
Multiple Alabama officers help stranded and robbed man with autism make his way home
Fox News
A chain of officers from police departments across Alabama helped a young man with autism make his way home to Indiana in what police described as a "bizarre story."
"We only have bits and pieces of the story, which we have updated as new information has come in," Morgan County Sheriff's Office Public Information Officer Mike Swafford told Fox News. "[Bolin's] family informed us that he was diagnosed with autism, but his name was actually Sangre. ... The name he used belonged to his brother." His family also informed officers that "he was troubled and that his father was still alive and his mother had both of her legs," contrary to the story Bolin told police, Swafford said. Bolin apparently called police Tuesday claiming he had been left stranded at a gas station in Montgomery after his "friends" who he was traveling to Florida with "physically pushed him out of the car and robbed him at a gas station in Montgomery ... leaving him with nothing but the clothes on his body ... no phone, no money," a Tuesday Facebook post from the sheriff's office reads.More Related News

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