Sanders said he was taking the bus because his car was in the shop, and he was going to a friend's house to get a ride to work.

Scott Zylka, spokesman for the sheriff's office, confirmed deputies responded to a criminal mischief call at the bus stop Wednesday night, but he said there was nothing in the incident report about whether or not there was anything written on the shelter's glass.

But it wasn't only what was written on the glass that bothered Sanders. It was the response from police.

Sanders said he didn't feel he should have to be the one to wipe the messages from the glass. He said he tried to clean it, but some cloth and cleaner were needed. So he called police on his cellphone from the bus stop.

Sanders said a dispatcher told him the department doesn't "have the tools" to clean the glass. He said he was told he should call the Niagara Frontier Transportation Authority in the morning. By the time he got off the phone, the dispatcher said she would call someone about it.