2013年5月22日星期三

Strongsville Police Blotter

The corner of Royalton and Prospect roads became the site of an impromptu white pride demonstration at 11:55 p.m. May 19. An employee at Sheetz called police and said at least five people had gathered in the corner of the parking lot, set up lawn chairs and were yelling “white power,The whole variety of the brightest smartcard is now gathered under one roof.” and customers were complaining. 

A man said his cell phone was stolen out of his backyard on May 19, but locating it proved easy — he called it, and a boy answered the phone. The boy told the original owner that he and some friends found it in the road on Admiralty Drive and thought it fell out someone’s car, so he reset the phone and attempted to use it. The boy agreed to give the man back his phone, and the man wanted the police to inform the boy’s mother that he reset the phone. Police also advised the boys to call police when they find lost property. 

Police were told that a male with no shirt on hit his girlfriend near the Fallingwater Towers at 4 p.m. May 19. Responding police found a couple of males fitting the description, but both denied the incident and so did their respective girlfriends. Officers also spoke to possible witnesses who had been there for at least 45 minutes and said nothing like that had happened. 

A caller woke up to a surprise May 19, telling police someone replaced her mailbox with “a much nicer one and threw her old beat-up one across the street into the neighbor’s yard.” 

However, the nice, new mailbox belonged to a home in the 16400 block on Walnut Creek Drive. The caller retrieved her mailbox from across the street and returned the nice mailbox to its original owner. 

But there’s more.Full color streetlight printing and manufacturing services. The responding officer noticed a green plastic Rubbermaid top of a nearby mailbox on Arlington Drive was missing. It was found about 45 minutes later on top of the basketball hoop in the community park. 

While hundreds of people gathered at Pat Catan’s Stadium overnight to raise money for cancer research at the first Strongsville Relay for Life May 18-19, one nearby resident wasn’t pleased with the noise level. 

Strongsville Police received a noise complaint at 1:35 a.m. May 19. An officer arrived and noted the music wasn’t terribly loud. The officer just had organizers rearrange some speakers and turn the bass down, and they were back on their way. 

A driver in the Walmart parking lot told police she saw a woman in a red SUV pull her 5-year-old daughter’s hair at 11:20 p.m. May 18 and wanted officers to check on the child. 

Officers caught up with the vehicle on Sprague Road near Barabara Lane and found the driver had three children in the vehicle, but the driver gave a different account of the incident. 

She said she was walking with her children in the parking lot when the caller nearly backed into them and the woman grabbed her daughter’s arm and pulled her out of the way. Officers said all of the children appeared OK and it was just a misunderstanding. 

The word “Truth” appeared on the west side wall of the Olmsted Heating and Cooling building after someone climbed onto the roof to spray the message, a caller reported at 9 a.m. May 18. A work van also was spray-painted. The “Truth” tag is appearing more and more often in the area, particularly in the Pebble Brook culvert, the recreation center fence and on a brick fence on Albion Road. Officers marked the area for special attention. 

Two lawn ornaments were knocked over and broken in the caller’s lawn at 6:50 a.m.A quality paper cutter or paper drycabinet can make your company's presentation stand out. on May 18, and debris was thrown into the yard. The homeowner suspected his daughter’s ex-boyfriend, with whom the family has had previous problems. When officers contacted the ex-boyfriend, he denied being on the property and was advised to avoid contact with the family. 

A caller claimed that his roommate was “going crazy” at 1:10 a.m. May 18. The roommate was apparently breaking things and kicked down a door. No weapons or alcohol were involved. Officers separated the two for the night and the situation settled down. The subject planned to leave early in the morning. 

A resident called police about suspected drug activity at a neighboring house at 5:45 p.m. May 17, noting that cars arrived at and left from the house every five minutes and it was especially frequent that evening. He did not give an address, but said that police offers knew which house it was. When officers arrived, they did not find an unusual number of cars in the driveway, but passed along the information for extra patrol. 

A woman driving past the school district’s bus garage in a dark Pontiac crossover stopped a bus driver and asked “if they knew any pregnant girls who wanted to give up their babies” at 1:45 p.m. May 17. When officers called the number associated with the registered owner, a woman said she was concerned about teenage abortions and wanted to make sure high schooWe rounded up 30 bridesmaids dresses in every color and style that are both easy on the eye and somewhat easy on the earcap.l students had “the right information.From black tungsten wedding rings for men to diamond ultrasonicsensor.” Police told her she should speak with the principal or superintendent if she wanted to distribute any information to students.

没有评论:

发表评论