Teens Use Stolen ATV While Burglarizing Vehicles
May 16, 2017
The Escambia County Sheriff’s Office has arrested two teens who where allegedly committing vehicle burglaries while using a stolen ATV as their transportation.
Timothy Eugene Scarbrough, 17, and Robert Wayne Lamarr, 18, were both charged with two counts burglary of an unoccupied conveyance unarmed, grand theft of a motor vehicle and second degree petit theft.
About 4 a.m. on May 15, an ECSO deputy made contact with Scarbrough and Lamarr in the 6000 block of Spanish Oak Court. During the investigation, it was determined that they were using a stolen ATV. When the suspects were searched, vehicle keys were found that tied them to a May 14 vehicle burglary and ATV theft in the same neighborhood. The undamaged ATV was located in a nearby wooded area and returned to the owner.
Pictured: Roberty Wayne Lamarr.
Comments
11 Responses to “Teens Use Stolen ATV While Burglarizing Vehicles”
Do you want them in college with your children?
David for safe children
Sad; they should be taking finals and getting ready for college.
Criminals here in Escambia County will never learn a lesson because the Judicial System sets them free too often. According to the laws, the 17 year old will be set free in no time with a message “Now don’t do that anymore”. The Judge thinks he is not old enough to understand what stealing is. At the age of 13, you know what is right and wrong. For some reason our laws look at that differently.
Both have been recently released from jail. When will they ever learn?
Instead of worring about being pc, just call them what they are. Two criminals. Good job law enforcement.
Those poor parents…if they were mine they would be safer in the jail
REGARDING:
“You are a teen until you turn twenty.”
(And again for a while after 112. Seldom in the arrest reports after that, though.)
David for better teenagers
Another poor misunderstood “child.”
You are a teen until you turn twenty. He knew better than to do what he did.
hey Greg, how about teenager, read the story one person in sevenTEEN and the other is eighTEEN. So the term “teenager” is correct.
Teens???? Oh come on, one of them is 18. How about one adult and one teen arrested….