8/13/2022, 5:20 am
Holy Batmobile!
It seems to many, that police jurisdiction is as relevant as the Constitution. Old, out of date, and not something to be concerned with...
ABC 7 News reported July 29 that the San Mateo County Sheriff's office organized a cross-country trip for four officers to raid a custom-car builder in Indiana who allegedly didn't deliver a custom 1960's version of the Batmobile on schedule to a buyer in California. The sheriff arrested the car builder, Mark Racop, on felony charges, raided his personal devices and froze his bank accounts, and held him briefly in an Indiana jail.
The controversy intensified when ABC uncovered the sheriff knew the buyer suing the shop and allegedly ordered the raid as a favor. Now, as suddenly as the criminal charges were created, Racop's felony arraignment has been dropped and the case may be dropped entirely by the prosecuting district attorney.
The original complaint was that a realtor in San Mateo, Sam Anagnostou, ordered a Batmobile from Fiberglass Freaks, an Indiana-based custom-car shop run by Racop (who is officially licensed by DC Comics to build Batmobile replicas). Anagnostou allegedly missed a $20,000 payment and lost his place in line to receive his $210,000 Batmobile when he expected. When his car didn't arrive, he filed a lawsuit in San Mateo, which was dismissed, and filed a criminal complaint with the Indiana police, who also declined to bring criminal charges.
ABC reported Anagnostou asked Bolanos, reportedly his friend, to intervene. Four officers took a cross-country flight and raided Fiberglass Freaks on July 19, and charged Racop with felonies in California. Afterward, the deputy district attorney for San Mateo County told ABC 7 that "additional investigation" yielded a need for warrants for the cross-country raid, and refused to comment on the personal relationship between Anagnostou and Bolanos.
It seems to many, that police jurisdiction is as relevant as the Constitution. Old, out of date, and not something to be concerned with...
ABC 7 News reported July 29 that the San Mateo County Sheriff's office organized a cross-country trip for four officers to raid a custom-car builder in Indiana who allegedly didn't deliver a custom 1960's version of the Batmobile on schedule to a buyer in California. The sheriff arrested the car builder, Mark Racop, on felony charges, raided his personal devices and froze his bank accounts, and held him briefly in an Indiana jail.
The controversy intensified when ABC uncovered the sheriff knew the buyer suing the shop and allegedly ordered the raid as a favor. Now, as suddenly as the criminal charges were created, Racop's felony arraignment has been dropped and the case may be dropped entirely by the prosecuting district attorney.
The original complaint was that a realtor in San Mateo, Sam Anagnostou, ordered a Batmobile from Fiberglass Freaks, an Indiana-based custom-car shop run by Racop (who is officially licensed by DC Comics to build Batmobile replicas). Anagnostou allegedly missed a $20,000 payment and lost his place in line to receive his $210,000 Batmobile when he expected. When his car didn't arrive, he filed a lawsuit in San Mateo, which was dismissed, and filed a criminal complaint with the Indiana police, who also declined to bring criminal charges.
ABC reported Anagnostou asked Bolanos, reportedly his friend, to intervene. Four officers took a cross-country flight and raided Fiberglass Freaks on July 19, and charged Racop with felonies in California. Afterward, the deputy district attorney for San Mateo County told ABC 7 that "additional investigation" yielded a need for warrants for the cross-country raid, and refused to comment on the personal relationship between Anagnostou and Bolanos.