Wednesday, April 18, 2012

Park Clean-Up REMINDER

Just a reminder that our park clean-up is this upcoming Saturday April 21st from 9am- 12pm. Please come help your community and neighbors clean up the park.



Dorchester Park has joined the Great Brookhaven Cleanup!

Last year over 5,000 residents joined together to make The Great Brookhaven Cleanup the greatest single cleanup in
Brookhaven history. Please come help your community clean-up Dorchester Park. Gloves and garbage bags will be provided by the town of Brookhaven.

Please bring your own rakes and pruning sheers. We will be raking, bagging, general clean-up and cutting back some overgrown brush as we feel necessary.

Girl Scouts and Boy Scout Troops will be also in attendance. Any help is appreciated...even if you come for a half hour or so to help rake/bag or help the kids do so...

Hope to see you there!

Thank you for caring about our community!

Your Neighborhood Watch Captain

Wednesday, April 11, 2012

Two (2) New Signs

We will be getting two (2) new signs that states the name of our community park, Dorchester Park. Only took two (2) years, but I got them! Councilwoman Walsh is to thank. I am being told that they will be installed tomorrow April 12th.

I will continue to press the town and councilwoman for further improvements to this park until it happens.

**Also, as a reminder, please continue to close the gates when small children/toddlers are in the park. The gates are ultimately for their safety against the speeding cars and cars that blow thru the STOP sign on Sycamore Ave.**

I hope everyone has a wonderful holiday. Happy Spring!

Your Neighborhood Watch Captain

Friday, March 23, 2012

Great Brookhaven Clean Up - April 21st 9am- 12pm

Dorchester Park has joined the Great Brookhaven Cleanup!

Last year over 5,000 residents joined together to make The Great Brookhaven Cleanup the greatest single cleanup in
Brookhaven history. Please come help your community clean-up Dorchester Park. Gloves and garbage bags will be provided by the town of Brookhaven.

Please bring your own rakes and pruning sheers. We will be raking, bagging, general clean-up and cutting back some overgrown brush as we feel necessary.

Girl Scouts and Boy Scout Troops will be also in attendance. Any help is appreciated.

Hope to see you there!

Your Neighborhood Watch Captain


Tuesday, March 13, 2012

Article about Heroin in our area- SachemPatch

Locals Nabbed in Heroin Sting Operation

Law enforcement officials apprehend residents from Farmingville, Blue Point and West Islip following nine-month investigation.

Several area residents were indicted Tuesday as part of an effort by federal and local law enforcement officials to end a heroin distribution ring that stretched from Queens to Suffolk County.

According to the U.S. Attorney for the Eastern District of New York, those indicted included Tina Catrini (alias Tina Bonghi), 29, of Farmingville; Matthew Catrini, 24, of Farmingville; Josephine (Josephina) Javis, 50, of West Islip; Ronald (Pops) Stern, 68, of Blue Point; and Corey Stern, 37, of Blue Point.

The five local residents were among 20 members of the Perez Organization who were indicted, law enforcement officials said, noting the organization is an alleged drug trafficking ring with conspiracy to distribute heroin. The defendants were arrested on Tuesday and were arraigned before United States Magistrate Judge Gary R. Brown at the United States Courthouse in Central Islip.

“The charges and arrests announced today have ended the activities of an alleged heroin distribution organization whose members were drawn from a variety of backgrounds but were united by common cause — profiting personally while seriously endangering the lives of so many residents in our communities,” said Loretta E. Lynch, the U.S. Attorney for the Eastern District of New York.

“As alleged in the indictment, the Perez Organization was responsible for a significant portion of the heroin distributed on Long Island,” said Janice K. Fedarcyk, FBI Assistant Director in Charge. “Heroin use among suburban teens is alarmingly popular, and today’s heroin is more potent and less expensive than ever. A potentially lethal dose can be purchased for about the cost of a pack of cigarettes or a six-pack of beer."

According to the indictment and a detention letter filed by the government, the organization’s leadership was centralized in Woodhaven, Queens, with distribution networks in Nassau and Suffolk counties and a storage facility in Brooklyn. The organization’s members were allegedly responsible for distributing more than 20 kilograms of heroin, with a street value of at least $2.75 million, to drug dealers in Long Island and Queens during the past nine months.

During the course of the investigation, law enforcement agents monitored hundreds of hours of court-ordered wiretaps, which documented numerous purchases and sales of heroin by the defendants, and conducted numerous controlled purchases of heroin, the U.S. Attorney’s office said.

During the investigation, more than 5,400 individual doses of heroin were recovered from members of the Perez Organization, which were otherwise destined to reach the streets of local communities. The agents also executed search warrants at four heroin storage locations in Queens, Brooklyn, and Roosevelt, New York, resulting in the seizure of, among other things, heroin with a street value of more than $30,000 and thousands of dollars in cash, law enforcement officials said.

The indictment and arrests are the product of a nine-month joint investigation (“Operation County Connection”) by the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) and Nassau County Police Department (NCPD), with assistance from the Suffolk County Police Department, the New York City Police Department, and the U.S. Marshals Service, Eastern District of New York. The investigation was initiated, in part, in response to the increased rate of heroin use on Long Island.

Related Topics: Blue Point residents arrested for heroin sale, Farmingville residents arrested for herion sale, Heroin Bust Suffolk County, U.S Attorney's Office Eastern District New York, West Islip resident arrested for heroin sale, and herion

Thursday, February 2, 2012

Sachem Patch Article - PLEASE READ & BE AWARE!

Men Wanted for Harassing 14-Year Old Girl in Lake Grove

During November incident, men yelled at girl to get in car near bus stop.

Suffolk County Police is seeking the public’s help to identify and locate the men who harassed a 14-year-old girl as she walked from a school bus stop in Lake Grove.

On Thursday Nov. 17, 2011 at approximately 5:00 p.m. two unknown males driving a dark-colored four-door Toyota Camry followed a 14-year-old female from a school bus stop at the intersection of Middle Country Road and Dietz Avenue in Lake Grove.

According to police, the men yelled at the girl to get into their car. The female ran from the scene and hid behind a nearby home while the two unknown males circled the area in the vehicle in an attempt to locate her.

The driver of the Toyota Camry is described as a white male, approximately 43 years old, 6’0”, 160 pounds. The passenger in the car (depicted in the sketch) is described as a light-skinned Hispanic male with black hair, approximately 37 years old, 5’8”, 180 pounds, with a Dominican language accent.

Suffolk County Crime Stoppers offers a cash reward of up to $5,000 for information that leads to an arrest. Anyone with information about this crime is asked to call Crime Stoppers anonymously at 1-800-220-TIPS. All calls will be kept confidential.

Related Topics: Chris R. Vaccaro, Harassment, Lake Grove, and Suffolk County Police