Monday, December 15, 2025
42.0°F

Thief steals more than a U-Haul trailer

Keith Cousins Staff Writer | Hagadone News Network | UPDATED 8 years, 9 months AGO
by Keith Cousins Staff Writer
| March 10, 2017 12:00 AM

POST FALLS — Rachael Garwick said she is just trying to move on with her life.

But the theft of a U-Haul trailer early Thursday morning from the parking lot of a Post Falls hotel has put a halt to those plans.

“He just walked up, locked on, and left with it,” Garwick said as she recalled to The Press what she saw on hotel surveillance footage. “So now I’m stuck here.”

The trailer, according to Garwick, was storing important documents like birth certificates, as well as the majority of the clothing she and her three kids own.

“It’s nothing valuable, but it’s important,” she added. “It’s everything we have.”

Garwick said she is originally from Tacoma, Wash., but recently attempted to relocate to Kootenai County. The move didn’t work out as she expected and Garwick said she and her children were left homeless.

So the woman secured a job in Tri-Cities, Wash., got financial help in renting a small U-Haul to attach to her Chevy Impala, and was prepared to move.

Post Falls Police Cpt. Greg McLean told The Press Thursday that, according to initial reports, a man driving a 1990s, gold-colored Ford F-150 appeared in the parking lot at 2:25 a.m. In an instant, the thief removed the trailer from Garwick’s Impala and attached it to the truck.

McLean added investigators are still attempting to get the license plate number of the vehicle.

When thefts of trailers occur, McLean said it is common that the perpetrator will get the trailer to an out-of-the-way location before grabbing what they want from it and leaving the trailer behind. In those instances, he added, police often recover the trailer within a week of the initial theft.

McLean encouraged anyone who might have information on the trailer, or the gold truck, to contact their local law enforcement agency.

In the meantime, Garwick said she is stuck in Post Falls. Since all of her family’s identifying documents were in the trailer, she said she likely won’t be able to get assistance from local organizations that help the homeless.

“I don’t know how long I’m going to be up here for now,” Garwick said. “This is horrible and shocking. I just want them caught.”

ARTICLES BY KEITH COUSINS STAFF WRITER

The Doctor is in
April 4, 2017 5:30 p.m.

The Doctor is in

OSBURN — An unusual career path, with twists and turns all over the globe, eventually led Dr. David Lawhorn to the Silver Valley.

April 5, 2017 3 a.m.

What this strike means to the local economy

WALLACE — The strike at the Lucky Friday mine is more economic bad news in a county that doesn’t need any more, said regional economist Sam Wolkenhauer.

Looking to the past
April 5, 2017 3 a.m.

Looking to the past

MULLAN — Like its modern counterpart, the last strike at the Lucky Friday Mine near Mullan in 1981 began with a secret ballot and nearly unanimous support from miners to take to the picket lines.