America's Dumbest Criminals

in #steem8 years ago


It's enough to make AI capone spin in his grave. For every criminal mastermind, there's a jail full of bumblers who practically handcuffed themselves. Here's a lineup of some particularly stupid crooks. Timothy Baker was back in jail in Waco, Texas, hours after he had escaped while being held for aggravated robbery. His gateway had taken him to Baylor University, where he broke into a building in order to find a change of clothes from his orange prison suit. The building was the Fine Arts Centre, where Baker raided a costume closet. He apparently thought he would be inconspicous if he changed into a 19th-century green wool outfit (with rubber galoshes) that made him look like a "leprechaun," according to the Waco sheriff. Baker was spotted on the street and rearrested. Said the chairman of the theatre department, "He just really stood out." Ten-year old Brian Kline was playing with his father's old handcuffs (Dad used to be security agent) and lovingly cuffed himself to William Kline, 33. It was a cute little joke, until they couldn't find the key. William called local police in Des Moines, lowa, and they all had a good laugh as the cops removed the cuffs. Then, as is routine, police ran Kline through their database and discovered two arrest warrants outstanding. Minutes later the police were back at Kline's home, where they recuffed him for real. Gary Lee Owens, 42, was arrested on drugs charges in Stilwell, Kansas, even though police weren't looking for drugs they knocked on his door. The police had recieved a tip that two fugitives were hiding at that address and since Owens knew nothing about that, he matter-of-factly gave them permission to search the house. He then added the restrictions "everywhere but the garage." The police naturally decided that this comment was worth a search warrant and later found the remains of a suspected methamphetamine lab. The criminal who is captured because his tracks lead away from a crime scene is an old story. However, Albert Jackson Dowdy, 22, took incompetence to a new level. According to police in Grants Pass, Oregon, he tried to break into a home by smashing a glass door with a paint can, but the can broke open. Paint splattered all over Dowdy's clothes and shoes yet he traipsed through the house nonetheless, leaving stains everywhere. He made off with two cans of tuna and a box of oatmeal. Before long police tracked Dowdy to a nearby motel - where he appeared at the door still wearing his paint-smeared clothes.