Great Pizza . . . And Now Throwing Stars, Too
The elusive Ninja Burglar turns out to be up to three Albanians:
Posted: April 23rd, 2008 | Filed under: Law & Order, Staten IslandThe NYPD has quietly closed the book on Staten Island’s so-called Ninja Burglar case, after authorities started deportation proceedings against at least one Albanian man they believe to be connected to the string of break-ins, police sources told the Advance.
About a week and a half ago, the police department dismantled the investigative team hunting for the serial burglar, those sources said.
“The investigation is dormant, with no new leads,” Paul Browne, the NYPD’s deputy commissioner for public information, confirmed to the Advance yesterday afternoon. “Investigators believe that an individual suspected [but with insufficient evidence to make an arrest] of being the burglar is among three Albanian nationals currently facing deportation because of their illegal status in the United States.”
Browne did not name the three Albanian nationals.
The Advance broke the story on its Web site, silive.com, yesterday afternoon.
Police had linked the “Ninja Burglar” — who received the nickname from the media after a Dongan Hills man reported fighting off a nunchuk-wielding intruder in a ninja costume last September — to 19 separate break-ins, mainly in the Todt Hill and Grymes Hill neighborhoods, between May 2007 and January of this year.
Multiple law-enforcement sources close to the investigation told the Advance that investigators were first clued into a possible Albanian connection to the burglary pattern last fall, when they learned that several Albanian men from the same area in neighboring Macedonia had formed a loosely knit crew to commit burglaries.
In some instances, they would wait for the other members of their Albanian community to go out to cultural events, then strike their vacant homes, the sources said.
. . .
. . . [S]ources said, two other members of the group were believed responsible for several of the break-ins in the Ninja Burglar case, but were never charged.
With their forensic and investigative leads exhausted, police contacted federal immigration officials, who started deportation proceedings against several members of the group last month, according to police sources.