It is a coincidence of Lony.
An alleged series thief with a strange name was arrested and accused of stealing more than $ 20,000 or merchandise from Walmart stores throughout the north of Georgia, according to Fox 5 Atlanta.
Speedy González, 40, was accused of placing pale items in a cheap container in the auto-checkout, but only scanning the large and economic article without scanning the narrowest elements hidden inside.
“Nicotine, gum, diabetic strips, you know, high -priced items, although of a smaller nature,” said Gainesville police lieutenant Kevin Holbrook. “He would like to choose an article from the shelf, like a garbage can. In one case, it was a mailbox … Then take all those items, put it in the box with the largest article, and then that, pay and leave the store.”
This trick allowed González to leave much more than he paid, but the police realized his alleged crimes and arrested him 10 days after another alleged robbery in March.
He had battery or about 20 robberies in the County of Georgia’s Hall, Barrow, Gwinnett, Haersham, White and Lumpkin.
González, who lived to the Northeast of Atlanta, was arrested and hired in the Hall County prison and faces a series of federal positions, according to the Gaineville Police Department.
It is not González’s first meeting with the police.
In April 2020, González was arrested in Gwinnett County for allegedly stealing checks from a mailbox and trying to buy items worth $ 3000 with the funds in a home depot home.
He made his name in that crime as a touch of application of the law months to judge it.
UCG/Universal Image Group through Getty Images
González’s name is almost the same as the iconic Looney Tunes Speedy Gonzales character, the fast mouse with a large yellow hat.
The cartoon was inspired by Frank Gonzales, an assistant animator of Warner Bros. known for being able to draw very fast, according to a former animation employee, Martha Goldman Sigall.
The users of social networks made fun of González’s misfortune after their wave of crimes.
“It was clearly not fast enough,” a person wrote in the comments section of the original publication of the Facebook trial of the Gainesville Police Department.
“You need to change,” another wrote. “Change it to Slowpoke Rodríguez after being caught.”
“Tell me that this is not his real name,” another joked.
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