Skip to main content

On the Police Logs 01.05.17

Thu, 05/23/2019 - 06:41

Amagansett

Two vehicles parked in the driveway of a Cross Highway house were keyed over a four-day period recently. Jonathan Alzate told police deep scratches had been made by a key or nail on his 2011 Toyota Tacoma overnight Dec. 18 and that his 2004 Dodge truck was similarly struck overnight Dec. 21. Police are investigating the acts as criminal mischief, which is a felony.

East Hampton

Police released a report this week of a similar incident, this one back in November.  Marisol Ozturk and Enrique Guerrero discovered a 2011 Toyota Tundra and a 2006 Nissan Altima were damaged by a key or another sharp metal object overnight on Nov. 6 outside Ms. Ozturk’s residence on Boatheader’s Lane. She reported that she had had “ongoing issues” with an ex-boyfriend and that he had been seen driving by the house in the days leading up to the incident.

East Hampton Village

If the Greek philosopher Diogenes had been walking through East Hampton Village at around noon on the day before New Year’s Eve, he might have been left a little less the cynic. Two wallets with credit cards and cash inside untouched were found at about the same time and turned over to police that day. One was found in the Reutershan parking lot, and belonged to an East Hampton resident. The other belonged to an Atlanta woman who had left it at J. Crew on Main Street.  However, a Bronx man told police New Year’s Day that he had left his wallet, containing $800 in cash and multiple credit and debit cards, on the Long Island Rail Road train he had taken to East Hampton Thursday. Police told him to contact the L.I.R.R.

Montauk

Police have classified an incident that made it possible for about 30 Deep Hollow Ranch horses to get out onto the road in front of the ranch last Thursday morning as criminal tampering. A town police officer, called to the site at 7:30 a.m., herded them to the shoulder of the road, where he was joined by Dorothy Malik-Atkinson, a ranch employee. After the horses were returned to the corral, an open gate was discovered at the southeast corner of the field north of the barn. Ms. Malik-Atkinson said she was “positive that she closed the gate” the previous afternoon.

On New Year’s Day, as the sun was setting, police responded to a call reporting trespassers inside the old radar station at Camp Hero. They found individuals exiting from a hole in the side of the building. Tom Dess, a state parks supervisor, did not want to press charges, but wanted the individuals warned they would face trespassing charges if they returned. Police complied.

Northwest Woods

Christopher Capalbo, the caretaker of a Hand’s Creek Road property, which was not identified for the record, called police on Dec. 28 to report five driveway globe lights on poles had been knocked down and smashed. He estimated repairs at $1,000.

Trespassers visited a house on Hedges Banks Drive some time last week, although nothing was reported missing or damaged. Police said John Donahue, Tom Alvino, and Drew Fennell “own several homes together and rent them out.” Mr. Donahue had received a call from a friend on Friday who told him the doors at the residence were wide open. It appears from the redacted report that the house had been entered and the heat turned on.

 A resident of Grape Arbor Lane found the white metal mailbox outside his house destroyed on Christmas Eve morning. It appeared that the mailbox and the pole it was on might have been struck by a vehicle. It will cost $150 to replace.

Sag Harbor

 A second report of a skimming device on an ATM in the village was received on New Year’s Eve. The machine was outside Suffolk County National Bank. The devices are used by criminals to capture card information. It was not clear how long the device had been in place.

Springs

Dennis Kleinman and his family were awakened by the sound of breaking glass a little after midnight Friday at their Old Stone Highway residence. He explained that he had gone downstairs and found a glass panel on his kitchen door shattered. Police said they soon found an extremely drunk neighbor wandering nearby, who apparently thought the house was his own and had smashed the window in an attempt to enter it. The neighbor, whose name was redacted, had a deep cut on his right arm and was taken to Southampton Hospital. Mr. Kleinman declined to press charges, but said he would seek restitution.

Long Days on the Fire Line In Orange County

East Hampton and Amagansett firefighters volunteered to head north last week to help fight a 5,000-acre wildfire in Orange County, N.Y., not once but twice, battling unfamiliar terrain to do so. “They fight fires completely differently than we do when we have a brush fire,” the Amagansett chief said.

Nov 21, 2024

Awards for Good Policing in Handgun Scuffle

“It could have gone worse. We’re lucky that I have officers here that weren’t shot,” said Police Chief Jeff Erickson at Friday’s East Hampton Village Board meeting. Chief Erickson was recognizing Sgt. Wayne Gauger and Officers John Clark and Robbie Greene for a traffic stop on Aug. 31 that turned into a scuffle and the eventual confiscation of an illegal gun.

Nov 21, 2024

On the Police Logs 11.21.24

A Three Mile Harbor Drive resident reported an online dating scam on the afternoon of Nov. 16. Somehow, said the 80-year-old man, a person on the dating platform had gotten his phone number and demanded $2,000 from him, threatening to tell his family he was using the site if he did not comply. Police told the man to block the number.

Nov 21, 2024

Head-On Collision on Route 27

A 2-year-old was taken to Stony Brook Southampton Hospital following a head-on collision Saturday afternoon on State Route 27 near Upland Road in Montauk.

Nov 21, 2024

 

Your support for The East Hampton Star helps us deliver the news, arts, and community information you need. Whether you are an online subscriber, get the paper in the mail, delivered to your door in Manhattan, or are just passing through, every reader counts. We value you for being part of The Star family.

Your subscription to The Star does more than get you great arts, news, sports, and outdoors stories. It makes everything we do possible.