At approximately 2:14 p.m. Eastern Daylight Time on Saturday, April 18, 2026, a Helen Police Department patrol officer issued a civil citation under City Code Section 46-31, titled 'Excessive Traditional Dress, Public Way, Downtown Core,' against a 52-year-old visitor from Marietta, Georgia. The citation is, per a Helen PD records search completed Sunday afternoon, the first citation issued under Section 46-31 in the 52 years the ordinance has been on the books. The ensemble, subsequently weighed on a Helen Welcome Center postal scale, totaled 14 pounds, 9 ounces. The fine was $45. It has been paid.
Helen Police Chief Darius Pritchett announced Monday, in a three-paragraph press release distributed to this publication and to no other outlet, the launch of a department-wide 'Pothole Politics' initiative modeled on the first 100 days of New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani, whose administration has publicly emphasized a focus on 'the everyday essential services that keep the city running.' Helen PD has, under the initiative, formally added pothole remediation to the department's patrol duties. In the first 72 hours of the program, Officer Dennis Vega has filled seven potholes and issued four municipal citations — to four separate potholes — for 'unauthorized occupation of the public right-of-way.'
Patrol Officer Dennis Vega, of the Helen Police Department, at 10:47 a.m. Tuesday issued himself Helen PD Civil Citation No. 2026-PKG-01402 for an expired downtown meter in front of Hofer's of Helen. Officer Vega paid the $35 fine in cash from his wallet at 10:51 a.m., four minutes after issuance. The blotter item, as transcribed from the Helen PD weekly log, is as follows.
In the 27 years the Helen Police Department has maintained downtown parking enforcement, its officers have issued 14,602 parking citations. Exactly one of those citations, issued at 11:47 a.m. on a Tuesday in August 2019, was written against a horse. Bavarian Brainrot has obtained the citation. We have also, as of Monday, obtained the horse.
The Helen Police Department, on Tuesday morning, issued a civil citation to Kenneth P. Laferty, 39, of Cumming, Georgia, under City Code 46-22, the downtown-core container-size ordinance. Mr. Laferty was carrying a 36-ounce insulated Yeti water bottle. City Code 46-22 sets the container limit at 32 ounces. Mr. Laferty, when cited, described the overage as 'a rounding error.' The citing officer, when asked whether a rounding error was a defense under 46-22, declined to characterize 46-22's rounding-error provisions.
The Department’s 47 calls between Sunday morning and Saturday evening included thirteen goose-related incidents, four lederhosen-adjacent property-crime reports, two stolen funnel cakes, and one bear that was, eventually, asked to leave.
Between March 2 and March 11, seven separate funnel-cake theft reports were filed from the Festhalle concession area. Five of the seven originated from a single stand, Oma Trudel's Funnel Cakes. The Department's investigation remains open. A single repeat offender is the Department's working theory.
White County Animal Control's annual February goose census, conducted with volunteer assistance from the Helen Police Department, counted 314 resident Canada geese. Of those, 211 meet the operational definition of 'full-time Helen geese' -- primarily resident within the downtown commercial area, observed on more than 200 days per year. The 2026 figure is up from 203 full-time Helen geese in 2025.
The Helen Police Department's Belgian Malinois K-9 officer, age 4, has been fitted for a custom working vest in a Trachten dirndl pattern for the Oktoberfest Pre-Season Parade on May 3. The Department's standing uniform policy required a formal supplemental memo before the vest could be approved for official use.
The Helen Police Department's quarterly statistical bulletin shows a 41-percent year-over-year increase in lederhosen-adjacent property crime, driven by outdoor-display-rack theft at seven downtown retailers. The Department's suspect profile memo describes the typical offender as male, between 20 and 40 years of age, and visibly intoxicated.
The Department's 43 calls between Sunday, February 8, and Saturday, February 14, included eleven goose-related incidents, two accordion-related dispatches, one bear in a souvenir-shop doorway, one set of missing Lederhosen from a Bruckenstrasse outdoor display rack, and one abandoned windmill component on a public right-of-way.
At approximately 6:14 a.m. Thursday, January 15, 2026, Helen Police Officer Dennis Vega, arriving for his morning shift at the Helen Police Department's 726 Main Street headquarters, observed what he later described to this reporter as 'a lot of activity' in the department's evidence locker — a 40-square-foot climate-controlled room located off the department's rear hallway, containing at that moment approximately 118 separate evidence inventory items including, per the department's chain-of-custody log, fourteen intact bottles of distilled spirits and two partially consumed twelve-packs of Kölsch-style lager. The activity was not departmental. The activity was mice.
The Helen Police Department's standard weekly blotter, covering the period Friday, January 2, 2026 through Thursday, January 8, 2026, documents eleven calls for service. Two resulted in verbal warnings (one to a dog, with a summary of the warning language given to the dog's owner), one resulted in a parking citation (issued to a pothole, per the department's active Pothole Politics adjacency initiative), and none resulted in an arrest. The goose, absent from the department's blotter throughout December 2025, re-appeared in the logs on Tuesday, January 6. The department's response was an exchange of nods.
At 2:14 p.m. Thursday, January 8, 2026, a single U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement deportation officer — identified per Helen PD's procedural incident report 2026-01-08-0341 as ICE Deportation Officer Brent Lowenstein, GS-11, El Centro regional detail — arrived at the Helen Welcome Center at 200 Bruckenstrasse, bearing a paper removal order, and informed Welcome Center Director Winslow Bach that he was there to 'execute a removal.' The named target of the removal, per the order's caption, was 'GOOSE (MALE, ADULT, UNIDENTIFIED),' last observed January 6 in the 200 block of Bruckenstrasse. Mr. Bach declined, citing both the improvised nature of the order and the fact that the goose does not live at the Welcome Center.