You’d be surprised at what you can see in government police records. I remember one time when I was young (back in the 1980s) processing a missing / stolen luggage report filed by Tom Cruise. I bet there still is a file on it.
Back around 96, the steel fabrication shop allowed personal radios at work stations. Most played ‘classic rock’. That song must have been played every hour.
I got so sick of hearing ‘music’ of guys yelling at the top of their lungs into the microphone, that I left earplugs in all day.
Sammy Hagar - I Can’t Drive 55
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RvV3nn_de2k
He’s still alive?.........The trooper, not Sammy Hagar.........
There is zero possibility the state police does not have a record of the troopers employed at the time in that district. It’s as bizarre as how the Trump assassin was mysteriously ignored if they can’t produce at least a list of names.
I think you need to think about the time period we are talking about. Records were not filed away on a computer. There were only paper copies. Imagine the storage problems of having to keep every record. Up until records were put on computer files, it was standard procedure to destroy records after so many years. In the 80s, I was told by a county records clerk that they destroyed records on on a sliding scale. For instance, a felony record it was kept forever. For a non-violent misdemeanor, it was five years and so on.
How about bringing in Bob Rivers who published the parody called, “I Can’t Drive (I’m 65)”?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DmrD_t4rCO8