Criminals: Police Found Thieves . . . Thanks to a Trail of Candy Wrappers

Police Found Thieves . . . Thanks to a Trail of Candy Wrappers

 

 

Police in Georgia recently busted a gang of thieves . . . by following a TRAIL OF CANDY WRAPPERS.

 

 

Nine bandits have been accused of burglarizing multiple homes and vehicles in early October . . . about a half-hour outside of Atlanta.

 

 

The thieves hiked through wooded areas to sneak into properties and cars . . . make getaways . . . and stash items that they stole until they could take them elsewhere. But that was also their undoing.

 

 

One of the items they stole was a bag of miniature Milky Way bars, which one of the thieves was snacking on while they were making their way through the woods. They left a trail of wrappers, and the cops followed it to their house.

 

 

The police have arrested nine thieves . . . but the investigation is still ongoing, so more arrests are possible. The suspects were hit with various charges, including burglary and drug possession.

 

 Read More HERE 

 

A man in a wheelchair was seen rolling down the 405 freeway in Los Angeles among the cars on Saturday night. 

The cops showed up and got him off the road safely. It's unclear if the man was arrested. 

Read More HERE

Burglars Were Caught After Robbing a Phone Store When One of Them Forgot Their Personal Phone

 

 

An AT&T store in Oklahoma was ransacked early Sunday morning, and the burglars thought they were smart by cutting the power to the store before breaking a window to get in.

 

 

But if the power had been on, there may have been enough light for the thieves to realize that one of them had left their PERSONAL cell phone in the store.

 

 

The cops showed up . . . noticed the USED phone . . . and took it into evidence. After they left, the thief went back and told the employees that he had recently left his phone there, but they told him they didn't have it so he left.

 

 

Then the employees called the police . . . reported the car the guy was driving . . . and they tracked him down. When the cops approached the vehicle, they asked for his name, and he said he was "Matt Damon."  (???)

 

 

He wasn't. His name was Dillon Slack, and he and his father, David McCollough, were arrested for burglary and false impersonation.

 

 Read More HERE

Photo: Getty Images


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