Reports from county or village police, May 9-15

Bellmore

A laptop computer was stolen May 11 from a vehicle parked in a shopping center lot on Merrick Road.

East Farmingdale

Vehicle license plates were discovered stolen from J & R Automotive on Verdi Street on May 11.

East Meadow

A Hudson Street residence was broken into May 12. Robbers entered through a partially open kitchen window, and stole cash.

Hicksville

An automobile's window was damaged while the vehicle was parked at Broadway Mall on May 10.

A GPS unit was discovered stolen from a vehicle parked at Broadway Mall on May 11.

An automobile's window was discovered damaged May 11 while the vehicle was parked on Oak Street.

Forty bras were stolen from Victoria's Secret at the Broadway Mall on May 15.

Jericho

Golf clubs were discovered stolen May 11 from a vehicle parked on South Marginal Drive.

MASSAPEQUA

A Hicksville man, 19, was arrested May 4 for grand larceny, fourth degree. He is charged with taking an iPod from a man on Broadway. When police stopped the suspect in front of the Massapequa Public Library on Central Avenue, he was handcuffed, but broke free. He was apprehended again about two blocks away.

A TV was discovered stolen May 9 from a room at Budget Inn on Carman Mill Road.

Two Seaford males, 16 and 20, were arrested May 10 on charges of making graffiti at Riverside Drive and Brooklyn Avenue.

Electrical equipment valued at $600 was stolen outside a residence on McKinley Avenue on May 13.

A catalytic converter and oxygen sensor were stolen May 14 from a vehicle parked in a Long Island Rail Road lot at Sunrise Highway and Broadway.

Oceanside

A skylight at Oceanside School on Terrell Avenue was found broken May 15.

Wires were cut May 12 to the time stamp machine at the Town of Hempstead Department of Sanitation on Beach Road.

On May 12, two people broke the side door at Oceanside Quick Stop on Long Beach Road and stole scratch-off lottery tickets valued at $15,000 on May 12.

Uniondale

Copper piping, a water meter and replacement windows were discovered stolen May 9 from a vacant home on Southern Parkway.

A laptop and a printer were discovered stolen from a Maple Avenue residence May 10. An air-conditioning unit was removed to gain entry.

Wantagh

A concrete lion lawn statue was stolen from a residential front yard on Wantagh Avenue on May 15.

Woodbury

Nine handbags were discovered stolen May 12 from a Colgate Lane location.

An automobile parked on Crossways Park Drive West was scratched May 14.

ELSEWHERE

Bay Park

A PlayStation video-game system,

a DVD player, a flat-screen TV and a GPS unit were stolen from a boat at a Cooke Street location May 10.

Dix Hills

Two men smashed the window of a 2005 Toyota on Peppermill Lane May 10.

East Rockaway

A Seiko watch and a cell phone charger were stolen from a vehicle parked on Centre Avenue on May 12.

Elmont

Two people stole a laptop computer, an iPod, a PlayStation 2 video game console, a suitcase, a briefcase and liquor from a residence on Carnegie Avenue on May 11. Entry was gained through a side door.

Hewlett

A spool of copper wire valued at $49,000 was stolen from the LIPA/National Grid property on Mill Road on May 14.

Huntington

Driveway lighting fixtures at a Huntington Bay Road house were damaged May 9.

Huntington Station

Women's tops were stolen from the Banana Republic in Walt Whitman Mall May 9.

Long Beach

A Hempstead woman, 20, was arrested May 13 and charged with third-degree assault for an incident that occurred April 3.

North Valley Stream

Two thousand dollars was stolen from an Essex Place residence May 12. Entry was gained through an open front window.

Valley Stream

About $30 in coins were stolen from a residence on Princeton Street on May 10. Entry was gained through a basement window.

A dashboard radio was stolen from a 1993 Honda parked in the Green Acres Mall parking lot on May 12.

Four tires and rims were stolen May 12 from a 2005 Infiniti parked in a municipal lot on Hendrickson Avenue.

Compiled by Mary Beth Foley

and Sabrina Monroe

NewsdayTV's Doug Geed visits two wineries and a fish market, and then it's time for holiday cheer, with a visit to a bakery and poinsettia greenhouses. Credit: Randee Dadonna

Out East with Doug Geed: Wine harvests, a fish market, baked treats and poinsettias NewsdayTV's Doug Geed visits two wineries and a fish market, and then it's time for holiday cheer, with a visit to a bakery and poinsettia greenhouses.

NewsdayTV's Doug Geed visits two wineries and a fish market, and then it's time for holiday cheer, with a visit to a bakery and poinsettia greenhouses. Credit: Randee Dadonna

Out East with Doug Geed: Wine harvests, a fish market, baked treats and poinsettias NewsdayTV's Doug Geed visits two wineries and a fish market, and then it's time for holiday cheer, with a visit to a bakery and poinsettia greenhouses.

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