The story seemed a
bit far-fetched: A frantic-sounding 25-year-old
woman on Tuesday spun a yarn about a desperate
stranger with a gun who got in her car and said
he needed $20,000. So the two drove around the
county trying to get money, but the gunman got
nervous and scared and hopped out of the
victim’s car somewhere in Deltona. The tall tale
resulted in more than two dozen officers from
four different law enforcement agencies
mobilizing to help investigate the incident and
search for the suspect. When it was all over,
the woman -- Stacie Zuver -- ended up in jail
after she finally admitted to Volusia County
Sheriff’s investigators that she made up the
entire story. Her reason for fabricating the
episode: Zuver said she wanted to get her
boyfriend to pay more attention to her.
The Sheriff’s Office
was first notified of the incident at 11:51 a.m.
on Tuesday from a woman in Ohio who works with
Zuver’s mother. The mother had received a
distress call from Zuver saying she was in
trouble and needed her to wire a large sum of
money. The mother then relayed the information
to a co-worker, who phoned the Sheriff’s Office
to report the incident. Zuver initially said
that she had parked in a shopping plaza in
Daytona Beach when she was accosted by the armed
stranger. The Sheriff’s Office launched a
search, but it was complicated by the fact that
the victim wasn’t sure of the exact location
where the incident took place. At first, she
said that she was in Daytona Beach when she
encountered the gunman. But then she later said
it was actually in Port Orange. Zuver said she
drove around trying to find a location where she
could have money wired to her, and eventually
headed to the Deltona area because she knew of a
grocery store there where she could have the
funds sent. But then she said the gunman got
scared and bolted from her car in the 2600 block
of Delaware Road in Deltona and took off
running. The victim then drove to the Orange
City Police Department at about 12:25 p.m. to
seek help. She later returned to Deltona to show
deputies where the gunman had supposedly dashed
from her car and also gave a vivid physical
description of the suspect.
Zuver’s story
prompted the Sheriff’s Office to mount a
wide-scale search for the suspect, with numerous
patrol and traffic deputies and a K-9 unit. A
Sheriff’s Office helicopter also was dispatched
to the scene to aid with the search from the
sky, and a crime scene investigator was called
out to process Zuver’s car for clues. Meanwhile,
Daytona Beach and Port Orange officers were
dispatched to two different plazas to see if any
exterior surveillance cameras captured the
supposed encounter with the armed man. While all
of that was going on, Sheriff’s investigators
continued to interview Zuver in an effort to
elicit additional details about the incident.
But what investigators discovered were
inconsistencies in her story. First, the
location kept changing. The next thing that
changed was the reason why she was supposedly in
the Port Orange area in the first place. She
initially told investigators that until about
two weeks ago, she had worked as an event
planner for Disney World and was trying to
generate additional business in the hopes of
getting her job back. But investigators were
suspicious when she was unable to provide
contact information for Disney or her previous
supervisor there. She eventually admitted that
she hadn’t worked there in more than a year, and
then later acknowledged making up the carjacking
story. In total, it’s estimated that Wednesday’s
law enforcement response cost approximately
$4,700. Zuver, meanwhile, was taken to jail
Wednesday night, charged with making a false
report to law enforcement. She has since been
released on $500 bond.