Woman sought in local crime spree
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Sue Doyle
NEWPORT BEACH -- Police, with bloodhounds by their side, conducted
a manhunt Friday for a woman who went on a crime spree, allegedly
stealing a white BMW in Corona del Mar and stuffing it with items she
reportedly ripped off from unlocked garages that morning.
Although authorities pulled out all the stops to find the woman, she
remained at large late Friday.
The woman was described as being in her early 20s or late teens, about
5 feet, 6 inches tall, weighing about 130 pounds with blond hair. Police
believe she may be from the Newport-Mesa area.
The incident put a scare into some residents in the Dover Shores
neighborhood as police scoured the area around Highland Street and Marian
Lane on foot, on bicycles, in a helicopter and with bloodhounds, but came
up empty handed.
Janet Payne caught a glimpse of the excitement from her window when
she saw authorities pointing guns at her neighbor’s garage. She was
relieved to hear that nobody was hurt during the burglaries.
But the rash of thefts made Payne question her neighborhood’s safety.
“We live at such a comfort level in this neighborhood and leave the
doors unlocked sometimes,” she said. “This makes you think twice about
things.”
The Newport Beach Police Department learned of the crimes at about
4:20 a.m., when they received a call about the car stolen from Blue Water
Drive.
A few minutes later, a woman was reportedly seen at the Baywood
Apartments swapping license plates with another BMW in the complex, said
Newport Beach Police Sgt. Mike McDermott.
Things remained quiet until 8 a.m., when authorities said they
received a string of complaints about a woman who was entering unlocked
garages around Blue Gum Lane and Dover Drive.
In one instance, a resident questioned the suspicious woman, who
replied that she was only looking for her car, police said.
The woman was getting into unlocked cars and taking items, such as
cellular phones and some clothing, McDermott said.
She piled up some of her stolen goods alongside one house, but never
returned for them after she realized authorities were after her,
McDermott said. Authorities located the stolen BMW still parked in the
neighborhood. The automobile had to be dusted for fingerprints before it
could be returned to the owner, police said.
Bloodhounds traced the woman’s scent around Polaris Beach, then down
toward Coast Highway and Dover Drive. Dogs pulled authorities up one side
and down the other of the hilly terrain at Castaways Park. Police
eventually made the dogs stop the search and said the windy conditions
scattered the woman’s scent around the bluffs, making it difficult to
trace.
Late Friday, police still were unsure of the dollar amount the woman
was able to steal.
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