Possible, but typically coverage of police reports uses a person's legal name rather than a Romanized nickname. You tend to see a lot of that in the Chinese and Middle-Eastern immigrant communities. For example, a coworker of mine's legal name is Yusef, but he goes by Joe. I'm assuming the thought process was Yusef --> Joseph --> Joe, but I've never asked him about it.
"It is the Arabic equivalent of the Hebrew name Yosef and the English name Joseph. Yesuf is a cognate Ethiopian name, derived from the Hebrew and Arabic origin."
Possible, but typically coverage of police reports uses a person's legal name rather than a Romanized nickname. You tend to see a lot of that in the Chinese and Middle-Eastern immigrant communities. For example, a coworker of mine's legal name is Yusef, but he goes by Joe. I'm assuming the thought process was Yusef --> Joseph --> Joe, but I've never asked him about it.
"It is the Arabic equivalent of the Hebrew name Yosef and the English name Joseph. Yesuf is a cognate Ethiopian name, derived from the Hebrew and Arabic origin."