Jay Dixit
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Home » Writing » The New York Times » Police Get Their Man—From a Chimney

This is an arti­cle from when I was work­ing as a stringer for the New York Times, just before I joined the staff of Psy­chol­ogy Today.

logoprinter Police Get Their Man—From a Chimney

Police Get Their Man: From a Chimney

By JENNIFER 8. LEE and JAY DIXIT

The mys­tery started around 2 a.m. yes­ter­day when police offi­cers were called to a Man­hat­tan rooftop to chase two sus­pected burglars.

The foot­steps of the police and their quarry pounded back and forth on the roof of the build­ing, at 404 West 40th Street, near Ninth Avenue, in Clin­ton, neigh­bors said.

The police caught one of the sus­pected bur­glars. But the other? They couldn’t find him.

Puz­zled, the police offi­cers left. But the next morn­ing, the police solved the mys­tery of his dis­ap­pear­ance when, shortly before 8 a.m., a woman who lives in the build­ing called them after she heard whim­pers and faint cries for help. She believed that one of her neigh­bors might have injured himself.

“The cops ran up and down and knocked on all the apart­ments to ask if any­one needed help, but no one needed it,” said Sarah Kod­ner, 25, a res­i­dent of the building.

Then the police told all the neigh­bors to quiet down. Then they lis­tened very care­fully for the cries.

“After a minute they fig­ured out he was in the walls in between the apartments.”

The police then traced the cries to the base­ment of the build­ing next door. Inside the chim­ney, dan­gling over the fur­nace, was a man yelling for help.

Res­cue work­ers broke through the walls and used ropes to extract him around 9 a.m. When he emerged, the man was shirt­less, with his arms pinned above his head. “He was com­pletely cov­ered head-to-toe in soot from the chim­ney that he was stuck in for I don’t know how many hours,” said Lara Hatcher, 23, a neighbor.

Inves­ti­ga­tors iden­ti­fied the bur­glar as Ser­afin Sanchez, a home­less 25-year-old man. They said he had orig­i­nally escaped the police by jump­ing into the chim­ney — an open­ing of less than 18 inches square.

“It was kind of cold last night,” said Michael Lehr, 26, a pro­gram­mer who lives in the build­ing. “He’s lucky they didn’t turn the fur­nace on.”

When Mr. Sanchez was finally freed, he was hang­ing inches from the fur­nace, his arms stretched over­head, the police said.

But Mr. Sanchez was des­tined for another period of con­fine­ment. The police arrested Mr. Sanchez and charged him with burglary.

“The cops thought they were going to help some­one who was hurt,” said Mr. Lehr. “Instead, they found Bad Santa.”

http://www.nytimes.com/2006/05/15/nyregion/15chimney.html

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