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Man with meth pipe accused of stealing tourist train and taking passengers for a ride before telling cops: ‘It's my birthday'

Man with meth pipe accused of stealing tourist train and taking passengers for a ride before telling cops: ‘It's my birthday'

Yahoo09-07-2025
A Florida man is accused of stealing a novelty tourist train and picking up bystanders on the Fourth of July, before being arrested by Key West police.
As officers searched and cuffed Jonathan Patrick Winslow, 57, he told police, 'It's my birthday,' and claimed to have once worked at driving the Conch Tour Train.
Winslow, listed in jail records as an artist living in Big Torch Key Florida, faces charges of burglary, grand theft auto, and possession of drug paraphernalia.
He is being detained in Key West with a $60,000 bond.
Police were called to the Conch Train depot around 11.30 a.m. on Friday, on reports of the train being stolen, according to arrest documents obtained by WPLG.
Winslow is accused of arriving at the depot, leaving his Kia still running, and taking off with the popular tourist train, leaving employees 'confused.'
As the 57-year-old allegedly drove the train, which was embedded with a GPS tracker, he even picked up 'two random passengers,' according to officials.
An employee was later able to retrieve the missing train, and Winslow was apprehended at the Southernmost Point Buoy.
Police said the man 'appeared excited' and talked in a 'rapid speech.'
Body camera video captured Winslow alternating between expressing alarm about his arrest and claiming he was being 'unlawfully detained,' as well as thanking officers and telling them he loved them.
Elsewhere, he joked about creating some '4th of July drama,' and said he was due to watch a 'dinosaur movie' later that day with his grandson, according to authorities.
In jail, police say they found a methamphetamine pipe in Winslow's pocket.
The 57-year-old said the pipe was for marijuana.
Winslow is expected to be arraigned on July 17.
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Because what it tells us, just like with George Floyd, if we don't record the video, we can see what they put in the police report with George Floyd before they realized the video existed.' McNeil was pulled over that day because officers said his headlights should have been on due to bad weather, his lawyers said. His camera shows him asking the officers what he did wrong. Seconds later, an officer smashes his window, strikes him as he sat in the driver's seat and then pulls him from the car and punches him in the head. After being knocked to the ground, McNeil was punched six more times in his right thigh, a police report states. The incident reports don't describe the officer punching McNeil in the head. The officer, who pulled McNeil over and then struck him, described the force this way in his report: 'Physical force was applied to the suspect and he was taken to the ground.' 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Crump, though, said McNeil's video shows that he 'never reaches for anything,' and a second officer wrote in his report that McNeil kept his hands up as the other officer smashed the car window. A camera inside a motorist's vehicle could make up for some shortcomings of police bodycams, which can have a narrow field of view that becomes more limited the closer an officer gets to the person being filmed, Mercado said. However, after the police murder of Floyd, some states and cities debated how and when citizens should be able to capture video of police. The Constitution guarantees the right to record police in public, but a point of contention in some states has been whether a civilian's recording might interfere with the ability of officers to do their job. In Louisiana, for example, a new law makes it a crime to approach within 25 feet (7.6 meters) of a police officer in certain situations. 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When he first began submitting research papers for academic review, many readers didn't believe the men's stories of being brutalized by officers. 'People who live in a civil society don't expect to be treated this way by the police. For them, their police interactions are mostly pleasant, mostly cordial,' Brunson said. 'So it's hard for people who don't have a tenuous relationship with the police to fathom that something like this happens,' he said. 'And that's where video does play a big part because people can't deny what they see.'

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