
 
        
         
		84TH PRECINCT  
 BROOKLYN HEIGHTS–DUMBO– 
 BOERUM HILL–DOWNTOWN 
 Smoking snakes 
 Two goons assaulted a guy on  
 Jay Street on Aug. 30. 
 The victim told cops he was waiting  
 for the train in the Jay Street- 
 Metrotech station at 1:26 am when  
 he saw the two men smoking near  
 two women. When he asked them  
 not to smoke near the women, they  
 chased him out of the station near  
 Fulton Street, punched him several  
 times, and slashed him in the  
 face.  
 iPhone madman 
 Some thief robbed a Fulton  
 Street phone shop and threatened  
 an employee on August 30. 
 Employees told cops the criminal  
 nabbed a phone from the store  
 near Elm Street at around 3:55 pm  
 and ran out of the store. When an  
 employee  caught  up  with  him,  he  
 fl ashed a pocket knife and said ‘I  
 will  f-----  stab you, you don’t know  
 me.’  
 Raised a cane 
 A lout assaulted a man on Duffi  
 eld Street on September 2. 
 The  victim  told  cops  he  was  
 walking near Willoughby Street at  
 around 9:55 pm, when the madman  
 hit him over the head with a cane.  
 Beemer baddie 
 A carjacker poached a pricey  
 car from a Boerum Place garage on  
 Sept 2. 
 According to the report, the  
 thief  snuck  into  the  garage  near  
 Court  Street  at  around  11:40,  obtained  
 a set of keys, and used them  
 to make off with a BMW.  
   — Ben Verde 
 88TH PRECINCT  
 FORT GREENE–CLINTON HILL 
 Craving gourmet 
 A baddie robbed a Fulton Street  
 deli late on Aug. 29. 
 The  victim  told  police  that  
 walked into Roll and X Deli near  
 South Portland Avenue holding a  
 handgun and demanding money  
 from the register. An employee  
 handed over $1,000, and the man  
 ran down Fulton Street toward Vanderbilt  
 Avenue. 
 Police assault 
 A bozo hit a passing police offi - 
 cer in the arm with a bottle on Aug.  
 29 on Fleet Walk. 
 The  offi cer told his fellow boys  
 in blue that the punk hit him on the  
 arm with a glass bottle at the Ingersoll  
 Houses near Tillary Street. 
 COURIER LIFE, S 8     EPTEMBER 10-16, 2021 
 Trucker fatally hits woman  
 pushing toddler in stroller 
 The intersection of Myrtle and Bedford avenues in Bedford-Stuyvest.  Google 
 Package swiper 
 Not even a closed door could save  
 packages  from  a  determined  thief  
 on Vanderbilt Avenue on Sept. 1. 
 The  victim  told  police  that  the  
 purloiner threw a glass bottle  
 through a glass front door, shattering  
 the door, then reached in and  
 stole three packages.   
 Fundraising 
 An  e-bandit  tried  to  blackmail  
 someone into making a donation on  
 Aug. 31 on Willoughby Avenue. 
 The victim  told police  that  they  
 received  a  Facebook message  with  
 explicit photos of himself attached.  
 The goon who sent the photos said  
 they  would  forward  them  to  the  
 victim’s  loved  ones  unless  he  sent  
 $5,000 to an organization that fi ghts  
 child hunger. 
 No seat, no problem 
 A weasel rode off with an electric  
 bicycle that had been parked on  
 Downing Street on Aug. 31.  
 The  victim  told  police  he  had  
 parked the e-bike, worth about  
 $2,000, between Fulton Street and  
 Putnam Avenue late on Aug. 30, taking  
 the seat with him. When he returned  
 the  next  afternoon,  it  was  
 gone without a trace. 
 Spam calls 
 One villain took spam calls to  
 the  next  level  on  Aug.  31  when  he  
 called a woman multiple times on  
 different numbers at her Cumberland  
 Walk apartment and told her  
 she needed to send ransom money to  
 release her mother, who he claimed  
 he had kidnapped. 
 The  victim  told  police  that  the  
 scammer asked for about $10,000 total, 
  and she ended up sending just  
 under $3,000 to different people before  
 she learned her mother was  
 safe and sound. 
 Broken windows 
 A sneak took advantage of an  
 open car window on Fulton Street  
 on Sept. 2 to reach in and steal a  
 backpack. 
 The victim told police that theyparked  
 her car at the corner of Classon  
 Street with the doors locked  
 and a window cracked for about an  
 hour. When she returned, her backpack  
 was missing, along with her  
 credit card and iPhone 12. Offi cers  
 searched the area and came up with  
 the backpack, but the cards and cell  
 phone had been taken out. 
 — Kirstyn Brendlen 
 60TH PRECINCT  
 CONEY ISLAND—BRIGHTON BEACH— 
 SEAGATE 
 Buggin’ 
 A crook snagged two bottles of insecticide  
 from a W. 25th Street apartment  
 complex on Aug. 11.  
 An employee of the apartment  
 complex told police that she returned  
 to work and found the glass on both  
 doors to the storage room between  
 Mermaid and Surf avenues had been  
 smashed open at around 10 am with  
 the supplies stolen.  
 Donut patrol  
 A bandit snagged a police offi cer’s  
 wallet while at a Surf Avenue donut  
 shop on Aug. 28.  
 The offi cer told fellow police offi  
 cers that she  left her waller on the  
 counter between W. 12th Street and  
 Stillwell Avenue at around 5:30 am  
 and returned to fi nd it gone. 
 Phone fi shing  
 A phone thief catfi shed a man pretending  
 to be a woman and lured him  
 to a W. 28th Street apartment on Sept.  
 1.  
 The victim told police that the  
 brute attacked him and stole his  
 phone at the apartment building between  
 Mermaid and Surf Avenue at  
 around 9:45 pm. .  
    — Jessica Parks 
 BY KEVIN DUGGAN 
 A truck driver fatally ran over  
 a woman pushing her one-yearold  
 niece in a stroller on Myrtle  
 Avenue on Thursday morning, according  
 to police. 
 The 62-year-old and the toddler  
 were crossing near at Bedford Avenue  
 in Bedford-Stuyvesant just  
 before 11 am, when the fl atbed  
 truck driver heading east struck  
 her, but luckily missed the child. 
 Paramedics rushed the woman,  
 who has not been identifi ed pending  
 family  notifi cation,  to  Brooklyn  
 Hospital where she was pronounced  
 dead. 
 The  one-year-old  girl  was  
 brought  to  Bellevue  Hospital  in  
 Manhattan for evaluation but only  
 suffered minor injuries, according  
 to a Police Department spokesman. 
 The 38-year-old driver stayed  
 on scene, but cops have not made  
 arrests and say they don’t suspect  
 any criminality. 
 An  NYPD  spokesman  said  on  
 background that the woman was  
 traversing Myrtle Avenue outside  
 the crosswalk and that the trucker  
 didn’t see her when he started  
 moving after he got the light. 
 Once he hit the elderly woman,  
 he stopped his vehicle, cops said.  
 There have been at least 20  
 crashes at the intersection with  
 41 people injured at that intersection  
 since August 2011, according  
 to the website NYC Crash Mapper.