Reading these kinds of stories sparked some sour memories for me concerning robbery and being violated by the scum who commit it. I had bought a property in the town where I grew up back in 1984. It was a large double dwelling with each side being 2300 sq. ft. and having four bedrooms and three baths. It needed renovation so I moved into one side of the dwelling to live there while I renovated the other and planned to move next door to do the same to the other side. Well, I moved into this familiar and relatively decent neighborhood for the town I was moving back to after four years away and set the first place up for me to live in. I had a great stereo, what were, at the time, a pair of large TVs and all of musical gear there when I was burglarized and robbed one day as I was off playing in New York City with my then band.
I immediately called the police....some of whom were family and old friends....and they came and took my report and a detailed list of what had been stolen. The burglars had left a full hand print on the tempered glass front of the stereo cabinet in the living room and it seemed to be so obvious that I couldn't help but to think it was intentional. I asked if the police were going to take the handprint just in case it was that of a known criminal or someone who they'd dealt with in the past and they answered with, "You're insured right? It's really not worth the time or trouble to lift the print. "
After some pleading and a phone call from an uncle who was a higher ranking official in the police department, a detective on the scene reluctantly pulled the print and took the sheet along with him. I got a call a few days later from my uncle who said that they did match the print to a person, but it was matched to prints on record from his juvenile criminal activity. He explained that they were not allowed to use those prints to identify him and pick him up since it was not legal for them to keep on record juvenile fingerprint records. Our system is about as flawed as a system can possibly be, in my opinion. These kind of ridiculous protocol and procedures make my head soin and my blood boil any time I hear of another innocent law abiding citizen falling prey to their idiotic shortcomings. It make me wonder if our lawmakers don;t have more family in crime than not.
So this guy and his two brothers who helped him were going to walk away with no possible legal action and were going to be allowed to keep the nearly $30k in property that they'd carried out of my place. To this day, almost 35 years later, they have never been punished by the police or court system even though my brothers and I were able to affect some level of justice only months after the burglary when we happened on one of them on the street. We were younger, a little crazier and different people back then and those were different times in our country. It was a small town with a rough reputation and we were on the tail end of the years of still being able to settle something behind the woodshed, so to speak. Do it today and the scum will own your house and see you off to prison. There was a certain level of satisfaction that we got from handling it in the only fashion that it was going to be handled, though.
It's just sad that, even now, the law will most times provide more protection for the rights of the criminal and for their physical welfare than it will for the law abiding victim and their property. As long as you're insured, you may find some relief from the financial loss caused by a robbery or fraud, but it will never match the satisfaction that can come from seeing the people who are paid to arrest and incarcerate them doing their jobs.
Any time I see, hear or read about any dirty fraud or criminal being caught, prosecuted and imprisoned, I could throw a party. That wasn't my only burglary and you never get used to being violated in that way. The second time, my neighbor actually held the door for the half dozen guys who emptied my studio and helped them load some of the 30 or so guitars and 24 or so amps that they stole onto their truck. She thought they were mambers of my band that had come to pick up gear for a gig in the city. I was in Hawaii for two weeks at the time. Yay thieves!
I hope you get the guitars back Howard, and that you can offer a great report of this guy either being busted or something suitable.
Regards, Kevin Gallagher/Omega Guitars
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