A bizarre cross-country road trip involving a stolen sports car, roadside begging, and an unexpectedly helpful diary came to an abrupt end in rural Colorado after a sheriff’s deputy noticed something that simply did not add up.

According to a report by the Moffat County Sheriff's Office, the case began on March 10 when employees at a grocery store in Craig, Colorado contacted authorities about a young woman who was allegedly approaching customers for money and causing a disturbance.

The store, a branch of City Market in the small northwestern Colorado town, had reportedly grown concerned about the situation and called 911.

When a sheriff’s lieutenant arrived on the scene, nothing seemed particularly extraordinary. The woman, later identified as 21-year-old Fallon Frederick, told the deputy she had fallen on difficult times and needed help getting back home to her mother.

Authorities later said the officer, described in an official release as a “good-hearted soul,” even gave her a few dollars after hearing her story.

But moments later, the situation took an unexpected turn.

After leaving the store, Frederick walked across the parking lot and climbed into the passenger seat of what the deputy described as a “very expensive sports car.” It turned out “that very expensive sports car” was being driven by her boyfriend, Neo Gabrielsen, also 21.

The optics immediately raised suspicion. Someone down on their luck typically does not climb into a high-performance machine worth tens or even hundreds of thousands of dollars.

Curious, the deputy decided to run the car’s license plate.

The result quickly transformed a strange situation into a criminal investigation. The plate returned as belonging to a car reported stolen from Washington County in the state of Oregon. Authorities said the theft had occurred under what investigators described as “allegedly violent circumstances.”

Once the vehicle pulled out of the parking lot, the deputy initiated a traffic stop. The stop quickly escalated. During the encounter, a police K9 conducted a sniff around the vehicle and alerted officers to the presence of narcotics. A search of the car uncovered drug paraphernalia that later tested positive for fentanyl, according to authorities.

Yet the most unusual discovery was not the drugs or the stolen car. It was a diary.

Inside the vehicle, investigators found a personal journal belonging to Frederick. According to the sheriff’s office, the notebook documented the couple’s journey across multiple states.

In the entries, Frederick allegedly described how the pair traveled across the country while relying on the generosity of strangers by asking for money along the way.

In other words, investigators say the couple had essentially been funding a road trip using a stolen sports car while posing as people in need.

Law enforcement officials said the diary turned out to be one of the most useful pieces of evidence in the case. The entries reportedly outlined travel routes and encounters with people who had given them money, effectively creating a timeline of the pair’s journey.

Following the stop, both Frederick and Gabrielsen were taken into custody and booked into the local jail in Moffat County, Colorado on auto theft charges. Authorities also confirmed that the two are expected to face extradition proceedings that could send them back to Oregon, where additional charges related to the vehicle theft may be filed.

Officials say they are now coordinating with investigators in Washington County to return the stolen sports car to its rightful owner. So far, law enforcement has not publicly disclosed the vehicle’s make or model, only describing it as an expensive performance car.

 

The story highlights how seemingly minor calls can unravel larger crimes. It began as a simple complaint about a person begging outside a grocery store, only to end with the recovery of a stolen car, the discovery of illegal drugs, and the arrest of two suspects who had been traveling across several states on other peoples’ dime.

Sources: steamboatradio.com, Daily Mail

Read More

These are the Best Cars to Buy in 2026, According to Consumer Reports

Sorta Forgotten Gems: Do You Remember These Incredible Cars From the 1960s?