Also on the Logs
Amagansett
The pistons on a driveway gate were pushed in and broken, according to Ivan Roman, the caretaker for Caroline Lloyd’s Town Lane house. Mr. Roman discovered the damage last Thursday, but found no sign that anyone had broken into the house or damaged anything else. The pistons will cost $2,500 to replace, he said.
On April 6, John Glennon, who was working at a neighboring house, noticed that the front door to the Dombrowski residence was ajar. Four days later, after he saw it was still open, he called police, who found that part of the glass door had been smashed. A detective found nothing missing or disturbed inside, according to a report.
Bridgehampton
Victoria Phoenix, the manager at Hampton Hound, reported on Saturday that someone had “intentionally” broken the front window of the Montauk Highway store on April 6. The damage will cost $750 to repair.
East Hampton
Charles Westergard, the manager of information systems at East Hampton High School, told police that two laptop computers — a Dell worth $887 and a Toshiba worth $1,535 — were taken off a cart between March 20 and March 27. He reported the thefts on April 11.
A Motorola Krazor cellphone, worth $250, and $5 in cash were stolen from Tonia Olvera’s unlocked gym locker at the high school on April 11 between 9:15 and 10 a.m. Ms. Olvera filed a complaint on Friday with Officer Matthew Rodriguez of the town police, who is the resource officer at the school.
As Robert Anderson slept in his Accabonac Road house last Thursday morning, a kitchen window screen was pried off the frame, police said. They said no signs of footprints were found in the yard outside the window, and that no fingerprints were left on the window because of the rain. Police suggested that wind might have pulled the screen loose.
Someone spray-painted a glass doorway on the Sonnenfeld Productions building on Springs-Fireplace Road between last Thursday and Friday. Joi Perle, an employee who called police Friday morning, was able to remove the paint.
A machine belonging to Keith Grimes Inc. at a gravel plant on Middle Highway was painted with yellow graffiti sometime between April 6 and 10. “2007” was painted on the gate leading to the Talmage gravel pit, also on Middle Highway.
Two halogen lamps, together worth $900, and some wood lattice were damaged, and graffiti were scrawled, on Riverhead Building Supply on Cove Hollow Road between April 7 and 10, when Thomas Harden noticed it. The lattice will cost $140 to repair, and removing the green graffiti will cost $100.
A young man from Oak View Highway became “belligerent” while Seth Lowell of Hedgerow Lane drove him home on Friday night, and Mr. Lowell called police. He said he had come upon a fight between the man, with whom he was acquainted, and another person at Main Beach, and helped him because he appeared to be bleeding and hurt.
John Small of Treescape Drive said his name had been used in order to open a cellphone account with Sprint on Feb. 26. The company’s fraud department said he would not be charged. He filed a report of identity theft last Thursday.
Two spotlights and the sign in front of Whitmore’s Nursery were damaged, according to Howard Kim, an employee. He called police when he reported for work last Thursday. He said the damage would cost $550 to repair.
While Su van Duong was on vacation, as far back as Dec. 24, someone stole the registration sticker from his trailer at Su Landscaping on Springs-Fireplace Road. The sticker will cost $70 to replace.
East Hampton Village
Several letters on the General Home Store sign were scratched intentionally and need to be “relettered,” according to police. Lisa B. Friscia, the manager, reported the damage last Thursday afternoon.
The letters “LCR” were spray painted in black four times on the Long Island Rail Road station building on Railroad Avenue sometime before Friday morning. Other writing, made with black marker on the southeast corner of the building, had been reported on April 9.
Jaime R. Lupercio of Gardiner’s Lane told police that he lost his wallet while he was on Egypt Lane on April 11 between 1 and 2 p.m. His Michigan driver’s license, $300 in cash, two credit cards, and a college ID were inside the wallet, he said.
According to Antoinette K. Zarcone of Wildwood Court, an unattended shopping cart from Citarella “accidentally rolled” into the driver’s-side door of her 2003 Volkswagen while it was parked on Fithian Lane on April 11. She told police the damage would cost $741.80 to repair.
A plastic Pankotto bench from Design Within Reach was taken from in front of the Park Place store, Kathryn Kane told police on April 9. Although such benches cost $378, she valued the stolen one at $200.
Montauk
Last Thursday afternoon, the Montauk Fire Department extinguished a small fire in the kitchen wall at O’Murphy’s Pub on Edgemere Street. Police said the fire marshal’s office believed the fire was caused when plywood in a wall was heated up by an adjacent stove.
Two screens at a house on McKinley Road had small holes poked in them, but nothing else appeared to be awry, police said. Arthur Lucas, the caretaker there, called police on Sunday, and said the holes would cost $100 to repair.
A Channin surfboard was taken from Daniel Dimauro’s Cedar Street yard between March 31 and April 5. The board had been leaning up against a fence at the end of his driveway, police said.
Noyac
On Saturday, windows were smashed on cars parked at the Morton Wildlife Refuge on Noyac Road between 11 a.m. and noon. Barbara H. Hackett of Southampton told police that her handbag was stolen out of her 2004 Land Rover Discovery.
Sag Harbor
Robert E. Donnelly left his car, which was parked on Cross Street, unlocked and his BlackBerry on the driver’s seat on Saturday. When he returned at about 2 p.m., the device was gone.
Springs
Two Goodrich tires on Brendon K. McHugh’s Dodge Ram pickup truck were slashed while it was parked at his Church Lane house on Holly Oak Avenue on the morning of April 9. He estimated that the tires would cost $500 to replace.
Mandy Favata’s Fuzion tires will cost $180 to replace, police said. Two tires on her 1992 Honda Accord went flat because they were cut while it was parked on Oceanview Avenue between Sunday night and Monday morning.
A state inspection sticker went missing from Kalbacher’s Auto on Fort Pond Boulevard on April 10 or 11. Robert Kalbacher called police about the $37 sticker on April 11.
About $1,000 worth of damage was done to the side windows, windshield, and headlights of a 2006 Nissan Titan pickup truck parked on Cedar Ridge Drive on Sunday evening. A witness, whose name police did not release, said he saw someone running away from the truck that morning.
Mary Fromm filed a complaint on April 11 that her daughter, Catherine, had been harassed on the MySpace Web site two days earlier.
An oil burner “puff back” caused a fire at James Trezza’s Springs-Fireplace Road house on April 10, a police report said.