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SARASOTA -- Two men arrested on charges they stole a 65-foot yacht did not get
far from the scene of the crime, police say.
Officers say they found the
men on the yacht, stuck on a sandbar less than 200 yards away from the backyard
dock they took it from.
Richard Barlow, 36, and Patrick Craig, 26, both
of Brandon, told police Monday that they found the $750,000 yacht drifting in
Sarasota Bay just north of Bird Key.
But Sarasota police marine Capt.
Eddie Howell recognized the luxury catamaran that had been moored for months
behind a home on Bird Key.
Neighbors said the boat had been unused and
docked behind a home that is in foreclosure, owned by attorney John Yanchek.
Police say they are not sure who owns the yacht.
According to neighbors,
two men climbed aboard about 11 a.m. Saturday. After loud rumbling noises and a
lot of black smoke, the engines were running.
The men ran aground on the
sandbar shortly after that, and there the yacht sat for two days.
When
police boarded the boat about 9 a.m. Monday, they found Barlow and Craig
onboard.
Craig told police he had gone to the boat on Sunday, and that
Barlow had recruited him to make repairs to it.
In an interview from
jail, Barlow said he had no idea how the boat got onto the sandbar. He said he
was fishing, saw the stranded boat and wanted to make sure the owner was
OK.
"No one was in it," Barlow said. "It looked like no one had been it
for years. I tried to start the motor and it took hours."
Barlow said it
was clear the boat had been there a long time.
"If you look inside this
boat there is jelly in the refrigerator that has mold on it," Barlow
said.
Police arrested both men and charged them with grand
theft.
Before the yacht could be towed, two other men climbed aboard and
tried to claim ownership. Edwin Watson, 74, and Brian Intrary, 35, told officers
they had seized the boat "under maritime law."
Both were arrested on
trespassing charges when they refused to leave the yacht, which was
impounded.
Police have not found the owner of the boat, which does not
have a name or registration number painted on it.
A woman who answered
Yanchek's telephone Tuesday said the boat did not belong to the attorney. She
declined to comment further.
Yanchek was the attorney for real estate
investor Neil Mohamed Husani, who left the country in 2006 after the FBI began
investigating the presentation of false documents in real estate deals in which
he was involved.
Yanchek faces disbarment, partly because of his
participation in those deals.
Abc News had these details
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