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$16,000 in Electronics Stolen from Hinsdale Central

A juvenile felony cocaine possession arrest is also among recent crimes reported by the Hinsdale Police Department.

 

Theft—An unknown suspect stole $16,122.34 worth of Shure wireless microphone systems from Hinsdale Central High School between June 9 and Aug. 15, according to an employee’s report to the Hinsdale Police Department, and the department has several leads it's currently following.

According to Deputy Hinsdale Police Chief Kevin Simpson, the 12 microphone systems had been delivered to the school at the end of last school year and the boxes they were in were left in a locked booth at the school's auditorium. 

"When [school staff] returned on August 15, the items were missing," Simpson said.

There were renovations going on in the auditorium over the summer, according to Simpson, and the department is currently determining what those renovations were and who was in the auditorium during the above time period.

Hinsdale Central Principal Mike McGrory said he had no comment because of the ongoing investigation. 

The theft was reported to police on Sept. 6.

Possession of a controlled substance—A 17-year-old female juvenile from Clarendon Hills was found to be in possession of cocaine during a traffic stop on Ogden Avenue near Route 83 at 10:33 p.m. on Sept. 7.

Deputy Chief Simpson said the cocaine was found in the juvenile's purse after officers found tobacco in the possession of the underage suspect and performed a consented search. 

The suspect was originally stopped by Hinsdale Police for improper lane usage and driving with an expired registration. She was charged with felony possession of a controlled substance in addition to the two traffic offenses and transported to DuPage County Jail.

Fraud—A male victim from the 10 block of Glendale Road reported to Hinsdale Police that an unknown person used the victim's bank accounts to make $679 worth of unauthorized payments to creditors and utilities between Aug. 22 and Sept. 1.

According to police, the case is pending.

Criminal damage to vehicle—A 15-year-old male juvenile from Hinsdale was charged with criminal damage to a motor vehicle after he allegedly hit with an unknown object the driver’s door of a car while the car was heading southbound in the 300 block of South Lincoln Street between 10:45 a.m. and 11:15 a.m. Sept. 10.

The object left a dent six inches below the male victim’s driver’s-side window, according to Hinsdale police, and the cost of damage was unknown at the time of the report.

Theft—An unknown suspect stole a $600 black and gray mountain bike at the Highlands Train Depot between Sept. 5 and Sept. 8, according to police.

The bike was locked but unattended.

Patch reports on law enforcement activity in our towns, using information provided by official agencies. Persons charged with a crime, or issued a citation for violation of a local ordinance, are presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law. If you or a family member are charged with a crime or cited for a violation, and the charge or citation is subsequently adjudicated, we encourage you to notify the editor of this Patch site by emailing joe.odonnell@patch.com and we will do follow-up reporting on the case.

Related Topics: Hinsdale Central High School, Hinsdale Police, and Theft

Will Sperling

9:10 am on Sunday, September 18, 2011

Regarding the incident at Hinsdale Central High School where $16K of audio equipment is reported missing, one of your daily bulletins lists this incident as a "robbery." That is totally incorrect. A robbery is a violent incident where item(s) are taken by threat of force or violence from a person. The theft at best would be a felony burglary to the school. Unless you discover that the items were taken by person or person(s) who used a weapon or threat of force physically from someone at the school, it shouldn't be reported as a "robbery." Illinois Criminal Code, 720 ILCS 5/18‑1 lists robbery as, "A person commits robbery when he or she takes property, except a motor vehicle covered by Section 18‑3 or 18‑4, from the person or presence of another by the use of force or by threatening the imminent use of force."

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Joe O'Donnell

9:43 am on Monday, September 19, 2011

Thanks for the comment, Will. My mistake. I appreciate your input and will make the correction from "robbery" to "theft."

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