
It looks like the nine twits who broke into Richard Garriott's village in Austin, partied, stole thousands in liquor and then left photographic evidence have been identified.
No real surprise there.
The Travis County Sheriff's Office issued arrest warrants on criminal trespass for Amy Adams, 19; Christopher Erich Ambrosius, 20; Jamie Marie Anderson, 18; Jeffery Steven Figge, 22; Ryan Keith Hess, 20; and Abraham Cazares, 21.
Travis Lynn Foxell, 20; Steven Andrew Silva, 20; and Scott Berner, 21; were charged with burglary of a building.
None have yet been arrested, though at least one of the men seen in the image has his very own MySpace on which he brags, when asked if he stole anything in the past month: "Borrowed with out intent of returning it!"
Hmm, whatever could he be talking about? Hit the jump for details from the warrant, courtesy of the Austin-American Statesman.
According to Rios and the arrest warrants, about 12:30 a.m. Feb. 1, the group parked three cars near the Pennybacker Bridge on Loop 360 (Capital of Texas Highway). They followed trails on a hillside, crawled under a fence and walked two miles to Garriott's property in the 7400 block of Coldwater Canyon Drive. The 70-acre property has a two-mile metal fence around it.Foxell told Berner that he had previously broken into a building on the property, an arrest warrant said. Foxell showed Berner some coins and tavern pipes he had taken from the building, according to the warrant.
The group called Garriott's property Midgetville because of several small buildings on it, warrants said. Several resemble playhouses, including a fake jail and treehouses with rope bridges, Rios said.
Once the suspects entered Garriott's property, some of them broke the exterior locks on two buildings to get inside, the warrant said.
They also broke into a bar, the warrants said. The group piled an ice chest so high with expensive Scotch, port and several kinds of wines that the top wouldn't close, Rios said.
They left behind several empty beer cans on a trail, the arrest warrant said.
A few days later, Adams and Foxell went back to get Adams' camera, Rios said. When they got to Garriott's property, however, they found photos of themselves posted on the buildings, he said. Garriott had printed photos from the camera in an attempt to identify the burglars, Rios said.
Investigators took the pictures to several high schools in western Travis County, posted them on the Web and gave them to area homeowners associations.
Garriott wanted to offer a reward, but investigators decided to release the pictures to the media March 16, said Roger Wade, a spokesman for the department.
Five days later, Adams walked into a sheriff's office with her attorney and identified herself and other people involved, according to an arrest warrant.
Pouring over the comments in the MySpace accounts I found a one reference to a village by ScottyBoy, who wrote the day after the incident occurred: "Dude Last night . in the weeble village ... fallin of cliffs ... HIT ME UP."
Nine who left pics at crime scene identified [Austin-American Statesman]




















