Dorset police launched a major hunt involving a helicopter, armed
officers and a dog unit for a man brandishing a weapon in the dark only
to find it was a gardener holding a rake.
Stephen Hogan had been working late in his back garden with friend Wayne
Dodd when police swooped on their home in Stanpit, Christchurch.
They had earlier received a 999 call from a member of staff at a nursing
home two doors down who reported seeing a man holding what appeared to
be a weapon. After making their way through the home, the two policemen found Mr
Dodd, 43, holding up a rake from where he had been helping to landscape
an area of Mr Hogan's garden under an external light.
Mr Hogan, a 55-year-old plumber, had bought a heavy roller to help with
the garden project on Friday and he, his son Sean, 23, and Mr Dodd
helped to put it together.
Mr Hogan said: "All of a sudden there was a lot of commotion coming from
out the front.
My wife Alison looked outside and saw about five police cars and armed
police officers and dogs.
"We could hear the police helicopter above us.
Then two policemen approached the front door.
They said there was someone with a weapon in the area. They asked to
come into the back garden and asked if someone was out there because
their ‘eyes in the sky’, as they called them, had seen someone.
They came in and found Wayne with the rake and then left.”
Mr Dodd said: "I was rolling an old part of the garden and saw the
helicopter was up. By the time the two policemen came, I was raking over
the ground and then they just left."
Mr Hogan said: "We were more bemused than anything.
It is reassuring that the police checked it out so thoroughly but in the
end they did all that just to see what was going on in our garden.
It didn't help that after leaving our house the police just packed up
and left without telling the neighbors it was a false alarm.”
A spokesman for Dorset police said: "At 11.41pm on Friday, we had a
report of someone with a weapon but it turned out to be someone who was doing some late night gardening using a rake. It was a misinterpretation of what the caller had seen."
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