What is the name of your state?
Georgia
Some people we know were in the process of robbing our house when my husband came home and interrupted them. The doors were locked and when asked how they got in and what they were doing there they told him that I had asked them to feed our animals while I was out of town, which was a total lie, and that they'd had to come in through a window.
They talked a good game, and we thought they were, "friends," of ours, and since my husband could not immediately contact me he did not call the police and did not think to look in their truck before they left.
When I called my husband and told him that they did not in fact have my permission to be in the house, he began to look around and notice several items were missing, and contacted our local police. The investigator came and saw the screen from the window torn off and we gave him a list of the items that were missing. (About $3000 of our property).
This investigator told us after a couple of weeks when we asked him about the case that he could not arrest them without finding the stolen items in their possession, which I understand, but my husband physically found them in our house and they did not have permission to be there as was their story. They had also damaged our property upon gaining unlawful entry so my first question is shouldn't he have at least arrested them for breaking and entering, upon which should he not have searched their residence and truck for the property that was subsequently missing?
It has been a year now and nothing was ever done AT ALL to help us, as victims of a burglary. We live in a very small town and the investigator conducts business based on his personal opinions rather than his professional obligations to the community, and this makes me very angry. I would like to sue the city for damages because they did not protect our civil liberties and neglected to investigate a crime commited against us. Is this possible?
Georgia
Some people we know were in the process of robbing our house when my husband came home and interrupted them. The doors were locked and when asked how they got in and what they were doing there they told him that I had asked them to feed our animals while I was out of town, which was a total lie, and that they'd had to come in through a window.
They talked a good game, and we thought they were, "friends," of ours, and since my husband could not immediately contact me he did not call the police and did not think to look in their truck before they left.
When I called my husband and told him that they did not in fact have my permission to be in the house, he began to look around and notice several items were missing, and contacted our local police. The investigator came and saw the screen from the window torn off and we gave him a list of the items that were missing. (About $3000 of our property).
This investigator told us after a couple of weeks when we asked him about the case that he could not arrest them without finding the stolen items in their possession, which I understand, but my husband physically found them in our house and they did not have permission to be there as was their story. They had also damaged our property upon gaining unlawful entry so my first question is shouldn't he have at least arrested them for breaking and entering, upon which should he not have searched their residence and truck for the property that was subsequently missing?
It has been a year now and nothing was ever done AT ALL to help us, as victims of a burglary. We live in a very small town and the investigator conducts business based on his personal opinions rather than his professional obligations to the community, and this makes me very angry. I would like to sue the city for damages because they did not protect our civil liberties and neglected to investigate a crime commited against us. Is this possible?
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