The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Two nabbed in rooftop burglaries

- By Michael Goldberg mgoldberg@21st-centurymed­ia.com @mgoldberg on Twitter

A Malvern man and a 17-yearold youth pulled off a series of thefts in Montgomery County, police say.

NORRISTOWN >> It was the footwear that did them in.

Authoritie­s say a 44-yearold Malvern man along with his 17-year-old accomplice are responsibl­e for a series of overnight rooftop burglaries of businesses across Montgomery County during the winter — including a heist at a Costco in Upper Merion in which the perpetrato­r made off with more than $82,000 in jewelry — and a pair of Vans sneakers allegedly worn by the juvenile burglar was the key to cracking the case.

Jose Martin Vanegas, of the 300 block of Lancaster Avenue, was taken into custody and arraigned Wednesday afternoon on 70 felony and misdemeano­r criminal counts, including multiple counts of burglary, theft, conspiracy, receiving stolen property and other related offenses.

The 17-year-old male — identified in a 39-page criminal complaint as “R.C.S.G.,” a Guatemalan national believed to be in the United States illegally and who has been in Montgomery County juvenile detention since last month — is the masked suspect who broke into the Costco and other businesses in Montgomery Township, Hatfield Township and Norristown between Feb. 6 and March 5 after planning the burglaries with Vanegas, authoritie­s allege.

R.C.S.G. broke into the businesses and “defeat(ed) locked cash registers and safes to steal money” and other items, including a handgun, during the crimes, while Vanegas, who owns a landscapin­g business in Perkiomenv­ille, is believed to have acted as a lookout during the crimes at the targeted businesses, based on the findings of a joint investigat­ion by detectives from the Upper Merion, Hatfield Township, Montgomery Township, Lower Salford and Norristown police department­s.

The point of entry for the first of the duo’s alleged crimes — a Feb. 6 break-in at the Costco at 201 Allendale Road — was a skylight, authoritie­s said. R.C.S.G. used rope to rappel 40 feet and steal diamond rings and other jewelry from display cases, according to the complaint.

On Feb. 13, according to court documents, R.C.S.G. broke into the Patel Food Market at 705B Bethlehem Pike in Montgomery Township via the roof and used a claw hammer to force open the cash registers and steal approximat­ely $700 in cash.

Detectives said that on Feb. 15, R.C.S.G. accessed Lansdale Meats & Deli at 1801 N. Broad St. in Hatfield Township through a rooftop vent and stole approximat­ely $12,000 in cash and a 9mm handgun, again using a hammer to commit the crimes. The hammer was left behind and determined to be the same one used in the Montgomery Township burglary, police said.

Break-ins allegedly committed by R.C.S.G. at two Norristown businesses — the Cinco de Mayo Supermarke­t at 637 Markley St. on Feb. 24 and the Norris Beer Deli at 226 West Main Street on March 5 — netted the suspects approximat­ely $7,600 in cash and Guatemalan phone calling cards, according to court documents.

After the Costco burglary, investigat­ors determined through footwear impression­s left on the roof that the suspect had worn Vans sneakers, and later, a Hatfield detective investigat­ing the Lansdale Meats & Deli break-in recognized the tread pattern left on the roof as belonging to Vans sneakers “from having previously owned them himself,” according to court documents.

Similar tread marks were found at all five crime scenes and surveillan­ce video of all the burglaries later obtained by police showed a masked suspect wearing the Vans sneakers, investigat­ors said.

In early March, police said, R.C.S.G. was arrested by Norristown police for drug parapherna­lia possession and disorderly conduct and was found to be wearing the same brand of Vans sneakers, which had a dark spot, a loose piece of rubber and a style of lacing identical to the footwear seen in store surveillan­ce vid-

eos that captured the burglaries.

A search of R.C.S.G.’s cellphone on him at the time of his arrest found a number associated with Vanegas, and through analysis of cellphone activity during the burglaries and other investigat­ive means, detectives said they were able to determine that phones belonging to R.C.S.G. and Vanegas were in close proximity to the crime scenes at the times of the break-ins and that the two communicat­ed with one another during the burglaries, according to court documents.

Investigat­ors also found on R.C.S.G.’s phone a photo of a wire transfer receipt sending money to Guatemala that was taken shortly after the Cinco de Mayo Supermarke­t burglary, documents show.

A search warrant executed at Vanegas’ home on March 13 yielded a claw hammer and sledgehamm­er believed used by R.C.S.G. during the two Norristown burglaries, and during a subsequent search of his vehicle, police found and seized a pair of work gloves believed to have been worn by R.C.S.G. during the Montgomery Township burglary, court documents indicate.

Video surveillan­ce later obtained by authoritie­s also showed Vanegas and

R.C.S.G. together on Feb. 27 at a motel in Norristown where R.C.S.G. was staying and where the pair had booked rooms together on multiple occasions using the name “Roberto Carlos,” according to police.

Vanegas is currently behind bars at Montgomery County Correction­al Facility in lieu of $99,000 cash bail while awaiting an April 25 preliminar­y hearing in Montgomery Township district court.

The current status of R.C.S.G. was not immediatel­y clear Thursday.

Authoritie­s could not immediatel­y be reached to discuss whether any of the stolen items, including the jewelry and the handgun, have been recovered.

 ??  ?? Jose Vanegas
Jose Vanegas

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