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mike April 29th 04 01:00 AM

Dinghy Thief Apprehended in Mazatlan (long)
 
Arabella cruised into El Cid marina April 25, after a leisurely trip
up the coast from Puerto Vallarta. We arrived as a big swell from a
Pacific storm was about to close the harbor for 3 days, so we decided
to put the dinghy into the water for visiting friends a half mile up
the channel in Marina Mazatlan. We were relaxed and feeling very
casual, so never even thought to lock the dinghy up at night. We were
on an end tie, and had it snuggled up behind the bow, tied to the
dock. You guessed it, the second night it disappeared while we were
aboard the boat, just after returning from dinner. Jorge, the El Cid
night watchman, came by in his panga as I was snoozing in the cockpit,
and asked if we had loaned our dinghy to someone. I said no, and he
said he had just seen an inflatable heading out of the harbor full
speed. He was ready to take off in pursuit, but since the harbor was
closed, had to get permission from the Harbormaster before he could do
so. As we tried to raise the Harbormaster on the radio, I made a call
to the fleet on the local hailing frequency, and immediately had an
answer from Mike Wilson on Tortue. It turned out that he, and several
others, had also had dinghies stolen in the past month or two, and he
offered to call the Police, Navy, and Port Captain to make the report.
This was the first dinghy to be snatched from marina El Cid, and
Estevan, head of security, also made the calls. By the time we
decided it would be too dangerous (and most likely futile) to try
crossing the waves breaking clear across the harbor entrance, the
police were arriving and ready to take our report. Everyone was
amazed the thief had actually made it out through that 10' surf in an
inflatable powered by a 6 horsepower engine.
Anyway, thanks to the quick report, and prompt response by the
authorities, the thief was caught by the Navy as he came ashore near
the Fisherman's Monument several miles away. All we had to do was go
to the District Attorney's office the following day, file a statement,
and we would be able to reclaim our dinghy and motor. During the
night he spent in custody, the thief was persuaded to confess to
stealing the other dinghies, and three of them were found at his home.
One was the brand new Caribe and motor that Mike Wilson had lost only
two days after he had bought them.
Mike offered to drive us around and get all the paperwork done at 9:00
am, but "El Cid Estevan" was waiting for us, and he happened to be an
ex policeman who knew everyone we needed to deal with. After three
hours of driving from one government agency to another, eventually we
found our dinghy at the Municipal Police station.
It ended up taking another day before we actually were able to
retrieve the dinghy, and again, Estevan and another El Cid employee
were there to drive and help load the dinghy into the truck. When we
arrived at the station, it turned out the police wanted to display all
the recovered dinghies and motors and have the local newspapers
photograph them with the thief standing handcuffed in front! It was a
classic situation, and worth the extra time it took. The thief will
get about 15 years in jail, and they were anxious to make an example
of him. It's a really bad thing to mess with the tourists around
here, since we've become the lifeblood of the place as the shrimp
fishery declines.
We learned a lot from this; primarily that it is smart to inquire on
the morning net whether there are any security concerns when arriving
at a new port, and never get so relaxed and casual that you risk
losing something as important as the ship to shore transportation
device!

Scott Vernon April 29th 04 01:10 AM

Dinghy Thief Apprehended in Mazatlan (long)
 
good story. Glad they caught the rat.

Scotty


"mike" wrote in message
om...
Arabella cruised into El Cid marina April 25, after a leisurely trip
up the coast from Puerto Vallarta. We arrived as a big swell from a
Pacific storm was about to close the harbor for 3 days, so we decided
to put the dinghy into the water for visiting friends a half mile up
the channel in Marina Mazatlan. We were relaxed and feeling very
casual, so never even thought to lock the dinghy up at night. We were
on an end tie, and had it snuggled up behind the bow, tied to the
dock. You guessed it, the second night it disappeared while we were
aboard the boat, just after returning from dinner. Jorge, the El Cid
night watchman, came by in his panga as I was snoozing in the cockpit,
and asked if we had loaned our dinghy to someone. I said no, and he
said he had just seen an inflatable heading out of the harbor full
speed. He was ready to take off in pursuit, but since the harbor was
closed, had to get permission from the Harbormaster before he could do
so. As we tried to raise the Harbormaster on the radio, I made a call
to the fleet on the local hailing frequency, and immediately had an
answer from Mike Wilson on Tortue. It turned out that he, and several
others, had also had dinghies stolen in the past month or two, and he
offered to call the Police, Navy, and Port Captain to make the report.
This was the first dinghy to be snatched from marina El Cid, and
Estevan, head of security, also made the calls. By the time we
decided it would be too dangerous (and most likely futile) to try
crossing the waves breaking clear across the harbor entrance, the
police were arriving and ready to take our report. Everyone was
amazed the thief had actually made it out through that 10' surf in an
inflatable powered by a 6 horsepower engine.
Anyway, thanks to the quick report, and prompt response by the
authorities, the thief was caught by the Navy as he came ashore near
the Fisherman's Monument several miles away. All we had to do was go
to the District Attorney's office the following day, file a statement,
and we would be able to reclaim our dinghy and motor. During the
night he spent in custody, the thief was persuaded to confess to
stealing the other dinghies, and three of them were found at his home.
One was the brand new Caribe and motor that Mike Wilson had lost only
two days after he had bought them.
Mike offered to drive us around and get all the paperwork done at 9:00
am, but "El Cid Estevan" was waiting for us, and he happened to be an
ex policeman who knew everyone we needed to deal with. After three
hours of driving from one government agency to another, eventually we
found our dinghy at the Municipal Police station.
It ended up taking another day before we actually were able to
retrieve the dinghy, and again, Estevan and another El Cid employee
were there to drive and help load the dinghy into the truck. When we
arrived at the station, it turned out the police wanted to display all
the recovered dinghies and motors and have the local newspapers
photograph them with the thief standing handcuffed in front! It was a
classic situation, and worth the extra time it took. The thief will
get about 15 years in jail, and they were anxious to make an example
of him. It's a really bad thing to mess with the tourists around
here, since we've become the lifeblood of the place as the shrimp
fishery declines.
We learned a lot from this; primarily that it is smart to inquire on
the morning net whether there are any security concerns when arriving
at a new port, and never get so relaxed and casual that you risk
losing something as important as the ship to shore transportation
device!



Bobsprit April 29th 04 01:10 AM

Dinghy Thief Apprehended in Mazatlan (long)
 
good story. Glad they caught the rat.


Less competition for Scotty the Rat.


RB

Bart Senior April 29th 04 03:14 AM

Dinghy Thief Apprehended in Mazatlan (long)
 
15 years in jail?

Sounds a little harsh.

mike wrote

classic situation, and worth the extra time it took. The thief will
get about 15 years in jail, and they were anxious to make an example
of him. It's a really bad thing to mess with the tourists around
here, since we've become the lifeblood of the place as the shrimp
fishery declines.
We learned a lot from this; primarily that it is smart to inquire on
the morning net whether there are any security concerns when arriving
at a new port, and never get so relaxed and casual that you risk
losing something as important as the ship to shore transportation
device!




Captain Bly April 29th 04 02:33 PM

Dinghy Thief Apprehended in Mazatlan (long)
 
Crawl back into your hole slimmy:

Less competition for Scotty the Rat.


RB




Joe April 29th 04 02:58 PM

Dinghy Thief Apprehended in Mazatlan (long)
 
"Bart Senior" wrote in message . net...
15 years in jail?

Sounds a little harsh.



If it was a kid under 18 then perhaps. If not it sounds just about
right as long as he can not get parolled early.

Joe



mike wrote

classic situation, and worth the extra time it took. The thief will
get about 15 years in jail, and they were anxious to make an example
of him. It's a really bad thing to mess with the tourists around
here, since we've become the lifeblood of the place as the shrimp
fishery declines.
We learned a lot from this; primarily that it is smart to inquire on
the morning net whether there are any security concerns when arriving
at a new port, and never get so relaxed and casual that you risk
losing something as important as the ship to shore transportation
device!


Martin Baxter April 29th 04 04:00 PM

Dinghy Thief Apprehended in Mazatlan (long)
 
Bart Senior wrote:

15 years in jail?

Sounds a little harsh.


Not if you compare it with the life sentences going out to petty thieves under the "Three Strike" laws.

Cheers
Marty


Lady Sailor April 29th 04 05:43 PM

Dinghy Thief Apprehended in Mazatlan (long)
 
Maybe by US standards but this is Mexico. In fact just walking up the
dock this morning one of the local dock hands stopped us to let us
know he thought the guy should get a longer sentence.

Lady B.

Bart Senior wrote:

15 years in jail?

Sounds a little harsh.


Captain Ahab April 30th 04 04:02 AM

Dinghy Thief Apprehended in Mazatlan (long)
 
Heh yeah especially since it is a mexican prison!!
That confession was wrought with many blows Im sure.

Ahab


"Bart Senior" wrote in message
et...
15 years in jail?

Sounds a little harsh.

mike wrote

classic situation, and worth the extra time it took. The thief will
get about 15 years in jail, and they were anxious to make an example
of him. It's a really bad thing to mess with the tourists around
here, since we've become the lifeblood of the place as the shrimp
fishery declines.
We learned a lot from this; primarily that it is smart to inquire on
the morning net whether there are any security concerns when arriving
at a new port, and never get so relaxed and casual that you risk
losing something as important as the ship to shore transportation
device!






none May 2nd 04 11:45 AM

Dinghy Thief Apprehended in Mazatlan (long)
 
yeah, and 15 yrs in jail for taking the toys of the idle rich is really
justice isn't it? Get a grip people, they live in poverty and 15 yrs for
that is pathetic!
rick

On Wed, 28 Apr 2004 20:10:35 -0400, Scott Vernon
wrote:

good story. Glad they caught the rat.

Scotty

snip.... The thief will
get about 15 years in jail, and they were anxious to make an example
of him. It's a really bad thing to mess with the tourists around
here, since we've become the lifeblood of the place as the shrimp
fishery declines.
We learned a lot from this; primarily that it is smart to inquire on
the morning net whether there are any security concerns when arriving
at a new port, and never get so relaxed and casual that you risk
losing something as important as the ship to shore transportation
device!


but you didn't learn anything about inequity of justice did you?
rick




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