We have a poonut running around Winnipeg

Thu, June 10, 2004

Thief dumps on his truck

Excrementating evidence?

By CARY CASTAGNA, POLICE REPORTER

As far as acts of vandalism go, this one was pretty crappy. Auctioneer Terry Wachniak awoke Tuesday morning to find someone had smeared human feces inside his 1997 Ford pickup truck and on the exterior walls of his Wolseley home.

"He used his hands to do some primitive artwork on my window as well as to my building," Wachniak, of Wachniak Auctions, told The Sun yesterday. "My vehicle was abused in not a very nice way at all and my building was smeared with the evidence."

Besides leaving the mess involving bodily waste, the culprit also stole about $500 worth of "odds and ends" -- including some collectible ornaments -- from the glove compartment in the half-ton truck, Wachniak said.

Most importantly, the vandal apparently left his fingerprints in the human excrement.

However, under department policy, Winnipeg police don't take fingerprints from vehicles, said spokesman Const. Bob Johnson.

"We don't fingerprint vehicles because it makes no sense to fingerprint vehicles," Johnson said, explaining a vehicle could have numerous sets of fingerprints. "Finding a fingerprint on a car doesn't mean he's responsible for the damage."

Wachniak disagrees in this case.

"It can't be anybody else. Who else would be touching and smearing that stuff?" he asked. "The guy was creating works of art."

Wachniak said he has a pretty good idea of who may be responsible because there was a man in his driveway Monday night who seemed to be "off his medication."

The man, who appeared to be harmless, was white, in his 40s, about 5-foot-10 and 200 pounds, wearing a plaid pullover shirt, Wachniak said.

Police have taken a report of the incident.

Wachniak is disappointed cops won't be investigating the incident any further because he said whoever is responsible is a disturbed individual who should be arrested.

"That is somebody who is crying out for help and needs it," Wachniak said, adding he's certain he is not the first victim. "And if no one is looking for him, I'm not going to be the last."
 
Phoenix said:
"We don't fingerprint vehicles because it makes no sense to fingerprint vehicles," Johnson said, explaining a vehicle could have numerous sets of fingerprints. "Finding a fingerprint on a car doesn't mean he's responsible for the damage."
They caught him by checking under his finger nails. eeewwwww.
 
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