” entry to the residence of the mother, who was “okay.” The officer advised the mother “to make contact with the daughter.” The officer “repaired entry point prior to leaving residence.”

November 2, 2017

  • A caller “reported a stolen bike.” The caller said someone “left another bike setting in the yard.” An officer responded and investigated, and the unknown “bike was taken to the bike shed.”
  • A caller reported “a large dog in front of the child development center.” The caller said the dog “wasn’t doing anything wrong, but she was worried for it.” An officer responded but did not find the dog.
  • A woman entered the offices of the Perry Police Department at 908 Willis Ave. and said “reported she found drug paraphernalia in her vehicle.” The woman said “the only person who has driven it is her niece.” An officer responded, and the “property was logged into evidence.”
  • A caller reported a hit-and-run accident. Officers responded.
  • An employee with the U.S. Postal Service in Perry presented a patrolling officer of the Perry Police Department with an Alaska driver’s license that “had been put into the drop box.” The item was “logged into evidence.”
  • A 16-year-old female of undisclosed residency was arrested on a charge of disorderly conduct.
  • Five wireless 911 calls were received from one number. The dispatcher heard “normal conversation between two females, possible employees.” The coordinates mapped to a local long-term care facility. Contact was made with an employee of the facility, who reported “no problems there.”
  • A caller said a telephone company technician “just came to check the damage of their unit, and it appears there is damage that needs to be reported.” Officers responded and made contact with the technician, who “confirmed the phone cord had been cut with a side cutter.” An investigation was started.
  • A woman entered the offices of the Perry Police Department at 908 Willis Ave. in order “to speak with an officer about a situation she found ridiculous.” The woman said she was shopping in a local retail store and when “she reached in her bag to eat a piece of candy, someone yelled to call the police and accused her of stealing.” The woman she was “upset” because “they kicked her out.” She said she “has a receipt for her candy from” another local retail store. An officer responded and determined “no criminal offense occurred.”
  • A woman told a patrolling officer of the Perry Police Department that someone “had attempted to remove the door latch from the rear north door of her building. The door had a padlock on it as well, but the screws had been removed. The suspect was unable to gain entry,” but the woman “finds it to be suspicious.”
  • A man entered the offices of the Perry Police Department at 908 Willis Ave. and said he “purchased a modular building a year ago from” someone who “didn’t tell him at the time that he still owed money on the building.” An officer responded and told the man “it is a civil issue, and he would need to take that subject to civil court.”
  • A caller said her cat was lost.
  • A caller said “he is being harassed.” An officer responded.
  • A caller said her cat was lost.
  • Matthew Wayne Richardson, 37, 2627 Warford St., Perry, was arrested on charges of disorderly conduct, first-offense public intoxication and interference with official acts.

November 3, 2017

  • A wireless 911 caller said “her son had run away.” An officer responded. The runaway was later located by the Dallas County Sheriff’s office as he was walking east of Perry.
  • A caller said “she has to surrender a dog to the Dallas County Sheriff’s office today,” and she “is wanting to know if she needs to take the dog’s belongings with her or if she is supposed to keep the items.” An officer responded.
  • A caller reported seeing “a bottle of prescription pills on the sidewalk across the street from the Progressive Foundry.” An officer responded, located the item and attempted to make contact with the owner of the item.
  • A caller, via a translator, said someone “was still harassing her via text messages.” The caller said “she went through the process to get a no-contact order but was denied one.” An officer responded.
  • A caller said his dog was lost.
  • A 13-year-old male from Perry was arrested on a charge of second-degree sexual abuse.
  • A caller said her husband was “a couple of hours late getting home from work.” The caller called again and said “her husband had arrived home, and everything” was “okay.”
  • A caller said his phone was lost.
  • A caller from a local retail store reported the “possible shoplifting of alcohol by two juveniles.” The caller said after entering the store, “one walked over by the liquor, and the other got a large cup of water and then dropped the water on the floor.” Another customer “observed the other male take a bottle of liquor” while the store employee was cleaning up the spilled water. An officer responded and “will follow up checking on the video.”

November 4, 2017

  • A caller said someone caller and said “that her daughter was kidnapped.” The caller said someone from the same phone number “is now calling her husband’s cell.” An officer responded and advised the caller “to block the number.”
  • A caller said “a vehicle ran the stop sign in front of” a local retail store “and hit the sign.” The caller said the sign was “flat on the ground, and the vehicle that hit it has damage on the side of the vehicle and is parked in front of” a local restaurant. An officer responded and made contact with the vehicle’s owner inside the restaurant. The owner said “he didn’t see the stop sign and hit it,” and “he said he was going to call the police after he was done eating with his wife.”
  • A caller said she saw “a gathering of people” and “thought a possible drug transaction had taken place.” An officer responded and found “no suspicious activity.”
  • A woman entered the offices of the Perry Police Department at 908 Willis Ave. with a set of keys she said she found. An officer responded.
  • A hangup 911 call was received. On callback a woman said “everything was fine” and “said her baby had been playing with the phone.”
  • A caller reported a “suspicious person” in a local retail store who “appeared to be either intoxicated or on drugs.” An officer responded and made contact with the person, who “has diabetic neuropathy” and was “with his mother.”

November 5, 2017

  • A caller said “she had gotten a call from a friend of hers stating that someone had broken into” a third party’s “residence” and “that they could hear” the third party “yelling to call the police.” Officers responded to the residence of the third party, who said “someone came into her residence while she was sleeping on the couch in the living room and stole her router for her wifi internet.” An officer located the router “on the window ledge behind her entertainment center.” The third party also claimed someone “put snakes in the entertainment center,” but “no snakes were found” by the officers. A caller later called and said the third party was “saying that someone was in her apartment again.” An officer responded.
  • A caller from the Dallas County Sheriff’s office said “one of their officers is at the Dallas County Hospital with a committal” and “is having problems and needs assistance.” Officers responded.

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

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