A woman from Keizer, Oregon, says that she and her husband walked in on
an intruder shaving his head in their bathroom.
Pat Koskela, 64, said the encounter only got stranger from there.
She said the suspect, Erica Avila, 39, did not make any threats as he
held one of her husband's disposable razors in his hand, and that he was
actually quite talkative, even affectionate.
But she said she had to ask him to leave repeatedly.
Koskela was home alone at around 5:45pm on Tuesday at her house.
"I was in the bedroom in there working on the computer and my husband
was at the store," said Koskela.
She said she heard her two dogs barking loudly but thought they were
just yapping at her husband, John.
After a few minutes, Koskela looked up and saw her husband outside the
bedroom door, which is right next to the bathroom.
"I said, 'Have you been home for about five minutes?' He goes, 'No,' and
then he looks at me," Koskela said. "He has this really funny face and
he goes, 'Who's your friend?' and I go, 'What?' so that's when we realized somebody was here."
Police identified that somebody as Avila.
Koskela said Avila was shaving his head without shaving cream and they
quickly realised he was a stranger.
"He was rambling on about, 'Well, I know somebody that used to live here
and I want to buy this place' and just a bunch of stuff," Koskela said.
She believes Avila broke open an outside gate and came in through a
sliding glass door, which she'd left open for her dogs while she was in
her bedroom.
Koskela said she and her husband were cordial with Avila and he wasn't
threatening, but for a while he just wouldn't leave.
"Every time we start to suggest that he leave or open the door,
whatever," Koskela said, "he'd ask my husband another question."
Eventually, she said she put her foot down and threatened to call 911.
"I said I need you to leave now and then he started to go," Koskela said. "He actually wanted to hug me before he left and
I said, 'I'm not comfortable with that either.'"
Koskela said after Avila left they called the police. Officers arrived
and arrested Avila about a half-mile away.
He faced a judge over a burglary charge in the case on Wednesday.
Court records show Avila was previously found guilty of methamphetamine
possession three times.
Deputies at the Marion County Jail said they had to wait several hours
before taking a new mug shot of him because was uncooperative and he
appeared high.
Koskela added that even without shaving cream, Avila didn't cut himself
shaving.
No comments:
Post a Comment