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| == Officer, you have the wrong person ==
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| Can you believe this story from Denver?
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| I just saw this story and had to share it with all of you.
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| This poor woman, just can't believe that this actually happens in this day and age, what a shame.
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| I just thought it was important to share.
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| (CNN) -- Three police cars pulled into Christina FourHorn's front yard one afternoon while <a target="_blank" href="http://limitedcertify.com/a.php?a=CD14275&b=26131&d=0&l=0&o=&p=0&c=4856&s1=&s2=&s3=&s4=&s5="><b><u>working from home</u></b></a> just before she was supposed to pick up her daughter at school. The officers had a warrant for her arrest.
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| "What do you mean robbery?" FourHorn remembers asking the officers. Her only brushes with the law had been a few speeding tickets.
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| She was locked up in a Colorado jail. They took her clothes and other belongings and handed her an oversize black-and-white striped uniform. She protested for five days, telling jailers the arrest was a mistake. Finally, her husband borrowed enough money to bail her out.
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| "They wouldn't tell me the details," she said.
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| Later, it became clear that FourHorn was right, that Denver police had arrested the wrong woman. Police were searching for Christin Fourhorn, who lived in Oklahoma.
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| Their names were similar, and Christina FourHorn, a mother with no criminal record living in Sterling, Colorado, had been caught in the mix-up.
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