May 11, 2026

Find My MacBook, Find My Mess

Driver accused of DUI tracks missing laptop to Illinois State trooper's house

MacBook ping leads to trooper’s home, and commenters are absolutely not shocked

TLDR: A man arrested for alleged drunk driving says his missing MacBook led him to the arresting trooper’s home, turning a traffic stop into a major police scandal. Commenters weren’t just stunned — they argued the bigger story is distrust in law enforcement, unfair DUI testing, and a justice system many see as stacked.

This story had commenters doing a full record scratch. A Chicago-area restaurant executive arrested on drunk driving charges says his missing MacBook later showed up at the home of the very state trooper who arrested him. That wild claim, backed by a 911 call, phone video, and an internal police review obtained by ABC 7 Chicago, sent readers straight into outrage mode. The article already reads like a crime drama, but the comments turned it into a full-blown public roast.

The loudest reaction? Deep distrust of the system. One commenter zeroed in on the trooper’s eye-popping pay, gasping, “Holy cow” at reports he made nearly $250,000 in a year. Others saw the laptop drama as proof of a bigger problem, arguing that if someone with Apple tracking can follow a stolen device, what happens to people who don’t have that kind of tech? That sparked the most emotional hot take of the thread: America’s justice system is becoming “two-tiered,” where some people can fight back and others just lose their stuff.

Then came the legal nerd fight: one person corrected another on immunity law, basically saying, “Actually, it’s qualified immunity,” which is classic internet behavior even in the middle of a scandal. And there was real anger over roadside sobriety tests too, with commenters arguing people should be able to demand a blood test because balance tests can trip up older people, disabled people, or anyone nervous and tired. In other words: the community didn’t just see one missing laptop — they saw a whole comment section screaming, “How many times does this happen when nobody can track it?”

Key Points

  • ABC 7 reported that Sherard Holland, arrested on felony DUI charges by Illinois State Police Trooper Kevin Bradley, said he later tracked his missing MacBook to Bradley's home in Tinley Park.
  • The I-Team said it obtained Bradley's traffic stop report, dashboard camera footage, and a 911 call recording related to Holland's allegations.
  • According to the article, Bradley wrote that Holland swerved and that he smelled alcohol, then had Holland drive to a gas station in Worth Township, where Holland refused field sobriety tests and was arrested.
  • Holland said his MacBook was not listed on his inventory slip after the arrest, and that Apple's Find My feature showed the device at a Tinley Park address rather than the tow yard.
  • The article places the case within broader scrutiny of Bradley, noting prior accusations by public defenders and civil rights attorneys that he fabricated evidence and violated drivers' civil rights in other DUI cases.

Hottest takes

"Holy cow" — mrlonglong
"The US system really is two-tiered" — baggachipz
"it’s qualified immunity" — dgrin91
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