San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)

NEWS OF THE WEIRD

- News of the Weird is compiled by editors at Andrews Mcmeel. Send items with subject line “Weird News” to weirdnewst­ips@amuniversa­l.com.

In plane sight

On Jan. 16 at Chicago’s O’hare Internatio­nal Airport, two employees of United Airlines approached a man and asked for his ID. Aditya Singh, 36, of Orange produced an employee badge, but it was not his: Another employee had reported it missing on Oct. 26, the Chicago Tribune reported. Authoritie­s said Singh had arrived at O’hare on Oct. 19 from Los Angeles and was too afraid to fly back home because of COVID-19, so he hid in a secured area of the airport for three months, living off food given to him by strangers. Singh is unemployed but has a master’s degree in hospitalit­y and doesn’t have a criminal background. He was charged with felony criminal trespass.

The devil made them do it

Members of Poughkeeps­ie, N.Y.’S Church of Satan were down in the dumps after someone torched their gathering place, known as “Halloween House,” on Jan. 14. According to the Poughkeeps­ie Journal, video footage shows a person carrying two gas cans, splashing liquid on the front porch, lighting it and running away. Two people who were inside at the time escaped unharmed; the arsonist has not been caught. “Sadly there are some ‘people of faith’ who are intolerant, and typically ignorant, of other belief systems,” noted Church of Satan high priest Peter H. Gilmore. Church member Isis Vermouth called the arson a “terror attack. Whoever did this is going to be hexed by all of us,” she said. “I just don’t understand why anyone would want to piss off Satanic witches. ’Cause now there’s going to be hell to pay.”

Unclear on the concept

Nicholas Debetes, 18, was finally placed in handcuffs in Titusville, Fla., on Jan. 14, after Brevard County officers chased him as he drove “at an extremely high rate of speed” to his mother’s trailer. Debetes, Click Orlando reported, had a unique excuse: “If I would have tried to stop quicker I would have crashed the vehicle,” he told police. He went on to say that his mother wanted him home for an unknown reason. Debetes had an outstandin­g warrant and was driving a stolen Hyundai Elantra.

Irony

Esequiel Robles, 40, was caught after a traffic stop in Williston, N.D., with methamphet­amine and drug parapherna­lia on Jan. 14. The Smoking Gun reported that Robles was on probation for narcotics possession at the time, following a 2019 conviction for meth possession. Notably, however, when Robles was arrested, he was wearing a T-shirt with the message, “Don’t Do Drugs.”

Least competent criminals

On Jan. 7, police received a call from a 7-Eleven store in Lehi, Utah, where earlier in the day a man wearing a “sheriff’s deputy” jacket stole a doughnut, then left in a white pickup truck. KUTV reported that Lehi police examined surveillan­ce video and tracked the truck to a nearby motel parking lot, where they knocked on the door of 47-year-old Daniel Mark Wright, who was staying there. As officers spoke with Wright, they saw a Salt Lake County Sheriff ’s jacket hanging in the room’s closet.

They arrested Wright for impersonat­ion of an officer and theft, along with receiving or transfer of a stolen vehicle in relation to the truck. Wright, his companion, Christian Olson, and another accomplice are also under investigat­ion for racketeeri­ng.

Leobardo Hernandez, 32, of Pomona went to extraordin­ary lengths on Jan. 16 to evade police after allegedly stealing a car. As Hernandez ran from officers, he entered an apartment complex and found an unlocked door, the Daily Bulletin reported. The apartment residents were not at home, so Hernandez moved right in, shaving his face, changing clothes and even cooking tortillas to make it seem as if he lived there. Unfortunat­ely, he also burned the tortillas, summoning the Fire Department. Hernandez eventually surrendere­d and was charged with burglary and possession of a stolen vehicle among other offenses.

Awwwwww

Russell Jones of London couldn’t figure out why his dog, Billy, was favoring one of his front paws while walking. He took the pet to the veterinari­an to have X-rays, United Press Internatio­nal reported, but the vet found nothing wrong. Jones, however, had recently broken his own ankle and was wearing a cast and limping. At the $400 vet visit, the doctor suggested that Billy was simply imitating his owner. Man’s best friend, indeed.

What’s in a name?

Before social distancing and masks became the world’s norm, CBS News reported on Jan. 12, Paul O’sullivan of Baltimore was noodling around on Facebook one night, searching for other Paul O’sullivans. Several of those he found accepted his friend request, which was when he noticed that some were musicians, as he was. Baltimore Paul, as he’s known, reached out to others, and eventually he and three others formed the Paul O’sullivan Band. Manchester Paul plays bass; Pennsylvan­ia Paul is the percussion­ist; and Baltimore Paul and Rotterdam Paul play guitar and sing. They recorded a single at the beginning of 2020, but when COVID-19 hit, they thought it was a great opportunit­y to make a whole album. “It feels great to be able to contact people on the other side of the world when you’re in lockdown because you don’t feel alone at the moment,” commented Rotterdam Paul. “If you learn to play an instrument, it can help you through some dark times,” said Manchester Paul.

Government in action

Bigfoot hunters in Oklahoma will be happy to know that their pastime could get its own season, KOKH reported. State Rep. Justin Humphrey introduced a bill on Jan. 20 asking the Oklahoma Wildlife Commission to establish a Bigfoot hunting season, “set annual season dates and create any necessary specific hunting licenses and fees.” Southeaste­rn and south-central Oklahoma is infamous for Bigfoot sightings, including a large festival (canceled this year because of COVID-19). If passed, the bill would become effective in November.

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