Law roundup: Man told to tone it down
Daily Inter Lake | Daily Inter-Lake | UPDATED 14 hours, 5 minutes AGO
Neighbors reportedly disagreed about what qualified as singing when someone called the Kalispell Police Department to complainabout a man yelling. They also thought they heard a second voice.
The man, who was home with his dog, described the noise as singing. Still, he was advised to keep the noise level down at that time of night, citing the “disorderly house” city code. The visit probably gave him a reason to sing the blues.
An employee allegedly racked up an estimated $10,000 to $12,000 in fraudulent charges on a business credit card.
A 14- and a 15-year-old reportedly threw rocks at ducks, injuring at least one, before running toward Center Street. One of the teens reportedly had a pistol on his hip.
A man, who allegedly thought someone at a location owed him money, started pacing around the building, becoming increasingly irritated. An employee called the police, asking them to move him along and tell him he couldn’t be on the property for a year.
A concerned father reportedly wanted to know if he could legally lock his daughter in her bedroom overnight to keep her from sneaking out with adults who plied her with alcohol and marijuana. He also asked officers to do extra patrols around the neighborhood when a vehicle would come around to pick her up.
An officer reportedly told the dad that as long as she had reasonable access to food, water and the bathroom, and could continue daily activities such as attending school, that “it would be a reasonable action” as a parent to prevent his child from sneaking out.”
A man claimed a camera was set up in his New York apartment, where someone was filming him while he was naked and drunk and the feed was being livestreamed on a Russian website. He was also allegedly poisoned on the plane ride home and said the FBI was taking things from the motel where he was staying.