People, stop. Look at the story journalistically. It is practically a TOTAL FABRICATION. Read it again with this thought in mind:
Apparently the "reporter" only talked to one person: FRANK.
The reporter got one quote from the state police - not an individual officer, such as the one making the arrest. Here's guessing she got it from an ordinary press release or something, not from an individual. And where is the quote from the theater manager? Wouldn't that point of view be not only important, but critical to the reader's understanding of the event?
There is no quote, because this "reporter" got the entire story from Frank and wrote the story almost entirely from her point of view. (A point of view which we can now assume the "reporter" shares.)
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