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Posts Tagged ‘crime in Ocean Grove’

From the Atlantic Magazine, March, 1982, introducing the classic article on the “broken window theory.”

By Paul Goldfinger, M.D., Editor @Blogfinger

We have received an alert from the Neighborhood Watch: Spring is upon us, and the usual petty crimes of theft and vandalism will soon be increasing. Over the last year, Blogfinger has documented the problem of crime in Ocean Grove. Usually we are troubled by “small” events such as  bike thefts, stolen lawn and porch items, broken car windows, damage to empty houses, etc. But sometimes there are issues that are more ominous such as muggings in broad daylight and house invasions with the people home or not.

Although Ocean Grove’s crime rates are relatively low compared to some other communities, this hasn’t reassured a lot of our residents. This town has a certain personality: it’s a quaint and historic place where one feels a sense of neighborliness, safety, and old fashioned values. Of course, the reality is that our fantasies can be quickly smashed when bad things happen here.

Over the last year we have documented the concerns of Grovers regarding these matters. Interestingly, some individuals thought that the police and the citizens were being overzealous in their pursuit of these small time crooks, while others thought the opposite.  Some readers thought that our articles about endless bike thefts, car break-ins, etc. would give the town a bad name and make people needlessly paranoid. Others felt that some of these felons were victims of the recession, so we needed to have compassion.

All of this reminds me of the “broken window theory” in the field of criminology. This is the idea that small crimes and civil disorder, if unchecked, can lead to bigger crimes and worse anti-social behavior in communities.  The plan is that you fix the problems when they are small in order to prevent major crimes from happening later.  It is this theory that was used in the 1990’s to help bring order in the New York Transit System by Transit Police Chief Wm. Bratton (1990) and the great work of Mayor Giuliani and his Police Chief Howard Safir (1997). It has shown promise in other, usually urban, places.

Here is a small part of the classic article on this subject by George L. Kelling and James Q. Wilson, in the Atlantic Magazine, March, 1982, entitled “Broken Windows: The police and neighborhood safety.” *

“Social psychologists and police officers tend to agree that if a window in a building is broken and is left unrepaired, all the rest of the windows will soon be broken. This is as true in nice neighborhoods as in rundown ones. Window-breaking does not necessarily occur on a large scale because some areas are inhabited by determined window-breakers whereas others are populated by window-lovers; rather, one unrepaired broken window is a signal that no one cares, and so breaking more windows costs nothing. (It has always been fun.)”

The core of this idea for us  is that our community needs to put on a “game face” and make it clear that we will not tolerate litter, pan handling, public disorder, small crimes, graffiti and other antisocial behavior because we don’t want one broken window to result in all the rest being broken.

We need to continue to work with the Neptune Township Police Department to aggressively signal that we want an environment in Ocean Grove where we will not allow small issues to grow into big problems.

Link to the Atlantic Magazine article

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Ocean Grove’s Neighborhood Watch reports that three vehicles were broken into in recent days. The incidents were all in the area between Central Avenue and Ocean Avenue. In all three cases, car windows were smashed and GPS units were stolen.

Neighborhood Watch reminds everyone to remove your GPS units and other valuables from your cars when you park them.

For an account of other recent incidents of crime in OG, go here.

— CL

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Editor’s note: This story has been updated to include information from the Neptune Township police.

By Charles Layton

Ocean Grove has suffered a new round of window smashing by vandals.

Neptune Police said Friday that the incidents were similar to acts of criminal mischief committed in several other shore communities around the same time.

At least two Ocean Grove houses in the Mt. Tabor/Mt. Hermon Way area had their windows broken by thrown rocks. Police said a parked car in Ocean Grove was also hit, and that the crimes likely were committed between the hours of 11 p.m. Wednesday and 1:30 a.m. Thursday.

“An Ocean Grove witness reported seeing three people, possibly two white males and a white female, operating a SUV described as a Jeep Cherokee, color blue, in the area at the time of the incidents,” police said in a press release.

One of the broken windows in Ocean Grove. Photo by Mary Walton

The statement also said this week’s incidents “are similar to crimes that occurred approximately three weeks ago in Ocean Grove where cars were damaged. During that time a witness reported seeing two younger males operating a SUV described as a Nissan Xtera, color silver.” (For background on those previous incidents, go here.)

The statement did not name the other shore towns where vandalism occurred, nor did it describe the extent of that vandalism.

Anyone with information is asked to contact the Neptune PD at 732-988-8000. Detective Jason Petillo is coordinating the investigations.

Saturday update: An Ocean Grove resident passes along this email, regarding an incident on Franklin Avenue:

“On 02/23 ~ 1 a.m. on Feb. 23 a blue older jeep Cherokee pulled up in front of my house. A white male exited the car and then threw a stone that broke through a double-hung window, rock entered into porch. Car drove away with at least 3 white younger males.”

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By Charles Layton

Mark Alan Nicastro, already charged with three Ocean Grove burglaries, is now thought to have committed a fourth, police said Friday.

Following his arrest on January 12, Nicastro, age 50, was accused of burglarizing a home in the second block of Embury Avenue and an apartment on Mt. Hermon Way.

Then, on February 3, Neptune police said they had found sufficient evidence to charge him with a third, much earlier crime: the burglary of a home on Mt. Hermon Way on September 28, 2010.

Now, they say, he is thought to have committed a fourth burglary, this one on Embury Avenue late last year. The victim in this case, the owner of a summer home, “recently discovered the crime and reported it to the police,” a police statement said. Police linked Nicastro to that burglary, they said, through the recovery of the victim’s stolen property, which was jewelry.

Nicastro was charged with the latest crime on Thursday at the Monmouth County Jail in Freehold, where he has been held since his January arrest. Police gave his most recent address as Embury Avenue in Ocean Grove.

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Rear window damage to an Ocean Avenue SUV. A fender was also damaged. Photo by the owner.

Ed. note: This story was updated with new information on Tuesday, January 31.

By Charles Layton

The Neptune Police Department now says 12 victims were involved in the spree of car vandalism in Ocean Grove this weekend.

Police said on Monday that two young men had been seen riding the streets of Ocean Grove early Sunday morning around the time that parked cars were being damaged with thrown rocks.

According to a police press statement released on Monday, “A witness reported seeing two younger males, possibly teenagers, operating a Nissan Xterra SUV color silver in the area.”

Blogfinger readers had earlier reported that an unknown number of parked cars in the Grove had had their windows smashed by rocks. One of those readers, Joe Abbruzzese, said that “two rocks were thrown from a moving vehicle with such force at our new SUV that one rock blew out the entire back window, sending glass throughout,” and that “a second rock the size of a grapefruit was thrown at the left front fender causing significant damage.”

Monday’s police statement said the various acts of vandalism took place in the early morning hours of Sunday “most likely between 1 a.m. and 3 a.m. The actor(s) targeted cars parked on the street, breaking windows in an apparent random manner.” The cars were not entered and nothing seems to have been stolen.

The police did not say exactly where the crimes occurred, except to say that they were “throughout the area north of Broadway.” Our readers spoke of at least two incidents happening along the eastern end of Main Avenue. Another reader said she saw a car with smashed-out windows at Pennsylvania and Broadway and another at New Jersey and Broadway. And another reader said someone smashed the front door of her house on Mt. Tabor over the weekend, apparently on the same night as the car vandalism.

Police Officer Kaan Williams is investigating, and anyone with information is asked to contact Williams by calling the police department at 732-988-8000.

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Over the past week there has been an increase in reported burglaries in Ocean Grove.

Two burglaries were reported on the south end of Pilgrim Pathway near Stockton Avenue and one in the area of Broadway and Central Avenue. During the course of the investigations it was discovered that one residence was entered through an unlocked window and one was entered through an unlocked door.

The third residence was entered after the actor broke a window to gain access to the home.

All of the homes were unoccupied. Some items from the burglaries have been recovered and the investigation is ongoing.

There were also two reported thefts. A wallet was stolen from an unlocked vehicle in the area of 110 Embury Avenue, and several personal items and cash were removed from an unlocked room in the area of 15 Pilgrim Pathway.

Ocean Grove Neighborhood Watch urges everyone, as always, to be aware of suspicious people and activity in your neighborhood.

— CL

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Our Neighborhood Watch reports the following cases of recent crime in Ocean Grove:

— Two houses — one on Broadway and one on Abbott Avenue — had windows broken.

— Someone damaged a vehicle on Abbott Avenue.

— An Abbott Avenue resident reported items missing from his summer home after contractors completed several weeks of work.

— Police arrested a trespasser in the area of 116 Abbott.

— Police received a report of a suspicious white male in the area of 130 Mt. Hermon Way.

Our Neighborhood Watch liaison, Officer Michael Adam, advises everyone to continue to be aware of suspicious activity and report all such to the police. And, as always, he reminds us, “Keep your homes and vehicles locked and secure your personal items.”

— CL

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Linda Sue St. Amand, the manager in residence of the Warrington Rest Home in Ocean Grove, has been charged with theft of money in excess of $5,000, Neptune Police said Wednesday.

Police said St. Amand, 56, stole the money from a 64-year-old man with special needs who was residing at the Warrington. According to a press release, “Police were alerted to the incident by the victim’s bank (Valley National Bank) when employees noticed suspicious activity involving his account.” Police said the theft occurred between November 18 and November 22 of this year.

St. Amand was linked to the crime through physical evidence and statements to the police. Following arrest and processing, St. Amand was released from custody on a summons.

The investigation is continuing, and anyone with information is asked to contact Neptune Detective Lieutenant Jeff Force at 732-988-8000.

The Warrington overlooks Wesley Lake at 22 Lake Avenue. It provides room and board for veterans and physically challenged people.

– Charles Layton

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Escape route. "Sitting Ducks" by Paul Goldfinger

By Paul Goldfinger and Charles Layton

A young man on a bicycle accosted two young women late Monday morning in Ocean Grove near Wesley Lake. During a struggle, he wrested an iPhone from the hands of one of the women and fled on foot into Asbury Park, abandoning his bicycle. No one was hurt during the struggle.

Witnesses who live in Ocean Grove, and who tried to help the young women, told the following story:

The young women, from Brooklyn, NY, had been in Asbury Park this weekend attending the music festival. They had never seen Ocean Grove before, and so, before leaving for home, they decided to take a walk through town and have breakfast at Nagle’s.

They came across on the foot bridge near Mt. Zion Way and began strolling down Mt. Pisgah Way, drinking coffee and texting on their phones as they went. When they turned onto New York Avenue, a young man in a gray hoodie approached them on a bicycle and, as he passed, grabbed an iPhone from one of the women.

“I was standing on my porch talking to a neighbor and I heard a girl screaming, ‘Why are you doing this?’ ” a resident said. He ran to the scene of what had become a struggle. As the thief tried to get away on his bicycle, the woman grabbed his hoodie and didn’t let go. She also threw coffee in the thief’s face.

The thief ended up abandoning both the hoodie and his bicycle and retreating on foot, with iPhone in hand, toward the bridge by Founders Park. The Ocean Grove man chased the thief for a time. The last he saw of the thief, he was on the Asbury Park side retreating in the direction of the Casino. He described the thief as probably in his 20s, black with short-cropped hair, and wearing a white tee-shirt, blue jeans and sneakers with red soles.

Other neighbors, meanwhile, came to the aid of the two young women. A woman who lives on Mt. Zion Way gave the two victims coffee while waiting for police to arrive. “They were I think in shock, sort of,” she said. She said Neptune police responded with considerable force, including an unmarked police van and at least one canine unit. She said police were visibly active in the area for about two hours.

The attack happened at about 11:30 a.m., according to police. One witness said the attacker had brandished a knife during the struggle, but another witness disputed that; he said a butterfly knife fell from the pocket of the hoodie after the attacker had fled.

Both Neptune and Asbury police joined in the unsuccessful search. Police took the bicycle, the hoodie and the knife as evidence.

“The investigation is continuing and police are looking for any person with information,” the Neptune PD said in a press release on Monday night. Anyone with information should call 732-988-8000.

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Editor’s note: This story was revised on Friday evening, Aug. 19, with updated information.

By Charles Layton

The two men accused of last Saturday morning’s car burglaries in Ocean Grove have both made bail and been released from Monmouth County Jail on their own recognizance.

Bail for each had been set at $74,000.

According to the county prosecutor’s office, the defendants — Markym Anderson, 22, and Jaheem Workman, 19, both of Asbury Park —  will have a plea hearing sometime in the coming weeks. Meanwhile, the case will continue to be investigated.

Police said that early last Saturday morning the two men stole a bicycle from Mt. Carmel Way and then entered several vehicles in the area, removing money and electronics. They were arrested after residents called the police. They are charged with theft, conspiracy to commit burglary, and criminal mischief.

Here is an update on another case: Thomas Lockhart, 52, the man accused of breaking into a house on Mt. Hermon Way last April 20, remains in Monmouth County Jail. That case is still in the legal motions stage. He was arraigned in July and bail is set at $72,500. A hearing on a motion to suppress is scheduled for October, according to the prosecutor’s office. After ruling on motions, the court will set a trial date.

Lockhart is accused of breaking a window for the purpose of entering the Mt. Hermon Way home. The break-in triggered a burglar alarm, which awakened the home owner, who called police.

Police said Lockhart tried to flee in a cab and, when police stopped the cab, he tried to run away on foot. “Burglary proceeds” were found in his possession, police said. He is charged with burglary.

Blogfinger will continue to follow the progress of these and other such criminal cases affecting Ocean Grove.

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