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“I went to look for my camera the day after I had him and the camera wasn’t there,” she said. A suspect, later identified by deputies as James Rouse, is accused of burgling her van and stealing the camera. Detectives eventually tracked it down at Gold and Gadgets in Deltona where they said Rouse sold it for $190. “I was like, ‘This is great, I’m going to get my camera back soon,’” Selby said.
But after weeks of investigating, the Sheriff’s Office said it turned the case over to the Volusia County state attorney who declined to prosecute. The State Attorney’s Office said they have no record of getting the case. Gold and Gadgets workers said they gave the Sheriff’s Office all the evidence needed to prosecute the man who allegedly stole the camera, including his thumbprint, but the suspect was never arrested.
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Workers at the pawn shop said they’ll return the camera to its rightful owner if a warrant is issued for Rouse’s arrest. Since that hasn’t happened, Selby was told she’ll have to buy the camera back. “That’s just ridiculous to me,” she said. Authorities said if Selby doesn’t buy her camera back she’ll have to file a claim in court to recover it.
With news video.
1 comment:
This sounds like a farce somebody dreamed up. How can law enforcement down there be so incredibly inept?
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