Police seeking info on stolen truck |
January 3, 2011 |
Major crimes in Boundary County, except to law
enforcement officers, are rare. A December 29
truck theft outside a Main Street restaurant in
which the stolen vehicle was found floating down
the Kootenai River, headlights on, even before
the rig had been noticed missing, may give lie
to that assumption.
While nothing has been ruled out yet, including
dumb luck, Bonners Ferry Assistant Police Chief
Joel Minor is concerned that "professional"
thieves might have been at work, and he's asking
the community's help not only in solving this
crime, but in preventing any similar
occurrences.
"This was fast," he said.
While an expensive truck wound up beneath the
waves of the Kootenai ... the thieves didn't get
away empty handed.
"The owner of the truck had just moved to
Bonners Ferry from Portland, Oregon," he said.
"She stopped at the Panhandle Restaurant for
dinner. We recieved a report from a northside
resident of lights on the river that looked like
a vehicle, and officers were on scene before the
truck sank. Less than half an hour later, a new
Bonners Ferry resident reported that her vehicle
wasn't where she'd left it."
Bonners Ferry Police Officer John Lunde ... who
ran down the river shining his flashlight into
the driver's side window of a vehicle sinking
beneath the surface of the Kootenai, looking for
signs of distress, saw an empty cab. Despite
argument from the many who descended on "his"
crime scene, Officer Lunde kept people ashore
despite the propensity of "rescuers" to jump
into the water.
As he was convinced, the first divers to reach
the rig found the vehicle empty ... and after the expensive vehicle was pulled from the
water, it was confirmed; nobody was inside.
It was later determined that in the short time
between the theft of the rig and the
time it was found, much of the owner's property
that was in the truck,
computers, personal belongings, etc., was gone.
"It appears that from the time the vehicle was
stolen to the time it was found in the river,
less than 15 minutes later, everything valuable
inside the vehicle was removed," Minor said,
"and the rig was floating in the water."
The owner of that rig, when she called it in,
didn't report the vehicle stolen, but "maybe
moved."
Police have an idea where the truck entered
the river; and they are developing information
to put a case together based on forensics the
culprits left behind in the truck.
Anyone who may have seen anything should call
City Hall, (208) 267-3105, or the Sheriff's
Office, (208) 267-3151. |
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