On 6/18/2016 5:23 AM, K Wills wrote:
> *That's* weird.
>
> -- Shill #3.
The game's over, "Kentucci":
https://plus.google.com/101980802427884289689
http://caselaw.findlaw.com/ia-supreme-court/1360099.html
Background Facts and Proceedings.
Around 1 a.m., an Ankeny resident called the local police to report that 
a car alarm sounded in the resident's neighborhood.   The city 
dispatched a police officer to the location.   Observing nothing 
unusual, the officer left the area, only to be stopped a couple of 
blocks later by a person who informed the officer he had witnessed 
someone running from the area of the car alarm.   As the officer started 
driving back to the area of the car alarm, he noticed a person walking 
on the sidewalk.   The officer asked the person, a minor, if he had 
noticed anybody running from the area.   The minor answered that he had 
not.   While the officer and another officer were speaking to the minor, 
another resident of the neighborhood arrived in her car and informed the 
officers that she had observed two people, one of whom was heavy set 
with a blinking light on his back pocket, walking in the area of her 
neighbor's residence.   She observed the heavier-set individual, later 
identified as Wills, enter her neighbor's attached garage through an 
unlocked service door.   She further observed a smaller individual 
standing by a van parked in the neighbor's driveway.
The officers eventually let the minor leave even though they found a 
large amount of coins, a flashlight, and an electronic pocket organizer 
in his pockets.   After releasing the minor, the police officers drove 
to the residence where the neighbor observed the two suspicious people 
and woke the owner.   The owner, his wife, and two daughters were in the 
residence sleeping at the time.   After a search of his vehicles, the 
owner discovered change and an electronic pocket organizer were missing 
from the vehicles.   The owner's daughter reported a diamond ring and 
some change were missing from her vehicle.   The officers then contacted 
the minor's parents, who informed the officers the minor was with Wills. 
  After the officers questioned the minor again, he admitted his 
involvement in the theft and implicated Wills in the burglary.   
Although Wills denied involvement in the burglary, the officers arrested 
him.
The State filed a trial information charging Wills with second-degree 
burglary.   The State later amended the information to include two 
additional charges of burglary in the third degree and using a juvenile 
to commit an indictable offense.
The jury returned a verdict finding Wills guilty of the crimes of 
burglary in the second degree, burglary in the third degree, and using a 
juvenile to commit an indictable offense.