84TH PRECINCT
BROOKLYN HEIGHTS–DUMBO–
BOERUM HILL–DOWNTOWN
Marauders at the
mailbox
A couple of sneaks allegedly
made repeat visits to a United States
Postal Service mailbox on Cadman
Plaza West late last month and
made off with a load of important
documents.
Police said that security footage
captured between Feb. 23 and March
1 showed some unknown thieves
making repeat visits to an outdoor
mailbox near Middagh Street, unlocking
it with a stolen key, and
sorting through the mail inside —
fi lling large bags with envelopes
containing credit and debit cards
and checks. The burglars loaded the
mail bags into a silver BMW parked
nearby, and the cameras caught the
vehicle’s license plate.
Cops arrested the suspects on
March 1, and the duo will be tried in
federal court.
Restaurant raider
Some thief broke into a Hoyt
Street restaurant and made off with
a load of equipment on March 1.
The victim told police he was the
last employee to leave the Mile End
Deli at the corner of Atlantic Avenue
at nearly 11pm. He returned to
the shop to make a delivery around
4 am and noticed that the glass in
the front door of the restaurant was
shattered. Inside, the rustler had stolen
several tablets used for taking orders
and cash, all in all worth $945.
Spitty Slimeball
An alleged arrestee got in even
more trouble on March 3 when he
spit on an offi cer as he was transported
in an ambulance.
Police said an offi cer was escorting
a defendant from Brooklyn Central
Booking to Cobble Hill Hospital
for a minor medical issue at around
9:30 pm when the jerk leaned forward
and spat at the offi cer, then hit
her in the right eye, causing some
pain and irritation.
Both were treated at the hospital,
and the cretin was re-arrested later
that night.
88TH PRECINCT
FORT GREENE–CLINTON HILL
Phone store swipers
A couple of thieves stole a ton of
smartphones from a Myrtle Avenue
shop on March 4.
Police said the two swipers
walked into an AT&T store near Ryerson
Street at around 10:30 in the
morning and locked the front door
while threatening the victim with
a handgun. They gathered up a selection
COURIER L 8 IFE, MARCH 11-17, 2022
Duo sought for robbing
teens at Prospect Park
Surveillance footage of the suspects. NYPD
of Samsung, LG, and Apple
smartphones and Apple watches,
all in all worth nearly $50,000, and
ordered the employee to stay in the
back of the store until they had left.
A witness said the perps drove
off in a blue Mercedes-Benz sedan.
Tire iron tussle
A knucklehead attacked a driver
with a tire iron on Flushing Avenue
on March 1.
Police said the victim was stopped
at a red light at the corner of Classon
Avenue at 4:30 am when someone
knocked on the rear window of the
vehicle. He got out of the car and saw
that the knocker was holding a tire
iron. The two got into a verbal argument,
which ended when the villain
hit the victim in the head with the
iron. A witness saw the whole thing
— and wrote down the assailant’s license
plate number.
You’ve got (no) mail
Just days after a ne’er-do-well
swiped some goodies from a Vanderbilt
Avenue apartment building,
a resident of that same building
caught a thief picking through mail
in the very same lobby.
Police said the worm allegedly
buzzed an apartment at the building
near Gates Avenue at about 12pm on
March 1 and pretended he was delivering
packages. But when the victim
went downstairs, he found the
worm stacking boxes onto a black
hand truck and wheeling them outside,
where a different resident, who
had watched the burglar walk into
the building with the empty hand
cart, shouted at him.
Cops arrested the alleged thief
on the scene.
— Kirstyn Brendlen
60TH PRECINCT
CONEY ISLAND—BRIGHTON BEACH—
SEAGATE
Drive by
A trigger-happy gunman allegedly
approached a man inside his
car on Avenue W and fi red multiple
rounds into the vehicle on March 6.
The victim fl ed the scene of the
crime between W. 11th Street and
Stillwell Avenue around 1o:20 pm to
fl ag down police. He sustained bullet
wounds to his thigh and thumb,
and was transported to Lutheran
Medical Center in Sunset Park. .
Over the railing
A savage pushed a man over the
railing at a Neptune Avenue chain
store on March 4.
The victim broke his forearm
from the fall at the store between W.
5th and W. 6th street, where authorities
say he and the pusher got into
an argument around 1:40 pm leading
up to the tumble.
Swingers club
A brute pushed a victim who
was on a swing at a park on Avenue
V and stole his Apple Air Pods and
iPhone on Feb. 28.
The victim told police the mugger
launched a conversation with
him at the park at the intersection of
Stillwell Avenue before pulling out a
knife and senselessly attacking him
at around 6:20 pm that evening.
62ND PRECINCT
BENSONHURST—BATH BEACH
Bottle rocket
A not-so-smashing gentleman allegedly
hit a pedestrian with a bottle
after asking him for money on
New Utrecht Avenue on Feb. 27.
The victim told police he was
walking from the train when the
defendant allegedly approached
him between 72nd and 73rd streets
around 11 pm and the victim said he
had no money to give.
High stakes
A sneaky crook broke into a 64th
Street home and stole $1,000 and
jewelry on March 2.
Cops say the daredevil entered
the residence, located between 17th
and 18th avenues, through a second
story, rear window at around 5:30
pm before pilfering the goods, and
fl eeing.
—Jessica Parks
BY ROBERT POZARYCKI
Police are looking for a duo
who robbed two teenagers at gunpoint
in Prospect Park on Sunday
night, March 6.
According to the NYPD, at
7:10 pm on March 6 an 18-year-old
boy and 16-year-old girl were inside
the park when they were approached
by two unknown individuals.
The suspects then pulled
out a fi rearm and forcibly took
the victims’ shoes, wallets, bags,
and credit cards.
The suspects then fl ed the
scene on foot in an unknown direction.
There were no injuries reported
as a result of the robbery.
The NYPD released photos and
a video of the suspects taken from
nearby surveillance footage:
Anyone with info in regard
to this incident is asked to call
the NYPD’s Crime Stoppers Hotline
at 1-800-577-TIPS (8477) or for
Spanish, 1-888-57-PISTA (74782).
The public can also submit their
tips by logging onto the Crime
Stoppers website or on Twitter.
All calls are confi dential.