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Police: Greenport man spit in officer’s face during arrest after driver fled scene of crash

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A 21-year old Greenport man was arrested early Monday morning after he spit in a Southold police officer’s face and resisted arrest during an investigation of a motor vehicle accident in Southold.

According to a department release, police received a report of a single motor vehicle accident on Route 25 near Tuckers Lane. The vehicle involved fled the scene and was found at a gas station on Main Bayview Road.

The driver of the car, Stephanie Caicedo, 25, of Orient, was found to be intoxicated. She was charged with driving while intoxicated, leaving the scene of an accident with property damage and driving without a license.

During the investigation, the release said, Jesus Mendoza “interfered with the investigation and spit in the officer’s face.” He was arrested for obstructing governmental administration and second-degree harassment.

“While being placed under arrest Mendoza resisted and had to be subdued by officers,” the police release said. “He was additionally charged with resisting arrest. He was taken to headquarters for processing.”

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Kayaker who died in Peconic Bay remembered for adventurous spirit

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An 18-year-old kayaker whose body was recovered from Peconic Bay Saturday night is being remembered for his gentle and adventurous spirit.

“I never felt like I had to worry about him,” Raistlin Ruther’s mom, Laura Gandara, recalled in an interview Monday morning. “Ever since he was a little boy, he was kind, considerate, compassionate. He kind of considered himself a loner, but he was so, so loved.”

Raistlin had shoved off in his blue kayak at about 8 a.m. from West Street in South Jamesport and was reported overdue to return to the Riverhead Town police by 4 p.m.

According to Ms. Gandara, her son was an experienced kayaker who was prepared with a wet suit, life jacket and other gear. He phoned his grandmother, with whom he lived in Riverhead, to let her know he had crossed the bay. “It was such a nice day — he sounded really good, but something happened after that,” Ms. Gandara said, her voice cracking.

A search was commenced a short time later that ultimately drew emergency crews from multiple East End fire and police departments, as well as helicopters from the Suffolk County Police Department and the U.S. Coast Guard station on Cape Cod.

Raistlin pictured in his Class of 2020 Riverhead High School photo.

Shortly before 9 p.m. the Coast Guard helicopter located the missing man’s kayak in eastern Peconic Bay. A short time later a Southold Town police search boat located the body of the man, who was wearing a life jacket according to a Coast Guard spokesperson.

According to Southold police, Raistlin’s body was found in Southampton Town waters, just west of Robins Island. A dry bag with the man’s cell phone inside was located on the shore at Meschutt Beach in Hampton Bays.

“We’re all just shocked and sickened,” said Amy Wells, a cousin of Ms. Gandara’s. “He was so sweet, always an outdoorsman,” she said, adding that he’d frequently post Tik Tok videos documenting his outdoor adventures and boxing hobby.

Ms. Wells said Raistlin had just graduated from Riverhead High School in June and had been working at the local Agway while thinking of starting a career in carpentry.

Ms. Gandara, who lives in Murrieta, Calif., said Raistlin briefly lived with her, her husband and their two young sons but returned to Long Island to live with his grandparents because he missed living on the water.

Speaking from a rest stop in Tennessee, Ms. Gandara, who was on her way to New York Monday, said her son’s interest in anything to do with sailing and marine life stemmed from a love of the “Pirates of the Caribbean” film series he enjoyed as a child.

Raistlin pictured with his mother, Laura Gandara. (Courtesy photo)

“He’d say ‘I want to sail, I want to sail,’ so I took him for lessons at the Mattituck Yacht Club. He completely loved it,” Ms. Gandara said. A few years later, he navigated local waters in his own Sunfish, she said.

In addition to a love of water sports, Raistlin loved hiking, fishing, boxing and playing the piano. In high school, he completed the BOCES carpentry program and was a member of ROTC, his mother said, which motivated him to stay fit and avoid drinking or drugs. “He used to drink coffee then one day thought ‘I think I’m addicted,’ and stopped,” Ms. Gandara said, letting out a little chuckle.

His aunt, Carissa Sexton, started a GoFundMe campaign to raise funds for the family’s travel expenses, funeral services and ultimately, a scholarship in Raistlin’s memory. “To lose someone like him is so difficult to accept. When Raistlin left us, a little piece of us all left with him,” Ms. Sexton wrote on the page, which had raised over $22,000 by Monday afternoon.

Ms. Gandara said memorial services are planned for Thursday, Jan. 7, in Wading River, though additional details were not immediately available. The results of an autopsy are still pending, though she believes Raistlin died of hypothermia.

“He was 18 and I’m 41 and I depended on him more than he depended on me,” she said quietly. “He was so independent. He really is my rock.”

The post Kayaker who died in Peconic Bay remembered for adventurous spirit appeared first on The Suffolk Times.

Cops: Greenport man responsible for multiple burglaries arrested

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A Greenport man allegedly responsible for several burglaries of Greenport businesses was arrested Wednesday, according to Southold Town police.

Jesus Mendoza, 21, faces a litany of charges in connection to eight cases that police were investigating that span the past several months.

Police said Mr. Mendoza was involved in five separate burglaries and stole numerous items ranging from electronics to clothing to food. He is also charged with assault on a police officer after an officer suffered a hand injury while Mr. Mendoza was resisting arrest recently on unrelated charges.

He is also charged with two separate counts of petit larceny after he was spotted on surveillance cameras shoplifting from local businesses. He faces a criminal trespass charge for entering one store after being advised he was longer allowed inside, police said.

Mr. Mendoza is scheduled to be arraigned Thursday morning.

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Former Southold officer’s lawsuit headed to trial after Appellate Division overturns prior ruling

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A former Southold Town probationary police officer’s suit against the town over his firing in May 2016 has won a victory in the Appellate Division of State Supreme Court, which has ordered the town to turn over videos sought by the former officer’s attorney.

Garrett Lake had argued in court papers that he was fired in bad faith due to political pressure. His and his attorney’s efforts to move the suit forward have previously stumbled in State Supreme Court with judges’ decisions denying an Article 78 proceeding aimed at returning Mr. Lake to the job.

Last month, however, the Appellate Division overturned that previous ruling, saying the in-car videos sought by Mr. Lake’s attorney, Eric Bressler of Mattituck, are in fact pertinent to the case. With that decision, Mr. Lake’s suit remains alive and goes back to State Supreme Court in Riverhead for trial.

In a statement, Mr. Bressler said he was “extremely pleased” with the decision, which was issued Dec. 30. “Specifically, the Appellate Division held that Mr. Lake had submitted sufficient evidence of wrongful termination so as to entitle him to a trial on the issues.

“The Appellate Division further held that Mr. Lake was entitled to discovery of the evidence upon which it was alleged his termination was based, which the lower court denied,” Mr. Bressler wrote.

In response, Town Attorney William Duffy said, “The Appellate Division decision is not a final decision. It does not address the merits of Lake’s claims; rather, the decision found that the trial court erred procedurally when it denied the petitioner’s request that the town make available certain video footage and dismissed the petition without a trial. We respectfully disagree with the Appellate Division.”

Mr. Duffy said he will consult with outside counsel whether to make a motion to the Appellate Division “to seek leave to appeal to the Court of Appeals.”

Mr. Lake had argued he was fired due to his involvement in two high-profile arrests: a drunken driving arrest in the fatal 2015 limousine crash in Cutchogue, and the DWI arrest of a Jamesport Fire Department chief. 

Mr. Lake had been honored in 2016 with a Suffolk County proclamation for making the department’s highest number of drunken-driving arrests. He alleged in court papers that the incidents infuriated local Republicans, who he claimed exercised undue political influence on the police department and Southold Town Board. 

Mr. Lake also argued that police Chief Martin Flatley admitted to him at separate times that political pressure was a factor in his dismissal. 

In its decision, the Appellate Division of State Supreme Court reinstated Mr. Bressler’s petition “to compel the disclosure of certain video recordings” held by Southold Town. 

In court papers, Mr. Lake state that the arrests of the two individuals had been lawful and proper and that he was fired in bad faith. In response to that allegation, the court papers state, the town “asserted that Lake’s employment was terminated in good faith based upon his failure to adequately perform his police duties.”

The papers state that Chief Flatley had viewed in-car videos and determined that many of Mr. Lake’s arrests were legally problematic. It is those videos that Mr. Bressler had sought that the Appellate Division ruled Mr. Lake is now entitled to.

The court papers state that “the Town’s present contention that those same videos are now irrelevant and unnecessary to the issues presented in this proceeding rings hollow.”

The post Former Southold officer’s lawsuit headed to trial after Appellate Division overturns prior ruling appeared first on The Suffolk Times.

Southold Blotter: Driver’s vehicle impounded after DWI arrest

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Rudy Elias, 41, of Laurel was arrested early Friday for DWI along Main Bayview Road in Southold.

Police said he was stopped for a violation around 1 a.m. and found to be intoxicated. He was charged with DWI and circumventing a court-ordered interlock device, according to police. Mr. Elias’ vehicle was also impounded due to a prior DWI conviction, officials said.

• Police arrested a Riverhead man for DWI on Oriole Drive in Southold last Thursday.

Police said Nathaniel Woodhull, 38, failed roadside sobriety tests after he was stopped for failing to yield the right of way to an officer around 10 p.m. He was charged with DWI, according to a police report.

• A Holbrook man was arrested for driving while ability impaired in East Marion last Wednesday afternoon.

According to police, an officer stopped William Swinford, age unavailable, after his gray BMW sedan crossed over the double yellow lines on Route 25 into the eastbound lane around 4:20 p.m.

Further investigation revealed Mr. Swinford was impaired by marijuana and in possession of marijuana and concentrated wax cannabis. He was arrested for DWAI and taken to Stony Brook Eastern Long Island Hospital for a blood test, police said.

• Mattituck firefighters extinguished a barbecue fire at a home on MacDonald Road in Laurel Saturday around 10:30 p.m.

• An eight-foot snowman display was stolen from the front yard of a home along Route 48 in Mattituck. The incident was reported to police Friday morning.

• Police were called to the New China restaurant in Greenport Sunday around 4 p.m. after an unknown man ordered food through a pickup window, grabbed the food and took off running without paying.

• Firefighters from Orient, East Marion and Greenport responded to a house fire on Petes Hill Road in Orient last Sunday evening.

According to police, all occupants of the home were able to safely evacuate. Police said a candle appeared to be the cause of the fire, which started around 5:30 p.m.

No injuries were reported, police said.

• Police are investigating after a broken rear window and back door were discovered at a home on Sigsbee Road in Mattituck Friday afternoon.

The owner, a Glen Cove man, was contacted and it’s unclear if anything was taken from the home.

• A Greenport man contacted police last Thursday afternoon to report that someone stole a car charger from his vehicle on Sixth Avenue sometime overnight.

Another Sixth Avenue resident reported a $20 lottery ticket was stolen from her vehicle. A black duffel bag was also reported stolen from a vehicle on Wiggins Street in Greenport last Thursday.

Those who are named in police reports have not been convicted of any crime or violation. The charges against them may later be reduced or withdrawn, or they may be found innocent.

The post Southold Blotter: Driver’s vehicle impounded after DWI arrest appeared first on The Suffolk Times.

Southold Blotter: Pedestrian avoids injury after being struck by unlicensed driver

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Southold Town police cited a Mattituck woman for unlicensed driving after she reportedly struck a pedestrian on Pike Street Friday evening.

According to police, the woman was driving eastbound on Pike Street when she veered to the right and struck a Southold man in the right ankle and also struck a parked vehicle on the side of the road.

The man was walking across the street when he was struck and declined medical attention, police said.

The driver, who did not appear to be under the influence of drugs or alcohol, is not facing any criminal charges but was issued a citation for driving without a license, officials said.

• Southold Town police arrested a Peconic man for DWI Monday after he was found driving with an open container of alcohol around 3 p.m.

Police received a report of a white van all over the roadway while traveling east on Route 25 in Cutchogue and stopped Juan Monzon Lopez, 49. He was arrested for aggravated Driving While Intoxicated and several violations, officials said. 

• A woman called police to report a fire in a wooded area on Peconic Bay Boulevard in Laurel Saturday.

According to officials from the Mattituck Fire Department, who responded and doused the area with water, a lit cigarette may have been thrown out of a window of a vehicle, causing a small fire around noon.

• Police were called to Magic Fountain in Mattituck last Thursday after a 37-year-old Southold woman was upset she was asked to wear a mask inside the store around 3:45 p.m.

The woman left the area after police arrived, officials said.

• Mattituck firefighters extinguished a small grill fire at a home on Laurelwood Drive in Laurel Sunday around 5 p.m.

• Police were called to an oyster stand on Jockey Creek Drive in Southold last Wednesday after a man reported seeing someone steal two bags of oysters and two knives from the stand.

• Police were called to the Mattituck Plaza last Tuesday after a Flanders man reported that the driver of a 2004 Chevrolet struck his vehicle while pulling out of a parking spot around 11:45 a.m.

Officers located the driver, a Laurel man, at home, where he told police he was unaware that he struck the vehicle. He isn’t facing any charges, police said.

• A woman called police last Thursday to report that an unknown person damaged two sections of fencing along her property line on Oakwood Road in Laurel. Extra patrols of the neighborhood were requested.

• A 75-year-old East Marion woman called police last Wednesday to report that her purse was stolen from her vehicle, which was parked on Front Street in Greenport, between 6 and 7 a.m.

• Police responded to a hotel on Front Street in Greenport after staff reported a disturbance involving an intoxicated man last Wednesday evening.

Officers located the man, a 38-year-old from Manhattan, who was transported to the Greenport train station around 9:30 p.m.

• A weighted blanket and vehicle registration card were reported stolen from a vehicle on Fifth Street in Greenport last Monday.

• An unknown woman reportedly stole a brown delivery package from the front step of a home on Sound Avenue in Peconic last Monday around noon.

Those who are named in police reports have not been convicted of any crime or violation. The charges against them may later be reduced or withdrawn, or they may be found innocent.

The post Southold Blotter: Pedestrian avoids injury after being struck by unlicensed driver appeared first on The Suffolk Times.

Southold Blotter: Driver arrested for DWI in East Marion

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Police were searching for the driver of a delivery truck who fled the scene of an accident Friday.

According to a report, a Patchogue man driving on Main Road near Cox Lane swerved to avoid a deer in the roadway and accidentally collided with a telephone pole, causing extensive damage to the pole, before leaving the scene.

The man was later tracked down by police to his place of employment, where he reportedly told police that he got confused. No injures were reported and the man isn’t facing any criminal charges.

• Southold police arrested an Astoria man for DWI in East Marion last Wednesday.

Police said George Drivas, 55, was stopped around 3:30 p.m. for driving a 2014 Honda in the shoulder along Route 25. He was found to be intoxicated and placed under arrest.

He was charged with driving while intoxicated along with several violations, police said.

• A 27-year-old Greenport man was arrested for impaired driving during a traffic stop in Peconic last Thursday evening.

According to police, Joseph Rico was observed driving slowly, “well below the posted speed limit,” on Route 48 and then pulled over to the side of the road without using a signal.

After being stopped by police, Mr. Rico was found to be operating the vehicle while impaired by drugs and was arrested for impaired driving and two violations.

• Southold police responded to a report of a dead seal washed up on the beach in front of Peconic Landing Friday afternoon.

An officer referred the incident to the Atlantic Marine Conservatory, which later performed a necropsy and buried the animal.

• A woman called police Friday to report that someone entered her Old Orchard Lane home in East Marion between Jan. 1 and Jan. 14.

According to police, nothing was damaged or stolen but a few things, including a candy jar, were found out of place.

• One injury was reported after pickup truck ran through a red light and crashed into the side of a Ford Suburban at the intersection of Hortons Lane and Route 48 in Southold last Wednesday morning.

According to police, the driver of the pickup, which was towing a landscaping trailer, said his brakes malfunctioned as he approached a red light around 11:35 a.m.

Minor damage was reported to both vehicles, reports said.

• A checkbook was reported stolen from a vehicle parked along Ninth Street in Greenport Saturday morning.

• Police were called to a disturbance on Clark Street in Greenport last Wednesday afternoon. According to a report, a 57-year-old Manorville man reportedly called a 69-year-old woman a “snobby rich b—“ after she asked him to put a mask on while walking past her home and spitting on the ground.

The man agreed not to walk past her house again, officials said.

• A dumpster fire broke out at the Sound View Inn in Greenport last Thursday evening.

According to officials, Greenport Fire Department extinguished the fire and spoke to a manager, who said the dumpster was filled with construction debris earlier by a contractor working on a vacant condo.

• A clerk at the 7-Eleven in Greenport called police last Thursday to report that there were two intoxicated subjects shopping in the store and he wanted to make sure they wouldn’t leave driving a vehicle.

A family member responded to the convenience store to drive them home shortly before 7 p.m., police said.

Those who are named in police reports have not been convicted of any crime or violation. The charges against them may later be reduced or withdrawn, or they may be found innocent.

The post Southold Blotter: Driver arrested for DWI in East Marion appeared first on The Suffolk Times.

Southold Blotter: Greenport man charged with DWI after crashing into fire hydrant

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Southold Town police arrested a 29-year-old Greenport man for driving while intoxicated after he reportedly crashed his car into a fire hydrant in Southold Friday.

According to police, Delfido Carrera Lopez was driving his 2005 Honda Civic westbound on Route 25 when he veered off the roadway, struck a fire hydrant and went through a fence and bushes into the front lawn of a residence shortly before 10 p.m.

Officers responding to the scene found Mr. Carrera Lopez to be intoxicated and placed him under arrest for DWI, reports said. He was not injured in the crash.

• Police arrested a 33-year-old Riverhead man after he was found with a stolen bicycle in Greenport Saturday afternoon.

Police said they received a call about an intoxicated man who was falling down in the Adams Street parking lot around 2 p.m. and found a highly intoxicated Kelvin Euceda walking with a bicycle near First Street.

He was arrested for fifth-degree criminal possession of stolen property after an officer determined the bike was stolen. It was later returned to the owner, a 43-year-old Greenport woman.

• A man was airlifted to Stony Brook University Hospital after his 2002 GMC pickup truck overturned on Route 25 in Cut-ch-ogue Friday night.

According to police, the Cut-ch-ogue man was driving westbound around 9:30 p.m. when he swerved off the road to avoid a deer crossing the roadway, hit a mailbox, skidded back onto the road and overturned.

He was taken to Stony Brook via Suffolk County police helicopter and issued a summons for unlicensed driving, police said.

• Police were called to a home on Peconic Bay Boulevard in Laurel after a home surveillance system captured an unknown man pulling fence slats back and trespassing on the property.

The incident was reported to police last Wednesday afternoon and the suspect is described in a report as a white man with a goatee and mustache wearing a light-colored hoodie.

• Police responded to a dispute between a taxi driver and customer along Route 48 in Southold last Wednesday morning.

According to police, a woman said she was upset that the driver was over 20 minutes late and after an argument during the ride, the driver pulled over and asked her to exit, which she refused to do.

The woman was transported back to her Southold home by police around 9 a.m., police said.

• A group of intoxicated men were asked to leave the North Ferry terminal in Greenport Friday night after a man called to complain about loitering around 8:30 p.m.

• Police were called to a home on Third Street in Greenport after a woman reported that a friend damaged both her TV and a wooden table inside her home last Thursday evening.

The woman told police that she didn’t know the man’s last name but described him to police, who are continuing to investigate the incident.

• A 64-year-old Southold woman called police last Monday afternoon to report she was concerned after seeing three young men enter a vacant lot on North Bayview Road with power tools around 1 p.m.

Police responded and spoke with three men in their early 20s who said they grew up in the area and wanted to build a tree house.

Police advised them that they must seek permission from the property owner and the group left the area, according to a report.

• Police were called to two homes in Greenport Village after receiving reports about a suspicious man last Monday.

According to a report, a Sterling Street resident called to report that an unknown man rang his doorbell shortly before 4 p.m. asking if he had a room to rent, before leaving in his vehicle.

A different resident later reported that around 5:30 p.m., a man wearing a trench coat knocked on her Sixth Avenue home also inquiring about a room to rent.

Police pulled over a 70-year-old Fort McCoy, Fla. man who told police he was trying to find a motel. An officer advised the man to check vacancies in the area or travel to Riverhead Town where there are additional options.

• A 57-year-old Mattituck woman called police Friday to report that an unknown person applied for unemployment benefits in her name.

Police told the woman to monitor her financial accounts and are continuing to investigate the incident.

Those who are named in police reports have not been convicted of any crime or violation. The charges against them may later be reduced or withdrawn, or they may be found innocent.

The post Southold Blotter: Greenport man charged with DWI after crashing into fire hydrant appeared first on The Suffolk Times.


Southold Blotter: Greenport man ticketed after backing into parked vehicle

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Southold Town police ticketed a Greenport man who reportedly left the scene of an accident last Wednesday afternoon.

Police said the man, who was driving a 2008 Chevrolet, was backing out of a parking space in a lot on Third Street in Greenport when he made contact with a parked vehicle. The man got out to inspect the damage, didn’t see anyone and left. He was located a short time later and issued traffic tickets for leaving the scene, officials said.

• One person was injured following a two-car crash at the intersection of Wickham Avenue and Pike Street in Mattituck last Monday.

According to police, a Greenport woman driving a 2014 Chevrolet was heading north on Wickham Avenue when a Greenport man driving a 2002 Chevrolet failed to yield and entered the intersection, striking the rear quarter panel of the other vehicle.

The woman reported minor injuries, police said.

• A Mattituck Fire Department ambulance struck a deer along County Route 48 while transporting a patient to Stony Brook Eastern Long Island Hospital last Thursday around 3 a.m.

No further injuries were reported, according to police.

• Detectives from the Suffolk County Police Department’s arson squad are investigating after a home on Old Jule Lane in Mattituck caught fire last week.

According to police, a man called to report a possible deck fire last Tuesday around 6 p.m. Mattituck Fire Department responded and extinguished the fire, which had engulfed the south side of the residence.

No injuries were reported and a report didn’t specify how the fire broke out.

• A Mattituck woman alerted police last week after she was notified by a credit monitoring company that an unknown person fraudulently applied for a COVID-19 economic injury disaster loan in her name.

Police provided the woman with identity theft paperwork last Thursday and detectives were notified about the incident, reports said.

• Police received four additional reports last week about fraudulent unemployment claims being filed.

• Police were called to Silvermere Road in Greenport Friday after receiving a report about a suspicious man walking around the property.

Police spoke with a 36-year-old Tolland, Conn., man who said he was trying to find a room to rent but it was too expensive. He was transported by police to the train station shortly before 7 p.m.

Those who are named in police reports have not been convicted of any crime or violation. The charges against them may later be reduced or withdrawn, or they may be found innocent.

The post Southold Blotter: Greenport man ticketed after backing into parked vehicle appeared first on The Suffolk Times.

Southold Blotter: Mattituck woman arrested after striking mailbox, PSEG pole in crash

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Southold Town police arrested a Mattituck woman for impaired driving after her vehicle struck a mailbox and PSEG pole along Route 25 in Laurel Saturday.

According to police, Elizabeth Antanaitis was driving a 2007 Honda westbound around 2 a.m. when she drifted off the roadway and struck a mailbox, pole and road sign just east of Bray Avenue.

Police said she was arrested for driving while ability impaired by drugs or alcohol and taken to Stony Brook Eastern Long Island Hospital, though no injuries were reported.

• Detectives are investigating after an unknown person reportedly broke into a home on Summer Lane in Southold last Thursday. The homeowner told police that several items had been moved throughout the residence, but no items had been taken.

• A Greenport woman called police after noticing that an unknown person used her debit card to transfer more than $9,800 to an account in Pennsylvania Saturday.

Detectives are investigating the incident and advised the woman to cancel the card and file a claim with the FTC.

• Police were called to a home on Carpenter Street In Greenport Saturday after a woman called to report a 59-year-old man was intoxicated and creating a disturbance.

The man had already left the area when police arrived shortly before 3 p.m.

• An empty gray floor safe was reported stolen from Doroski’s Nursery in Southold last Tuesday.

• Police responded to several crashes last Monday as a winter storm dropped a foot of snow on parts of the North Fork.

A woman was injured after losing control of her 2020 Kia and striking a utility pole on Route 25 in Southold.

Another driver, a Southold man, struck a LIPA pole after losing control of his 2015 Jeep in the snowy conditions near the intersection of Route 48 and Youngs Avenue in Southold.

One person was injured after the driver of a 1999 Toyota lost control of her vehicle along Main Road in Greenport and skidded into the opposite lane, striking a 2012 Dodge and a mailbox, according to police.

• A Greenport woman called police last Tuesday to report that someone filed fraudulent unemployment claims in her and her husband’s names. Detectives are investigating the incident.

Four other North Fork residents contacted police last week to report similar incidents.

• Loose change and a debit card were reported stolen from a vehicle on Ole Jule Lane in Mattituck last Thursday morning.

• Police responded Saturday to a two-car crash on Route 48 near Chapel Lane in Greenport after the driver of a 2008 Acura rear-ended the driver of a 2020 Hyundai.

The driver of the Acura reportedly told police that she dropped a can of soda while she was driving and was looking down to pick it up when the crash occurred. No injuries were reported.

• A Southold man called police to report being scammed out of more than $3,000 while attempting to rent an apartment he found listed online last Wednesday.

The 24-year-old told police that he was in contact with a man, sent him a $3,200 payment via Zelle and the 62-year-old man then stopped contacting him. Detectives were notified about the incident.

• One person was taken to Peconic Bay Medical Center after a rear-end crash along Route 48 in Mattituck Saturday afternoon.

• Minor injuries were reported after the driver of a 2012 Honda failed to yield to a 1989 Chevrolet while trying to make a left turn onto County Road 48 from Albertson Lane in Greenport Saturday morning.

• A Cutchogue man called police after finding an unknown vehicle parked in his driveway last Tuesday morning.

Police made contact with the owner, a Southold woman, who said a repair shop must have dropped it off at the wrong residence and retrieved the vehicle.

Those who are named in police reports have not been convicted of any crime or violation. The charges against them may later be reduced or withdrawn, or they may be found innocent.

The post Southold Blotter: Mattituck woman arrested after striking mailbox, PSEG pole in crash appeared first on The Suffolk Times.

Southold Blotter: Greenport man charged with DWI

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Southold Town police arrested a 41-year-old Greenport man for driving while intoxicated Friday.

Police received a report of a tan Ford F-150 failing to maintain its lane of travel on Main Street in Greenport and observed Chad Yokel failing to stop for a stop sign and failing to signal when turning at an intersection around 5 p.m.

Mr. Yokel was found to be intoxicated and arrested for aggravated DWI and two violations, reports said.

• A Greenport man was arrested for DWI during a traffic stop in Peconic Friday afternoon.

According to police, Christopher Zuhoski, 59, was operating a 2003 Dodge Durango eastbound on Route 25 when he was stopped for a traffic violation shortly before 3 p.m.

He was arrested for driving while intoxicated and first-degree aggravated unlicensed operation of a motor vehicle and reportedly refused to take a breath test at the scene, reports said.

• Two hunters, a 59-year-old Southold man and 58-year-old Ridge man, were issued summonses for hunting on private property along Oregon Road in Mattituck Sunday around noon.

The men were escorted off the property and advised to stay off of private land.

• More than $6,000 worth of carpentry equipment was reported stolen from a van parked outside of a home on Sound Avenue in Mattituck last week. The incident was reported to police last Thursday morning.

• Greenport Fire Department responded to a small oven fire at a home on Main Road in Greenport Saturday evening.

According to a report, a small piece of food was found aflame at the bottom of the oven and the fire was extinguished around 5:15 p.m.

• A 64-year-old Mattituck man called police Saturday to report that an unknown person attempted to claim unemployment benefits in his father’s name. Police received at least three similar reports of unemployment scams and detectives were notified about each incident.

• A 67-year-old woman contacted police to report that a necklace valued at $500 was stolen from a jewelry box at her Peconic home Friday.

The woman told police she believes the necklace was stolen by a cleaning lady and has been missing since December 2019.

• Police were called to a home on Fifth Avenue in Greenport after a man called to complain about people shooting BB guns in the area Sunday afternoon.

Police spoke with a 35-year-old man who said he was teaching his children to operate a BB gun and found he was shooting in a safe direction with a solid backstop.

• A 26-year-old Greenport man reported that someone hacked into his phone and stole money from an unemployment check last Wednesday.

• A chimney fire that broke out at a home on Aldrich Lane in Laurel was extinguished by members of the Mattituck Fire Department shortly after midnight last Thursday.

No damage was reported, reports said.

Those who are named in police reports have not been convicted of any crime or violation. The charges against them may later be reduced or withdrawn, or they may be found innocent.

The post Southold Blotter: Greenport man charged with DWI appeared first on The Suffolk Times.

Southold Blotter: DWI arrest in Greenport

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Southold Town police arrested a 43-year-old Ronkonkoma man for DWI in Greenport last Wednesday.

Edward Hyatt was stopped on Manor Place for a defective headlight after an officer saw him backing up in the road after missing a turn into the hospital parking lot.

Mr. Hyatt was found to be intoxicated and charged with driving while intoxicated, police said.

• Police responded to Duck Walk Vineyards Sunday after an employee found a pistol left in the bathroom around 4 p.m.

A 30-year-old Lindenhurst woman responded to police headquarters to claim the pistol after calling to report that she had accidentally left it there.

• A 38-year-old Southold man was arrested after a disturbance at a group home last Monday afternoon.

According to police, Peter Maisonet confronted another resident, who has an active order of protection against him, at the Main Bayview Road home. Mr. Maisonet was charged with criminal contempt and released on an appearance ticket, officials said.

• Police were called to a gas station along Main Bayview Road in Southold after receiving a report of an intoxicated man bothering customers around 4:30 p.m. Sunday. 

Police interviewed a 46-year-old Southold man and transported him back to his residence, reports said.

• A Southold police cruiser was damaged after an officer collided with a deer near the intersection of County Road 48 and Peconic Lane last Thursday night.

The officer, who was en route to respond to an emergency, didn’t report any injuries, officials said.

• Police responded to several weather-related crashes throughout town last week.

A woman driving a 2011 Hyundai collided with a stop sign on Bailey Avenue in Greenport after sliding in snowy conditions last Thursday around 2 p.m.

Another driver slid off the roadway along Route 25 in Southold and struck a sign and a mailbox Friday evening.

No injuries were reported after a man operating a 2006 Jeep skidded in the snow and collided with a utility pole Friday morning. The crash occurred near the intersection of Route 48 and Cox Neck Road, according to an accident report.

• A Southold man lost control of a 2014 Toyota on wet pavement and struck a telephone pole on North Bayview Road in Southold last Tuesday afternoon.

No injuries were reported, according to police.

• A Cutchogue woman reported receiving a fraudulent unemployment letter from the state Department of Labor last Thursday morning.

Three similar reports were filed last week, which officials said would be forwarded to the county detective division as part of a larger ongoing investigation.

• A 33-year-old Cutchogue man was ordered to surrender three firearms for safekeeping after a domestic incident last Tuesday morning.

Those who are named in police reports have not been convicted of any crime or violation. The charges against them may later be reduced or withdrawn, or they may be found innocent.

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Southold Blotter: Mattituck man charged with DWI after crashing into utility pole

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A Mattituck man was arrested and charged with driving while intoxicated after reportedly crashing into a utility pole and business sign along Route 25 Saturday.

According to police, Rony Giron Rodriguez was driving westbound on Route 25 around 2 a.m. when he fell asleep and drifted off of the roadway.

Police said Mr. Giron Rodriguez was taken to Stony Brook Eastern Long Island Hospital for treatment of minor injuries and held at police headquarters for arraignment.

• Southold Fire Department responded to a gas station along Route 48 in Peconic after a vehicle broke out in flames around 6:30 p.m. Sunday.

Officials determined an electrical issue sparked the flames and police helped transport the owner of the vehicle, a 27-year-old East Marion man, back home.

Police also responded to a vehicle fire along Main Road in Mattituck Saturday after a Greenport man noticed smoke coming from the hood, pulled over and saw flames.

Mattituck Fire Department responded and extinguished the fire shortly before 4 p.m., reports said.

• A 33-year-old Cut-ch-ogue man called police Friday after discovering that an unknown person wrote “Bless Trump” in permanent marker on the hood of his vehicle, which was parked along Wells Avenue in Southold.

• Police are investigating after a tool was reported stolen from a trailer parked on Cedar Drive in Southold Friday morning.

• A New Suffolk woman called police last Thursday afternoon to report that two juveniles threw something at her car and ran away along Main Road in Mattituck.

Police spoke with the juveniles, who admitted to throwing a snowball at the vehicle and were released to their parents. The woman declined to press charges.

• A 44-year-old Jamesport man called police Friday afternoon to report that sometime overnight, someone entered his barn along Oregon Road in Mattituck and damaged property with an ax.

• No injuries were reported after a man driving a 2014 Dodge reportedly struck a turkey that was crossing County Road 48 near Alvah’s Lane in Cut-ch-ogue Friday around 6 a.m.

• A county bus driver called police for assistance after two riders began arguing over a fare, causing a scene, along Route 25 in Greenport last Thursday afternoon.

• A green mountain bicycle was reported stolen from outside of the Greenport laundromat Saturday afternoon.

• Police responded to a single car crash along Main Road in East Marion last Tuesday around midnight after a man driving a 2012 Nissan drove off the roadway into a utility pole.

Police reported injuries as a result of the crash but the driver isn’t facing any criminal charges.

• A 60-year-old New Suffolk man filed a police report last Monday after another man, a 75-year-old from New Suffolk, reportedly grabbed his shirt and shook his head around forcibly during a discussion about a civic association meeting earlier in February.

An investigation is ongoing, police said.

• A Cutchogue woman reported receiving unemployment paperwork despite never filing for the benefits last Wednesday. The incident was forwarded to detectives, who are investigating similar incidents, police said.

Those who are named in police reports have not been convicted of any crime or violation. The charges against them may later be reduced or withdrawn, or they may be found innocent.

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Police chief responds to task force report, questions cost of body cams

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Among the recommendations outlined in Southold’s police reform report are the need to diversify the police force, establish an internal affairs bureau to better investigate complaints and begin equipping officers with body-worn cameras.

“There are some items that are definitely attainable, some we are currently in the process of implementing, but just as many that I don’t feel are necessary for our department,” Police Chief Martin Flatley said in response to the report submitted by the Southold Justice Review & Reform Task Force last week.

Ahead of a formal presentation of the proposal to the Town Board Friday, Chief Flatley submitted nine pages of comments that address some of the major recommendations included in the report.

“We are acutely aware of today’s sentiment toward the changes needed in policing throughout our country after several high profile police shootings and misconduct cases have ignited a call for change,” the chief wrote, recognizing that while Southold has not experienced similar incidents, he supports taking preventive action to preempt it.

But he questioned the need to form a community-police partnership board, arguing that an additional layer of oversight for the department is unwarranted. Instead, the chief suggested adding a section to his monthly report to give regular updates to the Town Board, who also function as police commissioners, on justice reform updates and adding two community members familiar with the reform plan to serve on the police advisory committee.

While open to training members on the tenets of procedural justice, Chief Flatley disagreed with the need for a procedural justice compliance officer and the task force’s recommendation that public hearings be held before police policies are changed.

“These orders are developed by New York State DCJS and professionals in law enforcement to instruct members of the department how to properly perform their duties as a police officer,” Chief Flatley said. “It is not necessary for the public to be involved in approving these orders, nor are most members of the public qualified to comment on the majority of our orders.”

The chief said he’d support efforts to provide enhanced training for police officers, but said budgetary restrictions, currently set at $10,000 for training, limit what’s achievable.

While efforts to diversify the police force are directly tied to the county’s civil service process, the chief conceded the department could make more effort to promote and publicize civil service test dates and enhance recruitment efforts in the community in both English and Spanish.

He also agreed that the current rotating shift schedule is difficult for officers’ overall health but noted that those must be negotiated between the town and police union.

Several other recommendations, such as updating discrimination policies, will be addressed through the accreditation process, he explained.

In his response, the chief also didn’t express support for body cameras, which have become a hot topic among criminal justice reform advocates in recent years.

He pointed to the significant cost associated with purchasing the equipment and storing the amount of video captured and said the department was one of the first to purchase in-car video systems back in 2005, which already record a significant number of interactions with the public.

The town, facing an April 1 deadline to adopt the plan and submit it to the state, is planning to hold two public listening sessions to receive feedback on the proposal, which is available online at southoldjusticetf.org. Copies are also available at each of the public libraries, officials said.

Supervisor Scott Russell said Tuesday that the listening schedules will be held over the next two weeks, though no dates have been announced yet.

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Residents express support for recently completed police reform plan during first listening session

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A recently completed plan that seeks to build stronger community relationships and provide more training to police officers in Southold was mostly applauded by community members during the first of two listening sessions held virtually Wednesday.

“I’m impressed with the effort that’s been made in this small town to address big issues,” said Diana Gordon during Wednesday’s meeting. 

Other residents echoed that feeling, describing the plan as both “reasonable” and “rational” while offering improvements they’d like to see adopted by the Town Board.

Many speakers agreed that community involvement was an important aspect of the plan, which was released by the Southold Justice Review & Reform Task Force earlier this month.

Daisy Rymer of Southold said she’d like to see it demonstrated that the police department has read and supports the plan. “They work for our community, not the other way around,” Ms. Rymer said. “I’d like to see a way to have faith that these practices will be followed through to the fullest extent and not mocked.”

Several people also spoke in support of establishing a Community-Police Partnership Committee that, according to the plan, would conduct ongoing reviews and community meetings in an effort to maintain “ongoing, trust-building dialogue,” and check in on the status of implementing recommendations in the adopted plan.

In a letter to the Town Board after the plan was released, police Chief Martin Flatley disputed the need for such an entity, arguing that an additional layer of oversight for the department is “unwarranted” since the Town Board also serves as police commissioners.

Local attorney Stephen Kiely, who also served on the task force, said the CPPC could serve as an open line of communication and collaboration between the department and residents.

“This is one of the most important subject areas to have a committee — and we have one for trees,” he said.

Some residents questioned whether the Town Board should double as the board of police commissioners. “It seems there are enough conflicts that could come up,” said Helen Finnigan of Southold.

Christopher North of Greenport agreed and called for additional reforms to the process of filing a complaint.

Prior Coverage

Police responds to report, questions body cams

Task force releases its report

Task force gathers community input

“Being the police commissioners and investigating a complaint is not going to work with trust of the community,” Mr. North said. “There needs to be some type of outside counsel or involvement of the community.”

Body cameras have also emerged as a common thread in similar reports drafted across the East End as a way to increase police transparency and accountability.

Ms. Finnigan said she was disappointed to learn that Chief Flatley did not favor body cameras, citing the additional costs associated with them.

“Body cameras are an important part of the entire set of recommendations,” she said. “I think that’s supported by a lot in the community.”

While the report doesn’t expressly recommend implementing body cameras, it does urge the department to begin evaluating the merits of the technology.

Former Town Justice Brian Hughes argued that the report is specifically meant to address issues within Southold rather than take on the larger national questions that have surfaced in the wake of George Floyd’s death and similar high profile cases.

Mr. Hughes pointed to the community survey conducted as part of the report, in which over 90% of respondents reported that they believed the Southold Police Department is “honest and ethical” in interactions with the community. About 72% of respondents reported having a “positive” or “very positive” interaction with police in the last five years, while approximately 10% of those surveyed reported having a negative or very negative encounter.

But the survey received just 422 responses, reflective of just 0.019% of town residents and the majority of respondents were between ages 60-69. Several task force members also testified that during one-on-one interviews with people of color and undocumented North Fork residents, many expressed hesitation at filling out the survey, even anonymously.

“It’s naive of us to say that because none of the surveys returned had any negativity that it doesn’t exist,” said Councilwoman Sarah Nappa.

Some of those interviews were conducted by Rev. Natalie Wimberly of Greenport’s Clinton Memorial A.M.E. Zion Church. She said what happens on the national level does have local impact and noted that in her interviews, she learned that police interaction with marginalized communities has not been as favorable as the survey results might suggest.

“Our community is a cross section of wonderful people who want their voices heard,” she said. “They want to be recognized and acknowledged that we matter.”

Board member Louisa Evans said what ultimately ends up in the reform plan is better than having nothing on the books.

“We should be thinking about it as not putting out fires, but preventing fires from happening,” she said. “Things may be OK now, but you don’t know what the future will hold.” 

A second listening session is planned for Wednesday, March 24.

It will be held at 7 p.m. via Zoom and login information can be found on the town website.

The town, and municipalities across New York State, are facing an April 1 deadline to adopt the plan, per an executive order issued last summer by Gov. Andrew Cuomo.

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Southold Blotter: Fire department responds to report of brush fire on Main Bayview Road

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Members of the Southold Fire Department responded to a report of a brush fire along Main Bayview Road Saturday morning.

Officials spoke with a 44-year-old construction worker who said the pile of smoldering debris was intended for use by workers to stay warm and agreed to extinguish the fire around 11:30 a.m., reports said.

• A 34-year-old Southold man called police to report seeing a man urinating on the road near his residence along Horton’s Lane shortly before midnight Sunday.

Police responded and spoke with a highly intoxicated 58-year-old Laurel man who was walking nearby and helped transport him home, according to a report. No charges were filed.

• Police were called to a 7-Eleven in Cutchogue early last Tuesday after an employee reported an intoxicated woman was refusing to leave after two hours.

An officer found the intoxicated woman, who is from Cut-ch-ogue, nearby, and assisted her to a friend’s house in Riverside shortly after midnight, according to a report.

• A 53-year-old East Marion man reported receiving notice in the mail that someone used his name and information to file for unemployment benefits Friday.

Detectives are investigating a slew of similar incidents, including two more that were reported to police last week.

• An ice making machine was reported stolen from the front yard of a building along Main Street in Greenport last Monday.

According to police, a man reported placing two ice making machines to the edge of his property to load them into a truck and left them there while delivering another piece of equipment around the block.

When he returned around 2 p.m., one of the ice makers had been removed, reports said.

• Police stopped a 69-year-old Gloucester, Mass., man along Route 25 in East Marion Friday after receiving a report of a vehicle failing to maintain its lane around 7 p.m.

The man, who did not show signs of impairment, told police that he just got off the ferry and was having a hard time seeing at night and an officer gave him information for nearby hotels, according to police.

Those who are named in police reports have not been convicted of any crime or violation. The charges against them may later be reduced or withdrawn, or they may be found innocent.

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During the pandemic year, some police calls fell, others rose

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As Southold Town entered lockdown amid the coronavirus pandemic last year, some crime rates dropped off while others shot up, according to a report presented by police Chief Martin Flatley Tuesday.

Could pandemic-related impacts be to blame?

In an interview Tuesday, Mr. Flatley described 2020 as a “tough year to make heads or tails of either way,” and noted that many other agencies recorded disparities in their yearly statistics.

Overall, the chief’s report noted a 9% decrease in calls to the department in 2020 over 2019 levels and noted decreases in motor vehicle accidents and crimes like aggravated assault, which fell by 57%, sex offenses and drug-related offenses.

The statistics also showed comparatively fewer DWI arrests (41 in 2020, 63 in 2019), aided cases (1,798 from 2,028), arrests (141 from 139) and possession of controlled substances (15 from 25).

But in other categories, crime rates increased.

Reports of burglaries increased 39%, with 39 incidents reported in 2020 over 28 the previous year. 

There were also more cases of larceny (221 from 171), criminal mischief (128 from 99) and simple assault (115 from 102). Police also responded to more domestic disturbances in 2020, according to the data, which shows 92 domestic violence cases and 254 domestic disturbances in 2020, over 71 domestic violence and 221 domestic disturbances in 2019.

“A large portion of the public were out of work and spent an inordinate amount of time at home with family members, which unfortunately led to more calls for domestics,” Chief Flatley said.

As for the spike in larcenies and burglaries, the police chief said those crimes could also be related to a large number of people out of work. “With burglaries, maybe a closed business or empty building or house are just a more tempting target for criminals,” he said.

Though he was expecting the number of phone calls to the police to increase in 2020 due to an influx of second homeowners and renters, the chief said he was surprised the number was down. “I would imagine the fact that restaurants, bars, stores and a lot of other activities were canceled or closed probably naturally reduced the amount of calls for service that we normally experience during busier months,” he said.

The report also included departmental updates on staffing and accreditation.

According to Chief Flatley, the accreditation process was put on hold briefly as Sgt. Scott Latham, who had been tasked with overseeing the process, stepped in to cover for one of two sergeants out on leave.

Councilman Jim Dinizio said Tuesday that he wants to ensure that doesn’t happen again. “That fill-in has to come from somewhere else,” he said. “[Accreditation] is very important right now with everything that’s going on. We need to keep moving forward,” he said.

Chief Flatley said it’s not something he foresees happening again as two officers were promoted to sergeant in February.

The Town Board also recently hired four probationary and two seasonal police officers who are expected to join the force after completing their training in the Suffolk County Police Academy.

Currently, the department is staffed with 48 employees — four short of the recommended 52 and a number Chief Flatley would like to revisit.

He’s requested an administrative staffing study be completed by the state Department of Criminal Justice Services to determine if that number, which stems from a study done 19 years ago, should be updated.

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Southold officer punched at altercation in Greenport

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Town police responded to a report of a domestic dispute in Greenport Monday night after a woman called 911 requesting assistance.

After officers responded around 11 p.m. the caller “became uncooperative with the officers and refused to allow them to speak with the other subject in the altercation,” according to police.

At that point, “the male subject came down the stairs to confront the officers and punched one of the officers in the side of the head with a closed fist,” police said.

Thomas Hilton, 54, was arrested and taken to headquarters for arraignment. The officer, who was not identified in a press release, was transported to Stony Brook Eastern Long Island Hospital where he was treated and released, police said.

Mr. Hilton was charged with two misdemeanors: obstructing governmental administration and resisting arrest. He also faces a harassment charge, which is a violation. He was arraigned virtually Tuesday and released on his own recognizance, police said.

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Southold Blotter: Woman charged with DWI after crashing into guard rail

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Southold Town police arrested a Southold woman for driving while intoxicated after she crashed into a guard rail at Goose Creek Beach in Southold last Saturday.

Lindsay Grathwohl, 39, was charged with DWI and no injuries were reported, officials said.

• Two men were arrested on drug charges after a man reported seeing them “passed out” in a vehicle in the middle of Cox Lane in Cutchogue Sunday morning.

The driver, Melvin Palacios Lainez, 20, of Southampton, was charged with driving while impaired by drugs. A passenger, Carlos Aguilar Morales, 18, of Eastport, was arrested after he was found to be in possession of several controlled substances, police said.

• Police arrested David Amaya, 39, of Greenport, for DWI along Main Street in Greenport last Wednesday morning.

He was stopped around 10:37 a.m. and found to be intoxicated, officials said.

In addition to a DWI charge, Mr. Amaya was cited for first-degree aggravated unlicensed operation of a motor vehicle due to two other pending DWI charges, police said.

• Roy Vaselovic, 60, of Shirley, was arrested for DWI along Route 25 in Greenport last Tuesday.

Police stopped him around 9 p.m. after he was seen failing to maintain his lane of travel, determined him to be intoxicated and charged him with DWI, according to a police report.

• Police arrested a 27-year-old Mattituck man for DWI during a traffic stop along Route 25 in Cutchogue Sunday.

Reynaldo Santos-Lopez was stopped shortly before 3 a.m. for failing to maintain his lane and was found to be intoxicated, with an open container of Corona beer in his center console, officials said.

He was charged with DWI and transported to police headquarters, according to police.

• A Greenport man was cited for leaving the scene of an accident Friday night.

According to police, a man driving a 2001 Toyota pulled to the side of Second Street in Greenport to let a man in a 2001 Nissan pass. The driver of the Nissan reportedly struck the other vehicle and left the scene around 10:30 p.m., but was located nearby and issued several tickets, police said.

• Members of the Southold Fire Department responded to a generator on fire at a home on Basin Road in Southold last Thursday.

Officials were able to shut off the gas and determined that a battery malfunction caused the fire to break out.

No injuries were reported, officials said.

• A Southold woman called police Friday morning to report youths “peeling out” in a gray Jeep and white Dodge pickup truck at Goose Creek Beach, causing damage to the grass.

An officer wasn’t able to locate the vehicles but reported the damage to the town’s Department of Public Works.

• Members of the Orient Fire Department were called to a dryer fire at the Orient Inn last Tuesday morning.

The owner, a 77-year-old man, was able to put the fire out himself using a fire extinguisher. Firefighters turned the power breaker off and helped ventilate the smoke out of the building.

• A Greenport woman called police to report that someone smashed the driver’s side window on her vehicle, slashed her tires and stole license plates last Wednesday morning. The incident, which occurred on Adams Street, is under investigation.

Those who are named in police reports have not been convicted of any crime or violation. The charges against them may later be reduced or withdrawn, or they may be found innocent.

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Cops: Greenport woman arrested on driving while impaired charges after hitting cyclist

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A 20-year-old Greenport woman was charged with driving while impaired and driving out of class after she left the roadway and struck a bicyclist on Route 48 in Southold Sunday afternoon.

Southold police arrested Alexis Hubbard at the scene of the crash near Albertson Lane. A press release said Ms. Hubbard was traveling westbound when she “left the roadway, striking a bicyclist [then] accelerated forward striking another vehicle before hitting an embankment and overturning.”

The crash occurred at around 2 p.m.

“Hubbard was determined to be impaired by drugs and placed under arrest,” the release said. The bicyclist was taken to Stony Brook Medical Center via a police helicopter with what were described as non-threatening injuries.

Ms. Hubbard, who was transported to Peconic Bay Medical Center, was later released on an appearance ticket, police said.

The Greenport and Southold fire departments both responded to the crash scene.

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