An Attempted Robbery and a K9 Breakthrough | Desert Law
The Circle K, a cornerstone of mundane late-night errands, was transformed into a theater of the unhinged when an “unarmed” customer decided that societal norms were merely suggestions. The scene began with a wine bottle being hurled—a pathetic attempt at a grand gesture—before the suspect breached the counter to terrorize an employee just trying to earn a living. The sheer entitlement of someone who believes they can simply storm behind a register and start a brawl over a few bottles of liquor is a depressing testament to the degradation of public civility.
The suspect’s propensity for violence was clear from the start. He didn’t just steal; he cursed, threw glass, and pushed his way through a space he had no right to occupy. By the time he was walking north, he likely thought he’d made a clean getaway, another victor in the endless cycle of low-stakes criminality.
However, his luck ran out in the form of a K9 unit. The encounter that followed was a chaotic display of primal stupidity. When ordered to the ground under the threat of a dog bite, the suspect chose a path that defies biological instinct: he fought the dog.
“Stop biting the dog,” the officers shouted, a phrase that highlights the absolute absurdity of the situation. It takes a special kind of delirium to find oneself locked in a struggle with a trained police animal and decide that the best course of action is to try and out-bite the beast. This wasn’t a desperate struggle for freedom; it was a violent tantrum against a partner that the officer rightly described as a “very good apprehension tool.”
The aftermath was a predictable mess of blood and bandages. As the suspect lay there “leaking pretty good,” the troopers were forced to provide medical care to a man who had just finished flipping them off and running. The hypocrisy of the criminal is never more apparent than in these moments: they demand the world bow to their whims, yet expect the very system they despise to patch them up the moment their choices catch up to them.
“I do what I want,” the suspect muttered, clinging to a delusional sense of autonomy while being bandaged and restrained.
The officer’s response was the only reality check left to give: “I promise you’re not doing what you want.”
In the end, the suspect learned that a St. Bernard might be unnerved by a screaming neighbor, but a police K9 is a different animal entirely. The “apprehension tool” did her job, the suspect was neutralized, and the only thing left of his “unwanted person” rampage was a trail of profanities and a very expensive medical bill that the taxpayer will likely end up footing. It’s a weary, repetitive cycle of lawlessness meeting the only thing it understands—consequences.