Man who allegedly rode naked atop moving locomotive busted after bizarre train stunt: sheriff

He boarded the train, but his clothes stayed behind.An Arizona man was arrested after authorities said he allegedly broke into a Union Pacific locomotive and surfed atop the moving train in the nude as it traveled through northeastern Colorado, leaving stunned witnesses watching the bizarre ride before deputies took him into custody Thursday.The Sedgwick County Sheriff's Office identified the suspect as Daniel Ray Ballance, of Quartzsite, Arizona, and allege he broke a window to enter the locomotive before climbing onto the roof while the train was moving.Ballance faces felony and misdemeanor charges following the incident, authorities said.NAKED MAN TRIES TO KIDNAP 7-YEAR-OLD TOURIST FROM MOTHER AT PORTLAND PARK, BYSTANDERS INTERVENEDaniel Ray Ballance appears in a booking photo released by the Sedgwick County Sheriff's Office after authorities accused him of breaking into a locomotive and riding atop a moving train in Colorado.(Sedgwick County Sheriff's Office, Colorado)Authorities said witnesses reported seeing Ballance riding naked atop the locomotive before deputies arrested him.The sheriff's office later shared his mugshot alongside a tongue-in-cheek Facebook post about the arrest."For those of you who had the unfortunate experience of seeing this gentleman surfing naked on top of a moving locomotive yesterday, I want you to know that he was arrested on felony and misdemeanor charges," the sheriff's office wrote.According to the sheriff's office, Ballance later told deputies he loved "vodka, beer and playing the Banjo."DITCHING HIS 'WHIZZINATOR' IN A PATROL CAR WAS FLORIDA MAN'S SECOND BAD DECISION OF DAYA Union Pacific freight locomotive travels along tracks in an undated file photo.
An Arizona man is accused of breaking into a locomotive before climbing atop a moving train in northeastern Colorado.(Els van der Gun/Getty Images, File)"Daniel expressed his love of vodka, beer and playing the Banjo," the agency joked.
"Unfortunately, we had to separate him fr...