People in the Nebraska town of Valentine wish their busiest
vandal would find another way to make his mark.
Beginning more than a year ago, some man has been skipping
from one business to another at night, pressing his naked
behind - sometimes his groin, sometimes both - on windows.
Store owners, church workers and school janitors have had to
wash lotion and petroleum jelly off the windows he selects.
"This is the weirdest case I've ever seen," said police Chief
Ben McBride.
Some residents of Valentine, a town of about 2,650 people,
find some humor in the strange vandalism and have taken to
calling the perpetrator the "Butt Bandit." But they also
can't help but cringe when finding his marks.
"We were completely grossed out," said Kalli Kieborz, who
works in a downtown building. "One day I walked into the
office and an employee said, 'Oh, my God, we've been
struck!'"
The police chief is far from amused.
"It's not funny," McBride said. "We're worried about the next
step."
It started in spring 2007, when the window of a Methodist
church was greased with an imprint. McBride figured it was a
high school prank. But the church kept getting hit, even
after police staked it out.
The bandit struck business after business, window after
window last summer.
Then he - and maybe, McBride said, copycat vandals - stopped
over the fall and winter.
"People said he was done," McBride said. "Then he started
back up this summer."
During one particularly brazen session, virtually all the
windows at a local hotel were imprinted.
McBride said no one has reported seeing the vandal in action.
The only clue is a blurry picture of him caught by a
surveillance camera at the middle school last year.
The man was 6-feet-tall or slightly taller, and slender. He
had a dark complexion, and McBride said the man's dark hair
was styled in a "1980s, feathered look."
Valentine, in remote north-central Nebraska, promotes itself
as "The Heart City." Downtown sidewalks are painted with
hearts, and locals encourage people from around the country
to send their Valentine's Day cards to the local post office
so they can be mailed out with the word "Valentine" stamped
on them.
"This is not normal behavior for Valentine," Cherry County
Attorney Eric Scott said. "It's not funny or something people
want to be exposed to."
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