Man arrested for ‘stealing’ own car

yeahright

yeahright

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Man arrested for ‘stealing’ own car

(Arianne Starnes/For The Examiner)

BALTIMORE - Baltimore City police have a new crime on the books: Stealing your own car.

Just ask Keith Spence, a Baltimore City resident who was arrested when he was driving home from work in a car he bought with a tax refund.

“I couldn’t believe it was happening,” Spence said.

Spence, 28, said city police pulled him over in his 1993 red Cadillac Elderado coupe for a cracked rear window in February. Four officers dragged Spence and his two passengers from the car and said they were under arrest for stealing it, he said.

“I was listening to the radio from the back seat of the police car. It said a gray Cadillac sedan was stolen; mine is a red coupe. I guess the officer must have been color blind,” he said.

“I tried to tell them it was my car, but they wouldn’t listen.”

Spence and his two friends were arrested, and the car was impounded. Charged with one count of motor vehicle theft, Spence represented himself in court in June.

“I owned the car — I knew it wasn’t stolen,” he said.

Even though Spence had the title proving he owned the car, he said he was cleared of the charges because of the testimony of the owner of the stolen car.

“The whole courtroom fell out — even the judge laughed,” Spence told The Examiner.

Still, police sold Spence’s car at auction two months before his day in court.

Now Spence is without the car it took him a year to buy, and his lawyer, Roland Brown, said he is preparing to sue the city.

“Not only did the police violate my client’s constitutional rights by selling his car before the trial, but the case demonstrates that young black males in this city are blindly targeted by the Baltimore City police,” he said.

Brown said the case also points out problems with the city’s management of stolen vehicles. “You have to question why a stolen car would be sold at all,” he said.

Police spokesman Matt Jablow said police are investigating the incident.

“We’re looking into the circumstances surrounding why the car was sold,” Jablow said.

Spence said he only wants the Cadillac he worked so hard to buy.

“I loved that car.”

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Man arrested for ‘stealing’ own car - Examiner.com
 
spatch

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Man arrested for ‘stealing’ own car



“I was listening to the radio from the back seat of the police car. It said a gray Cadillac sedan was stolen; mine is a red coupe. I guess the officer must have been color blind,” he said.

“I tried to tell them it was my car, but they wouldn’t listen.”
Cops like this earn the title....








Bacon, anyone?
 
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kdarrell

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Kind of scares you doesn't it? As they are the ones that are supposed to be out there to protect us. We shouldn't need protection from them!! And he should really invest in some glasses!
 
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snakebyte05

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I hate reading about this. Seriousl, if you are biased or have raciast ideals you should not be a cop. It is the wrong job for you. I hate reading about things where cops do such dumb things, its like what are they thinking.
 
yeahright

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Being a cop is a really stressful job so I think that I can understand some mistakes and/or abusive behavior might happen on occasion but this one seems to indicate a systemic problem from the beat cops, to the management, to the impound/auction crew all the way to the prosecutor.

What freakin prosecutor decided to go ahead with this case when they looked in the file and saw that it was the wrong car?

The whole criminal justice architecture in this town is screwed up.
 
CDB

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Being a cop is a really stressful job so I think that I can understand some mistakes and/or abusive behavior might happen on occasion but this one seems to indicate a systemic problem from the beat cops, to the management, to the impound/auction crew all the way to the prosecutor.

What freakin prosecutor decided to go ahead with this case when they looked in the file and saw that it was the wrong car?

The whole criminal justice architecture in this town is screwed up.
The prosecutor's job is to get convictions. Who cares if it's the right person? Well to that, most of us would were we prosecutors, but all you need is a few idiots and the true nature of the system as arbitrary, blind force comes out.

But look at it this way, at least the judge and court in general got a good laugh about it. It's not going to happen to their property so why should they care?
 
yeahright

yeahright

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so...

if they didnt have to go after the "criminals" who use drugs they could focus on crimes that actually have a victim.
From your civics class you might remember that it's legislatures that make the laws. Representatives of the executive power of the government (in this case cops) just enforce them.

Of course, in Baltimore it's apparently just anarchy.
 
Jayhawkk

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Baltimore/DC are rough areas to work in. Most cops don't want to work those areas due to such a high risk so the requirements to be a cop there are really low and the pay is good...

There's a saying that the only way to tell the criminal from the cop in DC or Baltimore is by who is wearing the handcuffs.
 
Cuffs

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There's always two sides to every story. I'm sure there's much more to this one.

Stolen vehicle reports are not made on just a type and color. License plates and vin numbers are required to make a report and confirmation. The vehicle was probably reported stolen by the person who sold the car to the dude, or something along those lines. If this happened as the story reads, which I almost doubt, then that law enforcement agency and district attorney's office are a joke.
 

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