The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)

Milk bottle may have been marker for £4k raid on Dundee home

CRIME: Family’s distress as jewellery and christenin­g presents stolen

- GRAHAM BROWN gbrown@thecourier.co.uk

Thieves may have marked out a target house with a bottle of milk before ransacking it in a cruel £4,000 daytime raid.

The culprits smashed their way in through a lounge window at the property in Mayfield Grove, Dundee, on Monday after failed attempts to force open a door to the house some time between 7.45am and 5pm.

Jewellery with sentimenta­l value, including an engraved christenin­g cup belonging to the family’s two-year-old son, was taken.

The victims, a couple in their 30s who did not wish to be named, say they have been left sad and angry by the theft.

The break-in was discovered by the female householde­r when she returned from work at around 5.30pm.

Her husband said: “My wife came through the garage and the first thing she saw were big muddy footprints.

“They had tried to get in through the utility but didn’t manage that and then used an ornamental rabbit to smash the lounge window.

“They’ve done a real job on it, going

“Those are keepsakes that are important to us but maybe not of huge value for people trying to get rid of them. HOMEOWNER

into every room, including our son’s – who knows what they expected to find in a two-year-old’s bedroom.”

He revealed the milk bottle theory emerged by chance.

“A friend of my wife’s came round to offer her moral support and brought a full bottle of milk in from the front door, thinking it was ours and just hadn’t been picked up.

“It was a glass bottle with a foil top but we don’t get milk delivered and when we mentioned that to the police they said it may have been put there to indicate which house should be done.”

The family have connection­s to the Channel Islands and jewellery by the area’s well-known silversmit­h Bruce Russell was taken.

“It is quite distinctiv­e jewellery and hallmarked from there and my wife also had a pair of earrings taken which were her grandmothe­r’s, so obviously they are also of sentimenta­l value.

“They’ve also taken quite a lot of our son’s christenin­g presents, including an engraved silver cup given to him by his grandparen­ts and a keyring made with an imprint of his foot.

“Those are keepsakes that are important to us but maybe not of huge value for people trying to get rid of them.”

He added: “The police were great, the forensics couldn’t have been more thorough. You just have to deal with something like this but it’s obviously upsetting.”

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