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24|OctOber 2020 Slippery rOck Gazette
   Those Wacky
Floridians
Florida man Herbert McClellan, 27, took ad- vantage of a distracted clerk at a Speedway gas station in Clearwater, Florida, one August weekday to snatch about $100 worth of scratch- off lottery tickets.
Police, who were alerted by observant store employ- ees a few hours later when McClellan returned to the store to claim the $30 prize offered by one of the tickets.
Fox13 News reported McClellan was charged with petty theft and dealing in sto- len property.
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Police in Hollywood, Florida, had little trou- ble tracking down a trio of thieves who broke into nearly 30 homes, stealing more than $150,000 in cash, weapons, mobile phones, electronics, jewelry, a vehicle and more, because all three were “al- ready on pretrial release for previous crimes and ... wear- ing court-ordered GPS ankle bracelet monitors,” Officer Christian Lata said.
The South Florida Sun- Sentinel reported Zion Odain Denvor Hall, 21; Tyrek Davontae Williams, 19; and Tremaine Raekwon Hill, 18, were arrested on August 14 and charged with burglary, grand theft and racketeering. Police believe they’re part of a larger organization committing criminal acts throughout South Florida.
Additional charges are likely to be filed.
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             Not a Zombie!
The Associated Press reports that a company in Tokyo called Kowagarasetai (which roughly translates to Scare Squad) has launched a drive- thru haunted house that allows patrons to socially distance from its “zombies” while getting a good fright.
With customers safely sealed
inside their cars, the zombies do Workers at the James H. Cole
an ER doctor, who, over the phone, “pronounced the patient deceased based upon medical information provided from the scene,” according to the fire de- partment. She was transported to the funeral home where, more than an hour later, she opened her eyes, and staff summoned emergency crews to take her to a hospital, where she was listed in critical condition.
 their best to scare the occupants, draping themselves over the cars and smearing them with fake blood.
“The distance (between custom- ers and cast) has actually gotten shorter since there is only a win- dow between them,” said Daichi Ono, a cast member. The zombies then helpfully clean the cars of excess zombie debris when the 13-minute show is over.
funeral home in Detroit got a start when a body they were about to begin embalming came to life, according to news reports.
One Sunday in August, fire de- partment paramedics in suburban Southfield were called to a home where they found 20-year-old Timesha Beauchamp unrespon- sive. After trying to resuscitate her for a half-hour, they consulted
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