www.thedenverchannel.com
– “Brazen burglars are hitting Stapleton homes
while people sleep; police urge residents to lock up” – September 26th,
2014:
DENVER - Denver police are warning residents in the Stapleton
neighborhood to lock their doors and windows after a string of brazen
burglaries where crooks looted homes while people slept.
The burglaries occurred from Sunday into Friday. Police said the
targeted area roughly stretches from East 21st Avenue to East 29th Avenue and
Syracuse Street to Xenia Street.
"She was actually sleeping on the couch when the person
came in the house," burglary victim Jeremy Willius said of his wife.
What did the Willius' household loose? "Three phones, two
purses, two sets of keys and our Honda Odyssey," Willius told 7NEWS
reported Molly Hendrickson.
"I wish I had kept my windows closed," he added.
Police are urging
residents to lock up.
All have involved the owners being present within the homes while burglaries were occurring," the Denver Police District 5 Facebook page says. "These incidents also involved several unlocked front and sliding glass doors to the residences."
"That's scary because burglars are supposed to come when you're not home," said Mike Bibbo, another Stapleton resident. "I used to walk my dog and not really think about locking my door."
Saturday, September 27, 2014
Saturday, September 20, 2014
The
Washington Post – “Secret Service reviews White House security after
fence-jumper enters mansion” – September 20th, 2014:
A day after a man scaled the fence and managed to get inside the front door of the White House, another man was arrested for trespassing after pulling his car into a White House access gate at 15th and E streets and refusing to leave, according to a Secret Service official.
The latest incident comes as the Secret Service has launched a White House security review into how a man was able to get inside the north door of the mansion Friday night. Authorities say Omar J. Gonzalez, 42, of Copperas Cove, Tex., hopped over the north fence line near Pennsylvania Avenue about 7:20 p.m. Friday, setting off a standard security alarm indicating a breach of the perimeter. Officers demanded that he stop, but he did not respond, and they were unable to reach him on foot before he ran more than 70 yards and got inside the unlocked front doors of the presidential mansion. A guard stationed at the door subdued him.
Officers at the scene considered Gonzalez to be unarmed and likely mentally disturbed, a law enforcement official familiar with the incident said.
A day after a man scaled the fence and managed to get inside the front door of the White House, another man was arrested for trespassing after pulling his car into a White House access gate at 15th and E streets and refusing to leave, according to a Secret Service official.
The latest incident comes as the Secret Service has launched a White House security review into how a man was able to get inside the north door of the mansion Friday night. Authorities say Omar J. Gonzalez, 42, of Copperas Cove, Tex., hopped over the north fence line near Pennsylvania Avenue about 7:20 p.m. Friday, setting off a standard security alarm indicating a breach of the perimeter. Officers demanded that he stop, but he did not respond, and they were unable to reach him on foot before he ran more than 70 yards and got inside the unlocked front doors of the presidential mansion. A guard stationed at the door subdued him.
Officers at the scene considered Gonzalez to be unarmed and likely mentally disturbed, a law enforcement official familiar with the incident said.
Wednesday, September 17, 2014
www.nj.com – “High on PCP, Jersey City
man locked himself in kindergarten bathroom: court docs” – September 17th,
2014:
The Jersey City man accused of
locking himself in a kindergarten bathroom at a Jersey City elementary school
while high on PCP made his first court appearance today.
Lamont Clay, 41, of Ocean
Avenue, is charged with criminal trespass and being under the influence after
he allegedly walked into a trailer housing a kindergarten class Friday morning
at Fred W. Martin School 41 on Wilkinson Avenue.
According to a criminal
complaint, Clay did “enter through the fence at Public School #41, walk to the
kindergarten trailer located in the parking lot, open the unlocked door, walk
into classroom trailer and lock himself in student’s bathroom."
Clay was under the influence of
PCP as he locked himself in the bathroom, police said.
Clay appeared in Central
Judicial Processing court in Jersey City today, where Judge Margaret Marley set
his bail at $5,000 with a 10 percent cash option. As a condition of his bail,
he must have no contact with School 41.
"I don't know if the
teacher had locked the door or maybe the locks don't work properly,"
Jersey City school board member Marilyn Roman said Friday afternoon. "We
need to make sure the trailers are safe for the students."
Monday, September 8, 2014
www.nj.com - “Laptops, watches stolen
during Jersey City home burglary, police say” – September 7th, 2014:
A Jersey City couple woke up Saturday to find about $2,800 worth of electronics and jewelry stolen from their home, according to police.
A woman living on Terrance Avenue told police that she went to sleep around 2 a.m. on Friday night, according to police. But when she awoke at 6 a.m. on Saturday, she noticed that the room where her mother sleeps was ransacked and clothes were tossed on the floor, according to police.
As the woman proceeded downstairs, she found bags strewn across the living room and a screen window in the kitchen wide open, according to police.
The woman then contacted her 57-year-old husband and the two searched the home, according to police. The couple discovered that two laptops and laptop bags were missing, as well as five gold watches, according to police.
The two estimated the laptops, bags and watches at about $2,800, according to police.
Police found no signs of forced entry and believed the front door was unlocked, according to police.
A Jersey City couple woke up Saturday to find about $2,800 worth of electronics and jewelry stolen from their home, according to police.
A woman living on Terrance Avenue told police that she went to sleep around 2 a.m. on Friday night, according to police. But when she awoke at 6 a.m. on Saturday, she noticed that the room where her mother sleeps was ransacked and clothes were tossed on the floor, according to police.
As the woman proceeded downstairs, she found bags strewn across the living room and a screen window in the kitchen wide open, according to police.
The woman then contacted her 57-year-old husband and the two searched the home, according to police. The couple discovered that two laptops and laptop bags were missing, as well as five gold watches, according to police.
The two estimated the laptops, bags and watches at about $2,800, according to police.
Police found no signs of forced entry and believed the front door was unlocked, according to police.
Sunday, September 7, 2014
www.cbc.ca - “Boy, 9, steals Saskatoon city bus, hits 2 parked vehicles” – September 6th,
2014:
No injuries are reported after a nine-year-old boy stole a city bus in Saskatoon and managed to drive it for a couple of blocks Saturday morning.
Police say the bus was stolen from the bus garages on 300 block of 24th Street West, near downtown.
CBC reporter Steve Pasqualotto was driving south along nearby Idywyld Drive toward downtown when he looked over and saw the child at the wheel of the bus.
The boy eventually stopped at the corner of Idylwyld Drive and 25th Street, after getting the bus hung up on the curb.
Police say the boy hit two vehicles — a parked city bus and another parked car — but no one was hurt.
Since the boy is 9-years-old police cannot lay charges.
Officers have confirmed he was taken home and is now with his family.
According to city officials, the stolen bus was being repaired on Saturday when it was stolen.
Jeff Jorgenson, General Manager of Transportation & Utilities Department, said he and other officials have reviewed a video tape that captured the incident. Based on this footage, Jorgenson explained that the bus had been left running by a maintenance person when the boy entered the bus and stole it.
"This is a case, from what I've seen, [where] policy and procedures were very clearly violated," said Jorgenson. "Buses are not to be left in that condition."
Jorgenson said typically buses must be left in a secured state. He explained that none of the steps had been taken to secure the bus, making it easy for the child to drive away with the bus.
"This is a case where safety protocols were violated," Jorgenson said, as he explained that the door was left unlocked, and the boy entered the bus with ease and started driving the bus a short time after entering it because the bus was not secure.
No injuries are reported after a nine-year-old boy stole a city bus in Saskatoon and managed to drive it for a couple of blocks Saturday morning.
Police say the bus was stolen from the bus garages on 300 block of 24th Street West, near downtown.
CBC reporter Steve Pasqualotto was driving south along nearby Idywyld Drive toward downtown when he looked over and saw the child at the wheel of the bus.
The boy eventually stopped at the corner of Idylwyld Drive and 25th Street, after getting the bus hung up on the curb.
Police say the boy hit two vehicles — a parked city bus and another parked car — but no one was hurt.
Since the boy is 9-years-old police cannot lay charges.
Officers have confirmed he was taken home and is now with his family.
According to city officials, the stolen bus was being repaired on Saturday when it was stolen.
Jeff Jorgenson, General Manager of Transportation & Utilities Department, said he and other officials have reviewed a video tape that captured the incident. Based on this footage, Jorgenson explained that the bus had been left running by a maintenance person when the boy entered the bus and stole it.
"This is a case, from what I've seen, [where] policy and procedures were very clearly violated," said Jorgenson. "Buses are not to be left in that condition."
Jorgenson said typically buses must be left in a secured state. He explained that none of the steps had been taken to secure the bus, making it easy for the child to drive away with the bus.
"This is a case where safety protocols were violated," Jorgenson said, as he explained that the door was left unlocked, and the boy entered the bus with ease and started driving the bus a short time after entering it because the bus was not secure.
Monday, September 1, 2014
motoringcrunch.com
– “Tesla Model S Hiccup Lets You Unlock
Doors Remotely” – September 1st. 2014:
The Model S from Tesla, the electric car, comes with many vulnerabilities that allow the car door to be unlocked and provides access to various controls of the car, said researchers. The flaw means that someone could activate such as the horn, lights and roof through remote control.
Tesla have been told about the bug and those who found it said that it can only be manipulated via high tech manoeuvres and it can be remedied by simply deactivating the remote access function of the vehicle.
The security company who found the issue have been the first to come across the security issue with Tesla cars. However this isn’t the first time that Tesla have come across issues as in March it was found that electric cars of theirs could be located and unlocked thanks to a six character password that could be used remotely.
The Model S from Tesla, the electric car, comes with many vulnerabilities that allow the car door to be unlocked and provides access to various controls of the car, said researchers. The flaw means that someone could activate such as the horn, lights and roof through remote control.
Tesla have been told about the bug and those who found it said that it can only be manipulated via high tech manoeuvres and it can be remedied by simply deactivating the remote access function of the vehicle.
The security company who found the issue have been the first to come across the security issue with Tesla cars. However this isn’t the first time that Tesla have come across issues as in March it was found that electric cars of theirs could be located and unlocked thanks to a six character password that could be used remotely.
Sunday, August 31, 2014
www.nj.com - “Kearny man punched 74-year-old Lyndhurst man in robbery attempt, police say”
– August 31st, 2014:
A Kearny man broke into a Bogle Drive home Friday and struck one of its 74-year-old occupants in a robbery attempt, police said.
Police charged Evanalain Sieberkrob-Hershman, 24, with robbery, burglary, three counts of aggravated assault, hindering apprehension, criminal restraint and possession of a hypodermic needle.
A 74-year-old woman told Lyndhurst Police that a man entered her home through an unlocked rear door, Capt. John J. Valente said in a press release. The man grabbed her and demanded money.
The woman's husband, also 74, tried to intervene but the man struck him in the head, Valente said. A 50-year-old relative living upstairs came down after hearing screams for help.
The man pushed her aside as he fled toward Riverside County Park, Valente said.
Police searched the park, where a witness reported seeing someone matching a description provided by police, Valente said. The witness said he saw the man walking north through the park toward Riverside Avenue.
Police arrested Sieberkrob-Hershman in a parking lot on Riverside Avenue. He was trying to remove clothing, apparently to avoid being recognized by police, Valente said.
He was sent to Bergen County Jail in lieu of $420,000 bail.
The 74-year-old man was released from Meadowlands Hospital after treatment for face and head injuries, Valente said.
A Kearny man broke into a Bogle Drive home Friday and struck one of its 74-year-old occupants in a robbery attempt, police said.
Police charged Evanalain Sieberkrob-Hershman, 24, with robbery, burglary, three counts of aggravated assault, hindering apprehension, criminal restraint and possession of a hypodermic needle.
A 74-year-old woman told Lyndhurst Police that a man entered her home through an unlocked rear door, Capt. John J. Valente said in a press release. The man grabbed her and demanded money.
The woman's husband, also 74, tried to intervene but the man struck him in the head, Valente said. A 50-year-old relative living upstairs came down after hearing screams for help.
The man pushed her aside as he fled toward Riverside County Park, Valente said.
Police searched the park, where a witness reported seeing someone matching a description provided by police, Valente said. The witness said he saw the man walking north through the park toward Riverside Avenue.
Police arrested Sieberkrob-Hershman in a parking lot on Riverside Avenue. He was trying to remove clothing, apparently to avoid being recognized by police, Valente said.
He was sent to Bergen County Jail in lieu of $420,000 bail.
The 74-year-old man was released from Meadowlands Hospital after treatment for face and head injuries, Valente said.
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