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Arvada Police blotter: Arvada bank doors broken
Contributed by: YourHub.com on 7/7/2008

Arvada Police Department

ARVADA BANK DOORS BROKEN
On June 17 at 8:30 a.m., officers were dispatched to the Washington Mutual Bank, at 9611 W. 58th Ave. on a possible burglary. The 27-year-old bank manager said she and one of her employees arrived at 8:15 a.m. The pair discovered the front door and side west doors had broken glass. The manager said it looked like rocks had been thrown through the doors on the south and west sides of the building. The officers did a check and did not find anyone inside the bank and after the employees did an internal check, it appeared nothing was missing. The officers observed a rock inside the entry near the ATM machine and a large rock inside on the west side. The manager said the bank security staff would check the video surveillance tape.

WOMAN'S DEBIT CARD STOLEN
On June 17 at 4:20 a.m., a 32-year-old woman told an officer in the lobby of the police department that someone had stolen her debit card from her purse at her residence on the 103000 block of West 59th Ave while she was away at work. She said she didn't know her debit card number since she had just received it a couple weeks earlier. She said the card had been used twice in Arvada on June 14 and 15. The woman said she had called her bank and thought the thief's identity might be attained if the stores looked at their video surveillance cameras. The officer gave her information on identity theft. There were no amounts available in the report.

HOUSE TRASHED WHILE OWNER AWAY
On June 18 at 8:13 a.m., an officer met a 42-year-old woman and her 49-year-old male friend. The woman was there to interpret for the man's story. She told the officer the man owns a house on the 8100 block of West 68th Avenue and he let another man live in the residence free of charge and take care of the place while he was out of state. The housesitter was arrested on January 16, but left his 20-year-old son at the home. When the woman's friend returned to the house, he found it had been trashed. He brought photos that showed torn drywall garbage on the floors and destroyed carpet. The officer went to the residence and talked to a neighbor who said he saw several people leaving the home on June 17. He said he heard parties and young people living at the resdience for several months. The officer attempted to contact the young man but had not been able to find a phone number for him.

JUVENILE GIVEN SUMMONS FOR FIGHTING
On June 18 at 11:32 a.m. officers were dispatched to 66th and Lamar streets on a report of a fight. The officers stopped several juveniles at 67th and Marshall streets who were huddled around a cell phone. One of them said they were watching a video on the phone. When an officer asked a 16-year-old male if he had recorded a fight on the cell phone, he did not respond. The officer asked to look at the phone and asked the group who the person in the video was. One of the juveniles appeared nervous and asked to leave, but the officer said he had more questions. Since he matched the description received from the reporting party, he was placed in the patrol car. One of the females in the group said she saw the male hit another boy so hard, "it made him stagger," she said. After contacting the 16-year-old's mother the juvenile was given a summons for disorderly conduct and assault based on witness statements and relased to his mother.



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