Alamy This is one for the books: a Texas man who checked a book out of his local library in 2010 and failed to return it was arrested and jailed. According to KWTX-TV, 19-year-old Jory Enck of Copperas Cove, Texas, was put behind bars Wednesday over an unreturned a GED study guide. His booking is a result of a local ordinance the city put in place nearly four years ago that allows police to arrest patrons for not returning overdue library materials after at least 90 days and failing to promptly respond to phone calls or emails from the library. "The reason they passed it was that they were spending a tremendous amount of money replacing these materials that people just didn't return," Copperas Cove Municipal court Judge Bill Price said. Price said that the ordinance has faced more than a little resistance, saying local reaction has been one of, "Universal hatred, nobody wants to get arrested over a library book." "The other side of that is people that go to our library and can't have these materials, they're put out, too," he added. Sergeant Julie Lehmann of the Copperas Cove Police Department confirmed that if police come across a patron during a routine stop who has been issued with a library warrant, they will always make an arrest. Enck was later released on a $200 bond, which Price said is standard. According to the Killeen Daily Herald, Enck was also arrested in 2012 for a much more serious crime. The publication reported at the time that Enck, then 18, was a suspect in a string of 13 vehicle burglaries that took place overnight. Enck was jailed on $50,000 bond. However, Enck is apparently not the first, or youngest person to run into trouble from the law for an overdue library book.
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