Someone steals Washington man's Alaska halibut
ANCHORAGE (AP) — When Barbara Kagerer's telephone rang, she figured it was her parents calling to say they'd had a great trip to Alaska and they were back in Seattle.
She was partly right. It was her dad on the line, calling from Seattle-Tacoma International Airport. "My fish!" he yelled into the phone. "They stole my fish!"
Somewhere between Anchorage and Seattle, about 40 meticulously wrapped and packed one-pound pieces of fresh-caught halibut vanished from Ray Bolanos' checked bags.
"I really just feel violated," Bolanos said from his home in Kenmore, Wash., a suburb north of Seattle.
A really fishy story...
ANCHORAGE (AP) — When Barbara Kagerer's telephone rang, she figured it was her parents calling to say they'd had a great trip to Alaska and they were back in Seattle.
She was partly right. It was her dad on the line, calling from Seattle-Tacoma International Airport. "My fish!" he yelled into the phone. "They stole my fish!"
Somewhere between Anchorage and Seattle, about 40 meticulously wrapped and packed one-pound pieces of fresh-caught halibut vanished from Ray Bolanos' checked bags.
"I really just feel violated," Bolanos said from his home in Kenmore, Wash., a suburb north of Seattle.
A really fishy story...