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Show IPaDllnce ndepntt Pinstriped mystery man vanishes into the dark of the night Almost anything is fair game for thieves in these parts. This week bandits knocked over the video games in the Holiday Cinema lobby. Among other thefts listed on the Park City Police blotter this week was one DUI and what is listed as a suspicious circumstance. On Nov. 5, a Park City woman reported to the police that when she returned to her room at the Claimjum-per Claimjum-per Hotel, a body was on her bed. She told police that she assumed it was her boyfriend. Upon closer inspection, in-spection, however, she found the body on the bed was not her boyfriend at all but a man in a pinstriped suit. She reported to the police that the man seemed to know who : she was. After he threatened to "ruin" her boyfriend, who he called by name, the mysterious man in the pinstripes pin-stripes vanished. Edward Botillier of the I Holiday Village Cinemas reported on Nov. 8 that burglars had broken into the video games in the theater's lobby. Park City Police officers of-ficers determined that force-able force-able entry was made into the theater through the middle mid-dle door on the east side of the building. An undisclosed amount of coin was missing. At 9 p.m. on Nov. 7, Robert Graf reported that his blue Chevrolet van had just been stolen. Graf said that he left the keys in the ignition. Park City police located the van driving north on Utah Highway High-way 40. According to the police report, the van ignored the red flashing lights and sirens. A chase ensued along the snow road. The van headed west on 1-80 at the Silver Creek Junction giving no heed to the police. Finally, the van pulled off the interstate at a rest area near Silver Creek Junction. The driver was taken into custody. His true identity remains veiled in mystery because he was carrying no identification and refuses to talk about his background. He told authorities his name is Steve Cope. He has been booked into the Summit County Jail and bail has been set at $5,000. Charlie Brown reported on -Nov. 7 that a 19-inch Panosonic color television was stolen from number 1540 at the Aspenwood Con- dominiums in Deer Valley. ; The television is valued at $480. ; ; ' ; An $800 BMX bicycle was stolen from Sean McAllister at about 8 p.m. on Nov; 5 ac- cording to Maureen McAllister. The theft report V describes the bike as a . Redline Proline II with a 20- inch chrome frame without fenders, a black seat and red racing stripes. On Nov. 5, Park City police arrested a 22-year-old Park 1 City woman for DUI at the junction of Utah highways 224 and 248 after they followed the vehicle she was driving down Park Avenue. The suspect failed numerous field sobriety tests and was taken to Coalville where an intoxilizer test showed her to be well beyond the legal limits of intoxication. :' Two minors were cited for illegal consumption of beer as they drove down Main Street on Nov. 4. The eviden- ' ce was seized and booked into in-to the evidence locker. . Bob Fuca balled the Park City' Police department on Nov. i to report that he had just received a call from the Salt Lake City Police Depart- ' ment who had apprehended a suspect carrying Fuca's drivers license and credit cards. Upon inspection of his pickup truck, Fuca found that; indeed, the items were missing. 1 Fifth Circuit Court On Nov. 4, Thomas Luke Higgins of Center Creek Road, Heber, pleaded guilty to public intoxication in Judge Larry Keller's Fifth District Court. Higgins was fined $100 and placed on six months probation. He was also sentenced to 30 days in jail, to be suspended upon the payment of the $100 fine. |