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Be careful out there!


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:laughing: The following article appeared at an on-line site tonight (Fark.com) relating to our favorite hobby...just shows you that you gotta be careful out there!

 

Not a bomb

A geocaching scavenger hunt [in Monroe, Ohio] caused the evacuation of residents and businesses Wednesday night as a bomb squad investigated a “suspicious package.”

 

The intersection of Main and Elm streets in Monroe was a bustle of activity while Monroe police and fire crews and the Butler County Sheriff’s Office Bomb Unit responded to the Monroe Historical Society, 10 Elm St., where a resident reported at 10:45 p.m. Wednesday that suspicious-looking subjects left a package outside the building.

 

“Police did find a package. It was in some bushes and covered with duct tape,” said Monroe dispatcher Mike McKinney.

 

The Butler County Sheriff’s Office Bomb Unit took a digital X-ray of the cylinder, which revealed a notebook and small trinkets typically left by people on geocaching scavenger hunts.

 

Monroe police Chief Greg Homer said what the resident saw was the “tail end” of activity of someone in the dark leaving something in the bushes. “They didn’t see the person write their name in the notebook and leave a souvenir,” Homer said.

 

After determining the package was a geocaching prize, the police also signed the notebook, left a toy badge as a souvenir and put it back in place, he said.

 

………………………………….

Geocaching is an outdoor treasure-hunting game in which the participants use a Global Positioning System device to hide and seek containers called geocaches—waterproof containers with a logbook and a treasure of small toys or trinkets. Participants who find the containers sign the log book, remove a souvenir and replace it with a trinket they have brought.

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“Police did find a package. It was in some bushes and covered with duct tape,” said Monroe dispatcher Mike McKinney.

 

Hmm. Was it Just Plain Duct Tape, or Camo? Inquiring minds want to know. :unsure:

 

 

After determining the package was a geocaching prize, the police also signed the notebook, left a toy badge as a souvenir and put it back in place, he said.

 

Good on the PO-leece!

(That's not a typo, that's Baltimoronese for "cops". :laughing: )

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I've been wondering about this. If this issue is becoming more widespread why don't police officials get a lat/long coordinate for anything suspicious that they find and have someone back at the dispatch do a quick check on geocaching.com. It would save them a lot of heartache, etc. Or is this something that should be discussed with local authorities in order to let them understand the issues. They could, if they wished, keep a record of local caches in the event that someone call something in they would be able to assure the individual as to what the situation is. Just a thought...

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"Sounds like some substandard bomb squad."

 

I respectfully disagree on that. First, this is the first time I've heard of a bomb squad not blowing up the geocache. Second, By signing the log and replacing the cache and having the press report it they helped present geocaching to the public as being endorsed by Law Enforcement. They could have made a huge fuss about the whole episode being an example of the 'problems' that geocaching causes.

 

- T of TandS

Edited by tands
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