Kingston02881’s Weblog


The list of stuff as published in the S C Independent
April 19, 2008, 8:31 pm
Filed under: Uncategorized

The warrant

 

 
 

South Kingstown and University police executed search warrants on the homes of Margo Caddick, 70 Cherry Road in Kingston and 108 Peninsula Road in Matunuck, as well as her cars. The following items were seized:

From Margo Caddick’s car:

Blue and white garden-type gloves

Needle pliers

Two mini-mag flashlights

A pair of latex gloves

Four sets of assorted keys

A Coleman seat belt cutter, which the police noted is commonly used by burglars to cut windows.

An orange and tan bag

A flashlight

Two D-cell batteries

Two candles

A plastic toolbox

Buyer’s Value slip joint pliers.

A LL Bean backpack

Three oranges

Four bananas

A quart of milk

Four small bags of chips.

Xbox 360

Seized from 108 Peninsula Road:

TruTech 17-inch Television/DVD combo

Polaroid 19-inch Television

Sharp 32-inch LCD Television

Sony DVD/CD 5-Disc Changer

Sony CD/DVD player

Sony Subwoofer

Sony Central Speaker

Durabrand CD/DVD combo

Coby CD/DVD combo

Sylvania DVD player

Alpine Car Stereo

Sanyo DVD/VCR

An Echo duffel bag

Nintendo 64

Three Nintendo 64 controllers

Four Nintendo 64 games: 007, Mission Impossible, Wave Race, and Mario Kart

Seized from 70 Cherry and the Caddick’s 1992 green Subaru:

Inside a white plastic crate on front outside porch, covered with tarp:

UPS packages addressed to Larry Simoneau

28 DVD/games

Five Xbox games

Inside a blue Tupperware bin on front outside porch, covered with tarp:

A black trash bag containing various knick-knacks and candles

Barious items of clothing

CVS photos, dated 5/22/02, with the name Lagasse

A photo album

Playstation II organizer

Two Klipsch speakers

Disposable camera, dated 10/2007

Conair portable hair dryer

Birth certificate and pay stubs for Christopher Lagasse

One DVD

11 assorted Playstation II games

Toshiba Television/DVD

HD Direct Television Tuner

HD Direct Television Receiver

Inside the house:

Pro-sport gym bag

Hair dryer

Copy paper

Four Hi-89 Sony Video tapes

Columbia Backpack

Toshiba laptop computer with D-ink card

Sony Cybershot digital camera

Sony Digital Handycam

Black laptop bag

Dell Inspirion 1100 laptop

Sandals

Santa’s Sweetie Halloween costume

Cobra Radar Detector with Radio Shack 3 outlet auto adapter with a pink cord

11 DVDs

Assorted Keys

HP Photosmart Printer/Scanner/Copier: C4200 series

Bag with four Zeta Beta Tau t-shirts

Four Cisco Systems Phones with University of Rhode Island suite stickers

Bushnell telescope

Tasco Galaxsee telescope

Two Magnavox televisions

Playstation II console

Silver iPod, 80 mg

Home2Go portable iPod system

Two DVDs

Mail belonging to neighbors

Bag Max backpack

Address labels with the name Joan Walters

Designer’s Guild ladies wallet with name Stephanie Palumbo

Whiting Davis purse, silver

Unopened key case

Coach ladies hand purse, light brown

Special Moments wooden picture frame, 5 x 7

Two URI long sleeve t-shirts

Vera Bradley sunglass case, empty

Kodak C330 digital camera, with user manual and CD

Trutech 20-inch T-2000 television

Sony FT ATSC flat-panel television operation manual

Five DVDs

Dell backpack

Mews giftcard for $100

Three postcards addressed to Leslie Holcroft

Pay stubs for Leslie Holcroft

Juicy Couture bag, black and green tie-dye, containing:

Sweatshirt

Silver tiara with purple and pink stones

Two GE television remotes

Silver jewelry box with harvest beads

Silver necklace and pendant with man’s picture in it

Seven DVDs

Jans-Sport backpack

Three scarves

Lady Buxton wallet with $12 in mixed antique money

Wooden handled antique dagger

Two ceramic candleholders

Four Lillian Vernon farm animal ornaments

Pewter Asian-style bowl

Plastic bag with assorted ceramic and silver collectables

JCPenney pin, shaped like the sun

Pin with flowers, labeled Florence, Italy

One placemat with seven cloth napkins

11 books and magazines

Backpack with $220 in cash and paperwork marked Heidi Kirk Duffy Center, IEP

Road Runner Guitar case with 35-foot air guns

Two plastic filing cabinet drawers with various jewelry, hair products, keys.

Link



Article from South County Independent
April 19, 2008, 8:29 pm
Filed under: Uncategorized | Tags: ,

Search warrant yields hoard of possibly stolen items

SOUTH KINGSTOWN — At the Delta Zeta sorority house near the University of Rhode Island, residents’ possessions – iPods, DVDs and clothing – were constantly disappearing.

“But there’s 30 girls, so you think someone picked it up by mistake,” said Stephanie Palumbo, a fashion merchandising major from Connecticut. “You don’t think much of it.”

Palumbo is spending this semester in Spain. When she moved out of the sorority house, she accidentally left one box behind. Her wallet was in it.

The wallet – a Designer’s Guild leather wallet with her name in it – was one of nearly 200 items removed from the homes of Margo Caddick when police executed a search warrant last month. (For a complete list of the warrant return, go to www.scindependent.com.)

The search came after Caddick, 54, of 70 Cherry Road in Kingston and 108 Peninsula Drive in Matunuck was arrested at the Sigma Delta Tau sorority house on campus March 12.

That night, sorority sisters discovered a female intruder looking into the refrigerator and woke up their housemother, Bethany Barrington, who is also a South Kingstown Police officer. Caddick told Barrington she came into the house to use the bathroom.

While the two women were talking near Caddick’s car, Barrington saw burglary tools – needle pliers, a seat belt cutter, latex gloves, two mini-mag lights and slip joint pliers; garden gloves and a mask, along with other goods – including food and an Xbox 360 – in the woman’s car. She called campus police officers, who charged Caddick with burglary, possession of burglary tools and receiving stolen goods worth less than $500.

“She was completely off the radar screen,” Major Stephen Baker of URI Police said of the suspect. “We had no prior dealings with her, nor had other local departments.”

So far, Caddick has been charged only in connection with the sorority house incident in March. But police are working to match up dozens of items found in her homes to theft reports and are planning additional charges.

Caddick’s lawyer, Lise Gescheidt, did not return a phone call asking for comment on the case.

“She did not work for the university,” Baker said. “She may have worked for the fraternity houses, independently.”

Palumbo and other students say white, middle-aged women often work as housekeepers, both at the university and within the Greek houses on Fraternity Circle and close to campus. There is enough turnover in those jobs, they said, that if they saw a middle-aged white woman they didn’t recognize wandering around their house – or even carrying items out – it might not raise suspicions.

The two departments served search warrants on Caddick’s homes, both of which are owned by trusts held by Caddick’s parents, according to town tax records, and which she shares with her elderly mother, Mildred. Her late father, Jack Caddick, was a professor of horticulture at URI.

“She appeared to have hoarded things,” said South Kingstown Police Capt. Jeffrey Allen. “The houses were both in poor condition.”

Matthew McHugh, a Caddick neighbor on Peninsula Road, said the Caddicks were a quiet family, but friendly.

“Jack was quite a collector,” McHugh said.

William Metz built his house on Cherry Road the same year Jack Caddick did.

“My mother’s family came from south of Rome, New York – Lamphere Road,” Metz said. “And Jack’s mother was also from Lamphere Road, Rome, New York.”

But despite that coincidence, Metz said, the two men worked in different departments at URI, went to different churches and had different interests.

“We were never closely acquainted,” Metz said. “But they were happy, friendly neighbors.”

Other neighbors agreed the Caddicks were quiet but friendly. They said Margo Caddick frequently walked around the neighborhood, often in search of one of her cats. Like the students, they didn’t think it strange to see her in their yards or even on their back porches.

“That’s just Margo,” many said.

But since the news of Caddick’s arrest has spread, her neighbors and students have been turning to police, detailing thefts that in many cases they had not bothered to report in the past.

Robert Andrews of 87 Conant Lane reported a large plastic penguin, valued at $1, a Movado ladies watch, valued at $350, and a silver serving set with gems inset in it, valued at $250, went missing in the past few years. He also told police that in April 2006, he found a middle-aged woman standing on his deck. The woman said she was looking for her dog.

Scott B. Newcombe of 52 Cherry Road told police a number of items were taken from his home over the past 10 months, including heirloom jewelry and tools. He also said the postal service and other delivery services had confirmed several pieces of mail and packages had been delivered but they had never arrived. Another neighbor, Norma H. O’Brien of 1637 South Road, reported that a concrete birdbath was stolen from her yard three years ago. Cynthia T. Smyth of 210 Weathervane Road reported a metal cat statue was missing.

Police are still working to match up items seized from the homes with their rightful owners. They are also following up on old larceny reports – and talking to neighbors – to compile a list of other missing items.

Some objects seized during the search have been positively identified.

Maryann Killilea of 1615 South Road identified a silver, blue and green necklace. Nikki Gates of 15 Thistledown Lane recognized her three-diamond ring, an emerald ring and two sets of diamond stud earrings. Susan Axelrod of 1621 South Road recognized a diamond turquoise ring, a blue sapphire ring, a gold diamond and opal ring, a gold bracelet, a silver and purple bracelet, a sterling silver pin with purple stones, a set of silver heart earrings and keys. Taryn Garshofsky of 18 Fraternity Circle identified a 17-inch flat-screen television. Amy Dahan of Potomac, Md., a university student, identified a Sharp 29-inch flat-screen television she had reported stolen on Jan. 22.

Allen said the police departments continue to investigate and more charges against Caddick will be forthcoming. After her arrest, Caddick was required to undergo a mental health screening, according to court records. She is free on bail. LINK



April 7, 2008
April 7, 2008, 9:06 pm
Filed under: Uncategorized

Hi Heather! Thanks for writing- I am at the same frustrated point as you are- maybe we should go together to talk to Detective Wheatley? If anyone else is reading this and wants to go try to get some answers, please reply in comments and maybe we can try to meet up and find out what is going on. It just seems that there definitely were cats – lots of cats- there, back when the police first went to that house, and now the police are trying to change that story. I think we deserve to know what happened and why she was given so much notice ahead of the warrant, why she has had all this time to do who knows what to hide what she has done, and we, as the victims, have been offered no answers and no chance to get our pets back.

Heather, you are so right- she did have my property, I certainly did not give it to her, and heck yes that is stealing. I felt so sick when they came around the corner with those buckets- of course I had known that they hadn’t just sprouted legs and walked, but the realization that a neighbor had come to my home and taken them gave me the chills. It’s not just us, either, there are other people all over this neighborhood whose homes were violated and whose pets went missing. It is a shocking thing and the police just don’t seem to be letting us know what is going on.

Maybe it’s time to call or write to the Narragansett Times, South County Independent, the ProJo, and channels 6, 10, and 12?

If a few of us get together, we might make more of an impact!

 



April 2nd
April 3, 2008, 12:29 am
Filed under: Uncategorized

I really wonder how the court date went- does anyone know?



No new real news but
April 2, 2008, 1:29 am
Filed under: Uncategorized

Late last night a lovely little brown and grey stripey cat came up to my porch- he didn’t come on the porch but he came quite close and gave me a quizzical look. He was a little damp (of course!) but looked happy and glossy- it just made me wonder where he came from, I’ve never seen that cat before. He’s not the cat with the bell, he (or she!) looked about 3, and very sweet. I guess I’m just worried now that every cat I see has been released by her.