A woman placed her baby inside a stroller outside of a ride at Disney's Hollywood Studios and walked away, the problem was she didn't the owner of the stroller. Lauren Collazo was the mom who did own the $1,800 Bugaboo stroller that was stolen by another mother while she was having a fun family day at the park, according to WFTS. The mother was shocked when she came off the ride to find her stroller had vanished, along with her wallet and car keys that she left in it. Collazo said: "I was there with no money, stranded. My husband had to fly over from Miami that same day, catch the first flight available to rescue me and my family." The woman's day at the park was ruined, but she was determined to find out who the thief was. NBC4i reported Disney security camera footage captured the stranger stealing the baby stroller, using her own child as a prop in the seat. Collazo used a photo from that footage to track down the woman by making a plea for information on Facebook: …show more content…
And I was able to obtain information on who this person is and actually see the post of my stroller being sold online.” A Texas woman, Thalia Rogers, saw Collazo's post, and realized she had purchased the stroller that was taken from Hollywood Studios: "She's like 'Oh my God, it still has the clips on it, it still has the tie wraps where your name was on it, do you recognize it?' I'm like absolutely." Rogers ended getting taken by the thief as well, losing the $500 she paid for the stolen stroller: "The thief somehow, I guess, found the post that Lauren had posted, and I don't know if she freaked out or what happened, and she called us and said, ‘Send it back to her.’ So I didn't even get the
body in her trunk? Casey even abandoned her car and then her mother found it and said that it
Mr. Thompson estimated that the value of the atv wheel and tires was $1,508.63 and the value of the various hand tools was $190.00, $20.00 in change and $23.00 for the package of bud light. The total value of all stolen items is $2,448.36.
from a foster parents purse and took her car on a joy ride and crashed it. After hearing these different
jennifer told me she had her Washington State driver’s license, her and her son’s Social Security cards, her and her sons Department of Defense ID cards, as well as her EBT card and Direct Express debit card. There was $300.00 in US currency as well. The keys went to her truck, apartment and utility room.
On 01/16/16 I contacted Iwanda Davidson at her residence at 11900 Melissa Lane. Mrs. Davidson said sometime over the past two weeks she has had several items come up missing from her residence including a black Hi-Point 9mm handgun, unknown serial number, valued at $150, a new in the box Poulan Chainsaw, unknown model or serial number, valued at $120, a new in the box Homelite weed eater, unknown model or serial number, valued at $50. Mrs. Davidson said she is missing a PorterCable tool bag which contained a battery operated drill, flashlight, circular saw and reciprocal saw, unknown serial numbers, valued at $250, a new set of sockets, wrenches and other miscellaneous hand tools, valued at $150, two new dead bolts she purchased for her front door to her residence, valued at $30 combined, and a Nokia cellular telephone blue in color with a pink and white case, valued at $30. Mrs. Davidson said that she also had several pieces of jewelry, mostly inexpensive keepsakes and costume jewelry, go missing. Mrs. Davidson said that the jewelry was a gift from her grandmother and that she could not describe any of it aside from one ring which had a dark stone possibly black or purple surrounded by several lab created white/clear gems. Mrs. Davidson said she did not know what the value of the
Randall Blighton saw a silhouette of an infant in the vans window which now he says was a car seat. He felt that he couldn’t just pass by after he had just dropped off his own children with their mother. When he first arrived by the van he set out flares to make sure that everybody knew that the van was there. He then went to open the drivers side door and found
It is undisputed the Vicky's cell phone was stolen from her hand while she was using it in the park on May 27, 2014, in the county of Queens.
On 04-11-2017 at approximately 1500hrs, I conducted an investigation on a stolen bike that was taken from Holmes Foods (101 S. Liberty Avenue). I made contact with the owner, who was identified as Ricardo Perez (TX-ID # 18515108). Perez informed me that his bicycle had been taken from his place of employment without his permission. Perez advised he chained the front tire to the frame to prevent anyone from riding off with the bicycle, but failed to secure the bicycle to the bike rack. Perez advised upon leaving his place of employment, he noticed his bicycle missing from where he parked it. Perez notified his supervisor, who informed Perez that he would review the security cameras. On 04-11-2017 I reviewed the security cameras on property
The airline alerted the police and pulled up the video footage of the carousel. The footage does show a person taking the bag, but an identification has not been made.
A Stolen Life is the autobiographical memoir of Jaycee Lee Dugard, the author of the book herself. It is a survival story of a typical eleven-year-old girl after being abducted and kept hidden in a shack in the backyard of her kidnappers home. Her captivity happened on June 10, 1991 near her home in Lake Tahoe, California. For eighteen years, Dugard is a captive of the couple Phillip Garrido and his wife Nancy. Dugard is not only forced to endure repeated sexual abuse, but also false imprisonment and is not even allowed to speak her own name.
Michael Mahurin drove into a San Diego, California neighborhood and spotted a six-year-old boy standing alone by his family's car. That was when the man made his move to steal the boy as he waited for his parents who weren't far behind, according to NBC 7.
At the point when, the child began crying in the car, the woman attempted to open the door, however the doors was locked, she got frenzy and began crying and calling people for help, I was only couple of autos far from her and went toward her, and attempted to help her yet couldn't do anything with the Locked doors personally. She requesting me to break the glass or accomplish something, I inquired as to whether she have copy key, she said no. Furthermore, the vehicle was truly costly I was requesting her please be patient, calm down, we can manage something else and trying her to understand, I can organize the locksmith I utilized last time, they are truly fast, simply give me couple of minutes, and I Called CarKeyPhiladelphia.com and disclosed to them the circumstance, they just came to in 15 minutes and took around 4 to 5 minutes to unlock the doors. The woman was truly upbeat, I was imagining that they are going to charge high for fast and emergency services, But they charged truly low. Truly was astounding experience of every one of us with them!
The wind was whipping fiercely when Nikki Maratea, her younger sister Alex, and Nikki's 3-week-old son Derrian went to catch an elevated train in Philadelphia near the home they shared with their mother. Thinking she had put the brake on the stroller, Nikki, 20, let it go to argue with the cashier, who insisted she pay the $2 fare before moving to the platform. A moment later Alex, then 10, looked toward her nephew—but he and his stroller were gone. "I said, 'Nikki,'" Alex recalls, "'where's the baby?'" They could hear Derrian's cries, but saw no sign of him. "Then," Alex says, "I looked down." What she saw was a nightmare: The stroller, blown by the wind, was lying on the tracks, about four
Urban Moms message board. And by the way, your kid's stroller sucks talks about judgment, yet on a more extreme level. Briefly, it talks about a blog for mothers in D.C. to offer insight, advice, etc. on life as a mother in D.C. Unfortunately, it has morphed into name-calling, judging and all out war between mothers. The author mulls over mothers judging each other by what stroller they use: "Bugaboo owners are rich and fad-oriented, MacClaren owners are upper middle-class and highly educated, Graco owners are poor" (Washington City Paper). This judgment illustrates that the society has entered a new stage of the consumption culture where "the symptoms of expensive vice are conventionally accepted as marks of a superior status" (Veblen 71).
So why would the parents leave the baby in the car. Well they might have done it because the parents or guardians might need to go the store really quick and their child might slow them down. Also the parents might think, it’s too cold or hot outside for the baby.