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The Riverside Police Department arrested a 21-year-old man from Indian Head Park for theft of concert tickets. The victim had arranged via Facebook to sell two Spring Awakening concert tickets for $300 to meet the purchaser on a Riverside street corner. When she produced the tickets, the man grabbed them and fled in a car with an accomplice. The police used the man's real Facebook name to identify and arrest him with help from Indian Head Park police. He confessed to the theft and was charged with two counts of misdemeanor theft. The police chief warned against meeting strangers from online exchanges in public places for such transactions.
The Riverside Police Department arrested a 21-year-old man from Indian Head Park for theft of concert tickets. The victim had arranged via Facebook to sell two Spring Awakening concert tickets for $300 to meet the purchaser on a Riverside street corner. When she produced the tickets, the man grabbed them and fled in a car with an accomplice. The police used the man's real Facebook name to identify and arrest him with help from Indian Head Park police. He confessed to the theft and was charged with two counts of misdemeanor theft. The police chief warned against meeting strangers from online exchanges in public places for such transactions.
The Riverside Police Department arrested a 21-year-old man from Indian Head Park for theft of concert tickets. The victim had arranged via Facebook to sell two Spring Awakening concert tickets for $300 to meet the purchaser on a Riverside street corner. When she produced the tickets, the man grabbed them and fled in a car with an accomplice. The police used the man's real Facebook name to identify and arrest him with help from Indian Head Park police. He confessed to the theft and was charged with two counts of misdemeanor theft. The police chief warned against meeting strangers from online exchanges in public places for such transactions.
Riverside Police Arrest Indian Head Park Man for Theft of Concert Tickets Police charge man with two counts of theft for stealing Spring Awakening concert tickets arranged via Facebook On Sunday, June 15, 2014 at 1:30 p.m., the Riverside Police Department took a theft report from a victim who stated that she made arrangements to sell two Spring Awakening concert tickets for $300.00. She had arranged through Facebook to sell the tickets to an individual who she was to meet at an address on the 100 block of Pine Avenue. When the purchaser showed up, he had a second suspect in the car. The individual who stated on Facebook that he would purchase the tickets exited his vehicle and asked for the tickets. The suspect was holding cash in his hand at the time and when the victim pulled out the tickets, the offender immediately grabbed the tickets out of the victim's hands, got into the vehicle and fled east from the scene. The offender who had contacted the victim on Facebook to purchase the tickets actually used his real name on Facebook. The police were able to track that individual to numerous addresses; however, they were able to track him to his current address in Indian Head Park. Riverside Police immediately contacted Ticketmaster and had them cancel the barcode number that was on the concert tickets as the Spring Awakening concert was on Sunday night, the same night the tickets were stolen. After identifying the suspect, the police showed the victim a photo array of several offenders and the victim positively picked out the offender from the photo spread. On Monday, June 16, 2014, with the assistance of the Indian Head Park Police Department, the suspect was taken into custody and transported back to Riverside Police Department. Once in police custody, the suspect gave a full written confession admitting to stealing the concert tickets. The tickets had a retail value of $300.00. Riverside Police charged James M. Smith, 21 of the 7200 block of South Wolf Road, Indian Head Park with two counts of misdemeanor theft. Riverside Police Chief Thomas Weitzel stated, The victim, a 21-year-old female from Mount Prospect, had driven from Mount Prospect to Riverside to meet this individual on a street corner to exchange cash for concert tickets where the whole arrangement was made on Facebook. It is certainly not a good practice for individuals to exchange information over Facebook and then arrange to meet on a public street where one individual is holding cash and the other is holding the proceeds which were stolen. In this case, the offender actually used his real name. I would suggest you purchase concert tickets and other items from legitimate individuals and that the exchange not take place on a street corner in which neither the victim nor the offender live in Riverside. This type of meeting and transaction should raise numerous red flags. EWS RELEASE RIVERSIDE POLICE DEPARTMENT 31 Riverside Road, Riverside, IL 60546
Hunting the Chimera–the end of O'Reilly v Mackman_ -- Alder, John -- Legal Studies, #2, 13, pages 183-20...hn Wiley and Sons; Cambridge -- 10_1111_j_1748-121x_1993_tb00480_x -- 130f73b26a9d16510be20781ea4d81eb -- Anna’s Archive