The Day

WALMART THEFT PROMPTS MANHUNT

- — Lindsay Boyle

with disorderly conduct and first-degree criminal trespass.

Giddel Falcon, 38, of 41 Rogers St., second floor, was charged Wednesday with second-degree reckless endangerme­nt, second-degree breach of peace and interferin­g with an officer.

Neftali Rodriguez-Hernandez, 23, of 237 Third Ave. was charged Tuesday with third-degree assault and breach of peace.

Catherine Mejia, 19, of 27 Michael Road, Apt. E, was charged Tuesday with third-degree assault and breach of peace.

William M. Thomas, 63, of 20 Colman St., Apt. 4, was charged Tuesday with second-degree assault and second-degree threatenin­g.

Dannielle Krams, 27, of 313 Shewville Road, Ledyard, was charged Tuesday with second-degree failure to appear in court.

Nathaniel Johnson, 35, of 45 Connecticu­t Ave., first floor, was charged Tuesday with driving with a suspended license and failure to obey a traffic control signal.

Norwich

Waterford — A New Haven man on Thursday afternoon turned himself in to police after leading multiple law enforcemen­t agencies on a pursuit Wednesday evening, according to Lt. Steve Bellos.

Daniel Scott Hosler, 42, of New Haven was charged with sixth-degree larceny, reckless driving, failure to obey the signal of an officer, third-degree criminal mischief and second-degree criminal trespass.

Bellos said the ordeal began about 5:45 p.m., when a man stole a computer from the Walmart at 155 Parkway North and then fled in a vehicle.

An officer attempted to stop the vehicle, but its driver took off, Bellos said. Officers didn’t get close enough to pursue the car, but alerted other department­s to what was going on.

Not long afterward, law enforcemen­t personnel driving past Exit 80 of Interstate 95 south, or the Oil Mill Road exit, noticed a cloud of dirt and smoke toward the bottom. When an officer behind them took the exit to see what had happened, the officer found a wrecked vehicle that was still running. No one was inside, Bellos said. At that point, Waterford police called in K-9s to assist with tracking the suspect and worked with East Lyme and state police to set up a perimeter.

Unable to find the man after an extensive search, police about 8:30 p.m. called it off.

Bellos said police identified Hosler through a combinatio­n of informatio­n from a previous arrest in South Carolina and surveillan­ce video footage from Walmart.

Hosler called police Thursday morning to inquire about his vehicle and, according to Bellos, admitted what he did. Bellos said he came to the station about 1 p.m. Thursday to give a statement and be processed.

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