Opinion ID: 2111189
Heading Depth: 1
Heading Rank: 4

Heading: Burglary Report.

Text: On October 9, 1996, Castor notified the Kearney Police Department that Brown's home, where she then resided, had been burglarized. A police officer who responded to the report was unable to find signs of a forced entry. He observed that the screens in the two upstairs bedrooms where Todd Guider and Castor stayed had approximately 12-by-12 cutouts and that Castor's bedroom had been ransacked. Castor informed the responding officer that her short-barreled, .22-caliber revolver and an unknown quantity of change had been stolen from her bedroom. Castor informed the officer that she thought perhaps Todd Guider committed the burglary because on October 8, a young woman had stopped at the house and told her that Todd Guider owed money for drugs. Castor also told the officer that she had been receiving unusual telephone calls. The officer did not take any physical evidence into custody, did not take fingerprints, did not take any photographs, and did not otherwise examine the crime scene. He told Castor to tell Todd Guider that he wanted to talk to him but made no other attempt to contact or interview Todd Guider. Later in the day, Castor reported the serial number of her missing handgun to the police. The Kearney Police Department closed the burglary investigation that same day.