View Single Post
  #67   Report Post  
Posted to alt.home.repair
trader_4 trader_4 is offline
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 15,279
Default OT Should I tell the police?

On Wednesday, October 15, 2014 11:09:58 AM UTC-4, Pico Rico wrote:
"micky" wrote in message

...

OT Should I tell the police?




About three or four weeks ago, I saw a sticker on the rear window of a


car parked in my n'hood, the parking lot of a townhouse n'hood, saying


it would be towed away because it had a flat tire. No deadline was


given. The HOA does this, aiui, only if someone has complained. Of


course we have more than our share** of petty people who would complain.




**Unless there are so many petty people in the world that we have no


more than our share.




So I pumped his tire up.




Today I pumped it up again, which means the leak is slow.




The car is in excellent condition, has no dents or scratches, the paint


is perfect, it's not dirty, and looks very nice. Valid plates. I


assume someone went on vacation and will start driving it again when he


gets back.




OTOH, most people don't take three week vacations and conceivably, the


car was stolen and left here, parked properly with the door locked.


(well, I haven't tried the door. I just assume it's locked) If it's


stolen, the real owner should get it back before he buys another car.




So I called the police and just wanted them to run the plate, and if


they said it was stolen, I'd tell them where they or the owner can come


and get it.




But the cop wants me to tell him where it is, so they can "roll by and


look at it", and he says they won't do anything if there isn't a


problem.




What problem could there be except that the owner reported it stolen?**


If they tell me that I'll believe them and I'll tell them where it is.


But if it's not stolen, I DON'T WANT TO CAUSE TROUBLE FOR THE OWNER, and


the police, for all the good they do, are also very good at causing


trouble. After all, I'm the one pumping up the tire so it won't be


towed away.




**One idea, it could have the wrong plates on it, but we could probably


verify that on the phone too. The DMV records show the make. Do they


also show the model and color? I think so. If the plates don't match


the make or model or color, then too I would tell them where the car is.




Would you tell the police where it is before they told you it was stolen


or misplated?




reading all the responses, I will toss in mine:



1. try again with the police. Maybe go to the station with the license

plate written down. I have had it go both ways "we can't tell you - where

is the car?" and a smirk, eyes rolling directed at the "smarty pants

citizen", run the plate, and then "yes, it is stolen - where is it?". If

they won't just run it, tell them where it is and let them investigate.



2. If you can, see if the police will at least tell you if the registered

address is in your HOA, so you can try to locate the owner and prevent it

being towed by the HOA. I have had a cop in a cruiser tell me the

registered address so I could walk across the street and tell them to move

their car or it will be towed. Of course, this was right there, and the cop

told me the address once he realized what the deal was - I was dong this guy

a favor.



3. Does your HOA not keep a list of license numbers and HOA owners? Many

do. Do any neighbors know who the car belongs to? Are their assigned

parking spaces?



4. If you can determine the car is not stolen, belongs to an HOA owner, and

you can locate him (or the police can do a welfare check), and you realize

he is simply out of town, tell the HOA to give the guy and his car a break.

If they seem belligerent as most HOAs are, keep filling up the tire, or

forget about it - your choice.





I concur with the thoughts to let the police do their job. The car could be

stolen, or it could belong to a lady who has fallen and can't get up. Try

to eliminate these types of possibilities first.


Note that none of the above is consistent with letting the police do
their job. Having folks waste police time, trying to get them to
run license plates, when they refuse to do it, isn't productive. Police
won't just run plates for you. I think they are probably rightly
concerned that they might be running the plate for a stalker, ****ed of
husband, etc up to no good. If I was a cop, I'd wonder what the hell is
wrong with someone that is so obsessed with a car that they want to come
over and talk to me about it, badger me, when I offered to take care of
the mystery car if they just tell me where it is. I'd might start to
run a check on them.