Some of the roughly 30,000 items discovered after 39-year-old burglary suspect John Suddard's recent arrest.(Photo: Derek Pruitt)
For five years, someone prowled rural counties in upstate New York,
pilfering pearl necklaces, gold chains, bracelets, coins, silverware and
other valuables from an untold number of homes.
Now authorities
face the daunting task of finding owners of the roughly 30,000 items
discovered in 31 duffel bags after John Suddard's recent arrest. So
police in the village of Hudson Falls, near the Vermont border, are
taking the novel step of displaying the items at the local high school
on Wednesday night.
Burglary victims will be invited in, and an
officer will escort them around tables set up in the cafeteria to see if
any of the items are theirs.
"I'm hoping," said Francesco
Venturiello, whose Schenectady home was burglarized in May. He lost cash
and roughly $75,000 worth his wife's jewelry, including irreplaceable
pieces bought in Italy. "I swear to God, if we find anything in there,
I'm going to have to call an ambulance. My wife will faint."
Suddard,
who has served three prisons terms for burglary since he was 19, was
arrested Dec. 21 as he attempted to pawn jewelry and coins at an
Albany-area coin shop stolen the day before an hour north in Hudson
Falls. He is being held in jail without bail on charges of possessing
stolen property. It wasn't clear whether Suddard had a lawyer.
Suddard, 39, declined a phone interview from jail.
Hudson
Falls Police Chief Randy Diamond said items recovered so far link
Suddard to 24 burglaries, though there could be many more.
Police
say the burglar's method of operation was basic: Wait until people leave
their house, break in and search for cash and jewelry. He worked mostly
in colder months, when the sun sets earlier. He struck whether the
homeowners were gone for weeks or minutes. He kept burglar's tools and a
camouflage ski mask in his car, police said.
"Seldom did he
actually encounter anybody in the house," Washington County Undersheriff
John Winchell said. "There were a couple of times when he was spooked -
people showed up and he had to run out the back door. ... Generally,
his crimes went unnoticed for days."
The suspect pretty much stole
"anything somebody would throw in their jewelry box," Winchell said,
and then some. Along with jewelry, police found cash, coins, a handgun
and game tokens.
"One of the bags I went through actually had an adult molar," Winchell said, "right down to the roots."
The duffel bags were found on the property of Suddard's brother-in-law, who is cooperating with the investigation.
Police
believe most of the items were stolen since his last release from
prison in 2007. He operated mostly in the cluster of three counties
around Hudson Falls, though it's not clear how far Suddard traveled. He
also spent some time in other Northeastern states and in Florida.
Diamond
said it appears that Suddard pawned the most expensive items and may
have held on to the remaining booty to sell later. Of the items
recovered, a small number have inscriptions linking them to victims.
The
display at Hudson Falls High School on Wednesday is for the items that
can't be identified. The viewing is restricted to people who reported a
burglary and have a police report. Victims will not be allowed to take
identified items home just yet, because they are still potential
evidence.
Diamond said the department has been inundated with
calls from as far away as New Jersey and New Hampshire, some from
callers missing cars, boats and other items clearly not involved in this
case. With interest so heavy, police plan to do at least one more
display after Wednesday.
"We've caught this guy; we need to link him to what we can and return the property that we can," Diamond said.
Associated Press