MIDDLEBURG HEIGHTS, Ohio
Criminal damage: Normandie Boulevard
Police went to a residence at 11:26 p.m. July 26 about a damaged car. The victim said her car, which her dad owns, had been damaged by her ex-boyfriend.
She said she had come home at 11 p.m. and noticed that her ex’s car was parked in front of her apartment building. She drove by and pulled into a sally port. She said her ex’s car followed her into the parking spot and parked his car behind hers. The ex then asked her where she was.
After she answered and then closed her apartment door, she heard a loud noise. She thought it was his car door. She returned to her car after changing clothes. She saw her ex speeding away.
She checked her car and saw that three tires had cuts and were deflated. The car’s windshield had a crack and the wipers were broken. She said her ex then called her and asked her, “How do you like your destroyed car?”
That is when she contacted police. While the officer was speaking with the victim, the ex called her. The officer took the call and spoke to him briefly about the incident. He said he had not been at the apartment building and told the officer to “prove it” before hanging up.
The car damage totaled about $850.
Damaged property: Engle Lake Drive
Police responded at 3:55 p.m. Aug. 8 to Fat Heads Brewery about a man who wanted a refill on his growler, but, due to COVID-19, the business is no longer refilling growlers. The man became upset.
He pushed open the door to leave. The glass portion of the door struck a large planter, causing the glass to shatter. He left.
An employee wrote down the car’s license plate as the man drove away. The establishment wants the man to pay for the damage and never walk through its doors again.
Police spoke to the suspect. He said he was upset the way the bartender treated him. He did not realize he had caused any damage. He agreed to reimburse the business.
Stolen car: Bagley Road
Police at 1:11 a.m. Aug. 5 went to Speedway regarding a stolen car. The victim said he had gone into the gas station briefly for food and returned to find his car gone. It was registered to his fiancée. He had left his cell phone, wallet, a car seat, a jewelry card and a debit card inside.
Police contacted the fiancée about her car. She was able to track her fiance’s cell phone, showing that the car was at Carnegie Avenue and East 30th Street at a Shell gas station in Cleveland. It was entered into LEADS as stolen.
Cleveland police were unable to locate the car.
At 2:17 p.m. that day, Euclid police located the car in their city, parked at a gas pump. It was unoccupied and had been abandoned overnight. It was confirmed as the victim’s and was towed. There was no damage to the car at the time of recovery. No arrests were made.
Trespassing: Belfair Drive
On Aug. 7, the owner of a home showed police several window screens that she believed may have been tampered with. While in the back yard, the officer saw a small window screen with a tiny hole in it. The kitchen window screen was opened a few inches and appeared to be placed on the window upside down.
The officer noted that they did not find any physical evidence that would indicate a burglary had occurred. The home owner believed someone had entered her back yard without permission and tampered with the screen between 9:30 p.m Aug. 6 and 9 a.m. Aug. 7.
Grand theft: Smith Road
Police went to the Convenient store at 10:45 a.m. Aug. 9 and spoke with the owner of a car that had just been stolen. The victim said he had parked his car in the front space, took the keys out of the ignition and set them in the middle cup holder. He went inside the store for a few minutes. He left the store and saw that his car was gone.
The officer watched security footage that showed what had occurred. A car had pulled into the space next to the victim’s car. The woman who was driving got out of that car, looked at the man’s car and got back into hers. A younger-looking passenger got out of the woman’s car, ran around to the driver’s side of the other car, got into it and drove away.
The officer checked the license plate that was on the front of the suspect’s car. It belonged to an 89-year-old man who lived on Cleveland’s west side. The officer went to the man’s home and learned that the man had had his rear license plate stolen Aug. 8.
The man saw that a similar car had pulled into his driveway. A woman and a man were in that car. They took his plate, which he reported stolen. There were also witnesses to that theft. The officer has not be able to interview them yet.
Dangerous drugs: Pearl Road
Police went to the Kingston Place Apartments at 9:34 a.m. Aug. 9 regarding a drunken man who had passed out. Police found him breathing heavily and unconscious on the floor near the door. Paramedics gave him Narcan. He eventually regained partial consciousness and was transported to the hospital.
A man who was with him said they had drank beer throughout the night. He last spoke with him at 6:30 a.m. after they had had several more beers. That is when the man fell asleep on the floor and could not be awakened.
The friend was unsure if the victim had a history of drug abuse and was unaware that there was an unused Narcan container in the living room.
Police spoke to the victim at the hospital. He was fully conscious. He denied using drugs, but said he consumed whatever was given to him.
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