
20 minute read
In ongoing beef, man doused at grill; ‘free massage’ prank rubbed out
Thursday, May 11
8:18 a.m. An officer was dispatched to Green Street to investigate a report of a group of painters threatening one of the neighbors. Upon his arrival, he was met by a man who explained that when he pulled into his driveway, there was a painter’s truck parked in the parking lot. The man said that he asked the painters to move the vehicle into another spot, which made them angry and caused them to shout an expletive at him. The officer then walked down the driveway and was met by the owner of the painting company, who said that when the painters arrived, the man had come outside and started yelling at him and his crew. The company owner said he tried to explain to the man that the owner of the building as well as the tenant who has the rights to the parking spot had given them permission to park in the spot, but the man kept yelling at them to move. The painting company owner acknowledged that he had directed unkind words (though different ones) at the man before walking off. The officer advised both parties to keep their distance from each other, and the man was satisfied that the officer had spoken with the painting crew and understood that they were allowed to park where they were.
9:27 a.m. An officer spoke by phone with a man who had been notified by the Department of Revenue and then the CFO of his company that someone had been using his personal information to collect unemployment benefits. The man said that had already been in contact with the unemployment office. The officer advised the man to monitor his bank accounts closely and to report any additional fraudulent activity and to contact one of the three major credit bureaus and place a fraud alert on his credit. The officer then provided the man with the information for reporting identity theft to the FTC.
10:09 a.m. A Beacon Street resident reported having received annoying phone calls.
2:39 p.m. An officer investigated a report of larceny, forgery or fraud on Fox Run Lane.
4:26 p.m. An officer investigated a report of suspicious activity on Front Street.
8:13 p.m. An officer investigated a report of vandalism on Gingerbread Hill Road.
Friday, May 12
7:59 a.m. An officer was sent to the area of the Glover School to investigate a complaint about someone placing traffic cones on the public roadway, which the town had not approved. The officer confirmed the existence of the cones and assisted the man who had placed them there with removing them. According to the officer’s report, the man did not specify why he had put the cones in the roadway, but he did request the officer’s name and take note of his badge number. The officer explained that he had been told by the officer-in-charge to remove the traffic cones, and the man asked for the name of the OIC as well. The officer wrote that he told the man to have a good day and went on his way.
9:35 a.m. An officer spoke by phone with a man who had been informed by his employer that someone had filed for unemployment benefits using his personal information. The officer advised the man to report the fraud to the state unemployment office and to monitor his bank accounts closely and to contact the major credit bureaus to have them place a fraud alert on his credit. The officer then provided the man with the information for reporting identity theft to the FTC.
11:39 a.m. An officer spoke in the police station with a man who believed that his roommate and his roommate’s girlfriend had stolen a Roku WiFi Fire stick and laptop charger from the living room of their apartment, which belonged to his girlfriend. The girlfriend of the man in the station had sent a Facebook message to the roommate, and he denied taking the items. The man in the station asked to have the incident documented. The officer asked the man if he had any proof that his roommate and his girlfriend had stolen the items, and the man said no. The officer advised the man to get a lock for his bedroom door and to keep his valuables locked inside the bedroom when he was not present. The man agreed and stated that he hoped to move to Florida in two months. The man thanked the officer and left the station.
12:06 p.m. An officer responded to the scene of a vehicle crash on Commercial and Prospect streets.
4:42 p.m. Officers were dispatched to Lincoln Avenue to investigate a report of a neighbor dispute. One of the two people involved explained that he had been outside about to put some food on the grill when his nextdoor neighbor reached over the fence with a hose and began to spray the grill and the man with water. The officer confirmed that the man was “extremely wet,” and there was water on the ground by the grill. The man explained that, as far as he knew, he had not done anything to provoke the hosedown, though he acknowledged that he has had ongoing issues with the neighbor. He admitted that, in the immediate aftermath of being sprayed, he had thrown a piece of the grill over the neighbor’s fence, and the neighbor had responded by throwing rocks into his yard. Another officer spoke to the neighbor, who “had a similar story.” Both were advised how to obtain a harassment prevention order.
5:15 p.m. An officer investigated a report of an assault on Atlantic Avenue.
5:20 p.m. An officer spoke by phone with a woman who had received a letter postmarked May 8 and sent to her parents’ address from the Massachusetts Department of Unemployment Assistance. She had not filed for unemployment assistance, as she was still currently employed. The woman had been able to log into the account using her Social Security number and reported the fraud to the department. The officer advised the woman to notify her employer about the fraud and file a report with the Federal Trade Commission via identitytheft.gov.
5:28 p.m. An officer was dispatched to Roosevelt Road to investigate a report of past vandalism to a vehicle. Upon his arrival, he was met by the vehicle’s owner who stated that he had recently noticed his vehicle’s windshield wiper had been broken off. The man said he rarely uses this vehicle and could not say for sure when the damage may have occurred.
After a quick look around the neighboring houses, the officer was unable to locate any cameras in the area that might have captured the event. The man stated that he does not know of anyone who would target him but indicated that, based on his profession, he understood that his vehicles could be targeted.
7:26 p.m. Officers investigated a disturbance on Lincoln Avenue.
8:08 p.m. An officer investigated a disturbance on Creesy Street.
8:49 p.m. Officers investigated a disturbance on Gerry Street.
10:31 p.m. Officers restored the peace after a disturbance on Phillips Street.
11:49 p.m. An officer investigated a report of vandalism on Pleasant Street.
Saturday, May 13
1:02 a.m. Officers investigated a disturbance on Sagamore Road.
7:55 a.m. Police received a report that bikes had been left on Smith Street.
8:55 a.m. An Abbot Public Library employee reported damage to solar lights at the library’s temporary home at the Eveleth School. The staff member showed the officer several lights along the library’s walkway that had been pulled up from the ground and knocked over, clearly intentionally. The officer also saw several trash and recycle bins that had been tipped over and a half-empty beer bottle by the doorway. The officer walked the property and did not see any cameras that could have caught the incident. The staff member told the officer that this was not the first time the lights had been knocked over, but now that some had been broken, she wanted to report it. The officer advised her to ask her supervisor about putting up cameras and said he would ask officers who work the overnight shifts to increase patrols in the area.
9:53 a.m. Vandalism was reported on Phillips Street.
12:09 p.m. An officer went to Jersey Street to investigate a report that someone had thrown a glass vodka bottle at a home, damaging one of the clapboards. The resident had heard a loud thud in the front of her house around 9:30 p.m. the night before but did not think anything of it until she discovered the broken bottle in the morning. In response to a question from the officer, the resident said it was possible that the bottle had been thrown by an employee she had recently fired, but she did not provide the name of the employee because she was not sure the employee would do something like this. The resident pointed out a neighbor’s house with a camera on it, and the owner of that home invited the officer in to review the footage, but the incident had not been captured. The officer provided that update to the woman whose home had been hit with the bottle, and she said she would report back to the police if she found out any more information about the incident.
1:38 p.m. An officer went to Pond Street to investigate a report of an aggressive dog. A resident told the officer that her upstairs neighbor does not keep her dog on a leash and is aggressive towards her small dogs. The resident also mentioned that she thought her neighbor and her daughter had walked into her apartment and stolen her Nintendo video game system. The officer asked the resident if she had any proof, and she said no. The woman said she now has security cameras on her door because she has no idea where her Nintendo went. The officer explained that there is a leash law in Marblehead and recommended that the woman have a conversation with the animal control officer about her neighbors’ dog. The officer tried to contact the upstairs neighbor, but no one answered the door.
2:23 p.m. A woman yelling was reported on Ida Road.
2:39 p.m. An officer assisted at the scene of a vehicle fire on West Shore Drive and Rainbow Road.
2:49 p.m. An officer investigated a past hit-and-run reported on Washington Street.
4:06 p.m. An officer investigated a hit-and-run reported on Atlantic Avenue and Hawkes Street.
6:52 p.m. An officer assisted at the scene of a grill or propane tank fire on Cornell Road.
Sunday, May 14
3:52 p.m. An officer investigated a report that an iPhone had been stolen on Pleasant Street.
4:33 p.m. An officer responded to the scene of a vehicle accident on Clifton Heights Lane.
7:53 p.m. A boat complaint was made on Village Street.
Monday, May 15
7:28 a.m. An officer investigated a report of vandalism on Atlantic Avenue.
9:46 a.m. An officer investigated a report that a hose had been taken and replaced on Frost Lane.
11:17 a.m. An officer investigated a report of larceny, forgery or fraud on Rainbow Road.
2:18 p.m. An issue with brush and branches was reported on Clifton Avenue.
Tuesday, May 16
7:07 a.m. An officer stopped a vehicle while conducting targeted speed enforcement on West Shore Drive and Bayview Avenue and found that the driver, a Randolph man, did not have a license. The officer confiscated the plates and had the vehicle towed, while the driver was picked up by a friend.
8:25 a.m. An officer spoke in the police station lobby with a woman who reported being sprayed with water that had come from a vehicle earlier in the day by the Neck side of the causeway on Ocean Avenue. The woman reported that she had been walking on the sidewalk when a black Audi Q5 approached her and stopped. She said the back window then opened, and she saw two black tubes pointed at her. Moments later, she was sprayed with water. The woman then said the vehicle then did a U-turn and headed back to the mainland of Marblehead. The woman was clearly upset about the incident and frightened, according to the officer’s report. The officer notified detectives of the incident and planned to reach out to the school resource officer to determine if there were any “games” or “internet challenges” going on that could explain this incident. The officer also intended to look in the area for cameras that might have caught the incident or could be helpful in identifying the vehicle.
11:23 a.m. An officer investigated a report of larceny, forgery or fraud on Clark Lane.
4:43 p.m. An officer spoke at the station with a man who had received a text message about a $989 unknown purchase on his Amazon account. The man had called the number included and provided his address and the last four digits of his Social
Security number. The man had gone to the ATM and withdrawn all the money from his bank account so he could hold it for safekeeping. The officer confirmed that it was most likely a scam attempt and to reach out to the bank the following day to report the incident. The officer then called the number through which the man had contacted the alleged scammers, and it was disconnected.
5:58 p.m. An officer was dispatched to Gas House Beach to investigate a report of overdue kayakers. A woman reported to me that her daughter had gone out on a kayak with her friend and another girl. The woman was worried something went wrong because they had left at 4 p.m. and should have returned no later than 5 p.m. After the Marblehead harbormaster did not answer its radio on several attempts, the officer asked dispatch to request that the Salem and Beverly harbormasters assist with the on-the-water search as Marblehead police officers checked the waters around the coastline. At 6:30 p.m., dispatch notified officers that the Beverly harbormaster had located the kayakers near the south coastline of Children’s Island. The kayakers had been picked up by a passing pleasure boat whose captain noticed they were in distress. The officer returned to Gas House Beach and informed the woman of the Beverly harbormaster’s findings and to respond to State Street landing to pick up her daughter and friends. The officer went to the landing as well and spoke with the adult who had taken the girls out on the water who reported that she had underestimated the wind force when she left Little Harbor and was not strong enough to row back in. Without a phone or radio on board, she had attempted to make landfall at Children’s Island. All three of the kayakers declined medical attention and were reunited with family members. (See related story, Page 1.)
6:50 p.m. An officer spoke by phone with a woman who had been notified by the IRS two days earlier that someone had tried to file taxes in her name. The woman said that she had filled out the affidavit with the IRS and had also notified the credit bureau. The officer advised her to notify her bank and credit card companies and that a report would be on file.
7:07 p.m. An officer was dispatched to Pleasant Street to investigate a woman’s complaint that her neighbor had been verbally confronting her about a past incident between her son and the neighbor’s friend. The woman did not want the officer to speak to her neighbor but wanted the incidents documented. The officer advised the woman about how to obtain a harassment prevention order.
9:25 p.m. An officer monitoring traffic in the Star of the Sea Church parking lot off Atlantic Avenue stopped a speeding vehicle and found that the driver did not have a license in his possession. Another man, who did have a license, said he would come to the scene to pick up the vehicle.
Wednesday, May 17
5:55 a.m. Traffic lights on flash were reported on Smith and Pleasant streets.
7:59 a.m. An officer spoke with a man regarding a past breakingand-entering of a vehicle that he had been parked in a Lafayette
Ferol S. Breymann, 97
Ferol Stark Breymann died peacefully on Dec. 12, 2022, at the age of 97 in Williamstown, Massachusetts, surrounded by her family. She was born Nov. 1, 1925, in Milwaukee. She was predeceased by her parents, her former husband, John B. Breymann III, her longtime
Phillips C. Cooke, 91
Phillips Carter Cooke, 91, of Marblehead passed away peacefully on May 14, 2023. He was born to parents Theodore Carter Cooke and Florence Phillips Cooke, on Feb. 28, 1932, in Lynn, just a few minutes before Leap Year Day.
Of his close childhood relatives, he is predeceased by his brothers, James Henry and Donald James, and leaves his sister, Nancy Cooke Latta of Pompton Plains, New Jersey.
He is survived by his three children, their spouses and six grandchildren: Jonathan Cooke and wife Sarah and their children, Rachel and Josh, of Newton; Peter Cooke and wife Mary Ann and their children, Maddie and Jake, of Westwood; and Jennifer Cooke Rotman and husband Richard Rotman and their children, Matt and Sam, of Westborough. He also leaves many loved nieces, nephews, and cousins.
Phil and his loving wife, Sally
Coa
From P. A17
New! Tap & jazz classes
On Thursdays at 8:30 a.m. This two-hour program will keep you moving. You can also attend just tap at 8:30 a.m. or just jazz at 9:30 a.m. $5.00
Tai Chi/Qigong
Tai Chi/Qigong is an excellent form of exercise for low-impact strengthening, stress relief, balance and flexibility. Qigong is an ancient Chinese system that combines breathing, movement and meditation to cultivate health and wellbeing. Thursdays at 1 p.m. $5.
Chair Volleyball
Chair Volleyball is now at the COA on Wednesdays and Fridays, 1 p.m. to 2:45 p.m.
Muscle Conditioning
Senior Muscle Conditioning with Kim is on Mondays and Fridays at 9 a.m and Wednesdays at 10 a.m. Cost is $3.
Smith Cooke, had a storybook marriage for 50 years and one day, until she passed away on July 10, 2010.
Phil grew up on Bradlee Avenue in Swampscott, where he attended junior high school. He graduated Kimball Union Academy in 1950, where he played on the football and tennis teams, and excelled on the ski team.
From there, he attended Dartmouth College, receiving a bachelor of arts in geography and a minor in history, where he ran cross country, was coxswain
Stay Active
North Shore Physical Therapy runs an osteo class on Mondays and Thursdays at 10 a.m. There’s also Balance and Mobility with Mary Manning on Mondays and Wednesdays at 10:30 a.m. Each class is $3.
Zumba Gold Zumba Gold classes are held on Wednesdays at noon. It is a lower-intensity dance class inspired by Latin and world music.
Parkinson’s Fitness
The Parkinson’s Fitness class is free on Wednesdays at 11 a.m. Specifically developed for folks with Parkinson’s disease but appropriate for all, this class focuses on strength, mobility and balance. The program is paid for by the Friends of the Council on Aging.
Indoor Curling partner, Donald B. Connors, and her brother, Donny Stark. She is survived by her daughters, Meg Breymann, Kerry Breymann, Annabelle Keil (Rodrigo Corazon) and Rebecca Leiter (Mark); her grandchildren, Will Breymann (Bailey Sheran), Jackson Mansfield, Maggie Mansfield (Sam Perkins), Ben Keil and Peter Keil (Frances), Gabriel Leiter, Nicky Leiter and Noa Leiter; and her great-grandson, Pace Breymann. Ferol graduated from for the crew team, and raced and ski jumped for the Dartmouth ski team. He remained a devoted Dartmouth alumnus.
Indoor curling takes place on Mondays, Tuesdays and Thursdays from 1 p.m. to 2:45 p.m.
After graduating college in 1954, Phil entered the U.S. Air Force as a ROTC second lieutenant, serving as an intelligence officer in the 363rd Reconnaissance Technical Squadron and earned his honorable discharge at the rank of captain in 1957.
Following discharge, he spent many years in business as president of Hume Pipe Corp. and vice president and director of Lynn Sand and Stone Co, both family-owned companies based in Swampscott.
After sale of the family businesses in the early 1980s, Phil pursued a second career as a financial planner affiliated with Mass Mutual Life Insurance Co. He had many interests and hobbies, including photography and especially genealogy. He researched his, his wife Sally’s and his three in-law children’s genealogies over the span of 30 years or more.
Phil was a longtime member
No experience is necessary for this indoor sport. Instructions on how to play the game will be available at every session. Yearly fee is $15. Contact pbibbo@aol. com with questions.
Stretch & Strength
The Council on Aging offers a Strength & Stretch class on Mondays at 11:30 a.m. and Thursdays at 11 a.m. Cost is $3.
Step it Up
Karen Jancsy leads this lowimpact movement and muscle conditioning class on Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays at 8 a.m.
Weight Training
A Weight Training class is held on Tuesdays, Wednesdays and Thursdays at 8:45 a.m. Cost is $3.
Learn more about insurance
Trained SHINE counselors offer free, unbiased, confidential counseling on all aspects of Medicare and related insurance programs. Appointments are
Marquette University with a bachelor’s in journalism and from the Boston University School of Communications with her master’s. Her many volunteer activities in Marblehead included the Festival of Arts, the Historical Society and the Girl Scouts. She was a member of the North Shore Writers Group. Breymann was an energetic and creative feminist. She inspired her daughters to love beauty, the outdoors, healthy eating, exercise and chocolate. “We thought she would live of the Old North Church in Marblehead, a former member of Tedesco Country Club, a 50-plus year member of the Corinthian Yacht Club and a member of the American Legion as well as the New England Historical and Genealogical Society.
Phil was loved dearly by his family and had many close friends. He lived a full and active life, including many adventures shared with others.
He skied Tuckerman’s Ravine at age 12 in 1944; bicycled from Swampscott to Mackinac Island, Michigan, at the age of 16 in 1948; tried out for the Olympic ski team; climbed the Grand Teton in Wyoming via the Exum Route; fought forest fires in Oregon; skied at 121 ski areas over 78 years; climbed all 48 of the White Mountains over 4,000 feet in New Hampshire with his children and golfed at least 146 golf courses.
He also traveled extensively with his wife Sally to many parts of the world on six continents, to name some. An avid train enthusiast, they took many scenic train routes during their available at the COA. Call 781-631-6225.
Yoga with Evie
This yoga class is held on Mondays at 9 a.m., Wednesdays at 8:30 a.m. and Thursdays and Fridays at 9:30 a.m.
Chair Yoga
Gail Perry Borden teaches Chair Yoga on Tuesdays and Thursdays at 11 a.m. Cost is $3.
Line Dancing Kate Hoffman teaches Line Dancing on Thursdays from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. The first hour is focused on beginners; however, all are welcome and encouraged to participate. Cost is $5.
Get a senior Charlie Card
People who are 65 years or older are eligible for reduced MBTA fares with a senior Charlie Card. These cards are valid for eight years. Call Nadine Lepick at 781-631-6225 Tuesday through Friday from 9 a.m. to 11 a.m. to ask questions or make forever,” they said. “We would like to appreciate the staff of Williamstown Commons and Golden Living in Newton for their humor and kindness towards our mother. We are deeply grateful.” an appointment to process an application. Cards can also be reloaded with cash on any bus.
A memorial Mass will be held on Saturday, June 3, 1 p.m., at Our Lady Star of the Sea Church in Marblehead. Memorial gifts may be sent to the causes of her favorite women, Hillary Clinton and Michelle Obama, or your favorite cause. For updated information, visit flynndagnolifuneralhomes.com.
U.S. and world travels.
Visiting hours for Phillips will be held Wednesday, May 24, 2023, from 4 to 7 p.m. at Eustis & Cornell of Marblehead, 142 Elm St.
Family and friends are kindly invited to his graveside committal service with military honors to be held on Thursday, May 25, 2023, at 10 a.m. at Waterside Cemetery, 294 West Shore Drive, Marblehead, followed by a memorial service at 11:30 a.m. at Old North Church, 35 Washington St., Marblehead.
A reception and continuation of the celebration of Phillips’ life will immediately follow the memorial service at the Corinthian Yacht Club, 1 Nahant St., Marblehead.

In lieu of flowers, donations can be made to the Dana Farber Sally Cooke Ovarian Cancer Research Fund, 450 Brookline Ave., Boston, MA 02215, or via www.dana-farber.org.
Fond memories and expressions of sympathy for the Cooke family may be shared at eustisandcornellfuneralhome.com.
Quilting
Learn how to quilt in this class on Thursdays at 10 a.m. Cost is $5 per class.
Knitting Group
Drop-in knitting is Thursdays at 9 a.m.
Cribbage
Cribbage is held on Tuesdays. Doors close at 9:30 a.m.
Mahjong
Play mahjong Mondays and Wednesdays, 11 a.m. to 2:30 p.m.
I Love Bridge
This advanced bridge instruction class meets Mondays, 12:30 p.m. to 2 p.m. Cost is $5. Drop-in bridge is on Tuesdays, 10 a.m. to noon, and Fridays, 10 a.m. to 1 p.m.
Street driveway at approximately 5 p.m. the night before. He woke up to find that his wallet was missing from the vehicle, which he believed he had locked. At approximately 1:38 p.m., the man called the police department to let police know that he had found his wallet.
9:49 a.m. An officer was dispatched to Maverick Street to take a report on a possible neighbor dispute. Upon his arrival, he spoke with a woman who reported that she has had multiple issues with the family next door over the seven years she had lived there. She explained that about a week earlier, she heard the couple next door calling to her dog, which was outside in her yard. The woman said she found that strange, as the families do not get along, and she did not believe they liked her dogs. The woman said that the reason she had called was that, the night before, she had gone to call her dog in from outside, and the dog was in her neighbors’ yard. She explained that her dog let out a small bark, and there was a delay in the dog returning to her property. She said that she did not see her neighbors holding the dog, but it was her opinion that someone must have been holding the dog’s collar, which is why it barked when she called for it. The officer then went and rang the doorbell next door, and there was no answer. The officer explained to the caller that he would document what he had been told and that a report would be on file. He then explained the process on how to obtain a harassment prevention order. The officer advised the woman to keep her dog on a leash, even on her own property, as she does not have a fence, which might help keep him from going onto other people’s property.
11:45 a.m. An officer spoke in the police station lobby with a woman who had received a debit card in the mail from Bank of America with her name on it for which she had not applied. The woman contacted Bank of America who informed her that they had already deactivated the debit card when it was flagged in their system. Bank of America also informed the woman that they had notified the credit bureaus as well as the Social Security office to flag anything suspicious in her accounts.
Bank of America instructed the woman to file a police report and to inform any other banks she uses about the fraudulent activities. The woman had not noticed anything else wrong with any of her accounts but said she would keep police informed if that changed.
4:30 p.m. An officer was dispatched to Ramsdell Road to speak to a woman who had a sign placed in her front yard reading, “Now Offering Free Massage.” A short time later, a man had come to her door requesting his free massage, and she had to explain that the sign was fake. The officer was unable to find the man who had come to the door and did not see any other “free massage” signs in other yards.
5:12 p.m. A tree or branch was reported down on May Street.
5:19 p.m. An officer spoke in the police station lobby with a woman who said she had been subjected to an anonymous person who had called her employer to report that she was intoxicated on the job, which a co-worker could verify was false. She said that this was not the first time that an anonymous caller had contacted her employer to complain about her. She theorized that it was a tenant in her building with whom she has had constant issues. She was advised to continue to report issues with her neighbor to Salem Police and to consider applying for a harassment prevention order.
7:11 p.m. An officer responded to the scene of a vehicle accident on Alexander Circle.
8:30 p.m. Officers responded to Fairview Road and arrested a 62-year-old Peabody man who was charged with domestic assault and battery and assault with a deadly weapon.
8:36 p.m. A missing flag was reported on Atlantic Avenue.