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Discussion Starter · #1 ·
By Lily Leung
The Arizona Republic

SURPRISE, Ariz. - Daniel Hughes says he is the prime example of someone who did everything right but still came up the victim of a crime.
Thieves broke into the Surprise police chief's gym locker at Mountainside Fitness Club in Surprise last Friday night, stealing his wallet, uniform, badge and keys to his unmarked police vehicle between 6 and 7 p.m., Hughes said.
The assailants then went to the parking lot and stole his Chevrolet Tahoe, in which he had left his Glock .40-caliber handgun. The theft happened sometime during Hughes' routine 90-minute workout at the fitness center.
Hughes said the vehicle was eventually found about three blocks from the gym at the Brookside Center, a shopping center near Bell and Reems roads.
That's when police discovered that all the vehicle's contents had been stolen. The car was otherwise relatively untouched.
"The car itself was in pretty good shape," Hughes said. "They went through the car and took anything of value."
Hughes said he left police headquarters about a 5:45 p.m. and arrived to the gym about 6 p.m. He said he locked his car and entered the fitness center in his uniform, with his gym bag in hand.
He changed into his workout gear, put his things into a locker and locked it.
After running on the treadmill, he returned to the locker room and found that the lock and everything in the locker was gone.
Hughes said he was about to call 911 when he realized that a gentleman who had a locker above his also had been victimized by thieves.
"So I just simply said, 'While you're talking to them, (tell them) there's a second victim," said Hughes, a regular at the gym.
Hughes said he is unsure if he was targeted because he walked into the facility in his uniform, or whether it was a random crime. But he conceded that he usually walks into the gym in civilian clothes and doesn't use the lockers.
"I would like to think that they didn't see me walking in in my uniform," he said. "I don't know. Obviously, I'm not the only one . . . I'm not sure, but my concern is certainly that when they broke into the locker, you would think they might want to leave it alone when they saw the uniform in there."
Police are exploring several leads in the case and are trying to determine if it is part of a crime trend involving other gyms in Surprise.

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"I would like to think that they didn't see me walking in in my uniform," he said.
Seriously??

"I don't know. Obviously, I'm not the only one . . . I'm not sure, but my concern is certainly that when they broke into the locker, you would think they might want to leave it alone when they saw the uniform in there."
With all due respect Chief, I'm afraid those days are gone. I know when I first got on the job, even a majority of the "bad guys" had some modicum of respect for officers. Those days are long gone. We are now perpetual targets. Situational awareness is tantamount, both on and off duty.
 

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Don't know about you guys, but my car keys and ID always stay in my pocket when I'm at the gym...I don't even bring my wallet.
Don't always keep my ID but I definitely never am without my keys in my possession. I also do not place anything of value in the gym lockers. I suppose if I were to use the pool I'd have to lock my keys up, but that's not likely to happen since I have an adversion to public pools, LOL!
 

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Discussion Starter · #8 ·
Man who stole Ariz. chief's car, gun arrested

By Lily Leung
The Arizona Republic

SURPRISE, Ariz. - A two-week manhunt worked by three law-enforcement agencies ended in the capture of what authorities are saying is the brazen person who stole the Surprise police chief's city-issued gun, vehicle, uniform and badge.
Kevin M. Kern, 30, was arrested Friday after a four-hour standoff that began as a traffic stop at 28th Street and McDowell Road in Phoenix, said Lt. James Warriner, a spokesman for the Arizona Department of Public Safety.
Officers with the U.S. Marshal's Office, DPS and Surprise found Kern driving a rental car about noon, when they tried to conduct the stop, Warriner said. Kern, who has an extensive criminal history in the West Valley, reportedly ran from the vehicle as officers pursued him.
He tried to break into two homes and succeeded in kicking down the door of an unoccupied residence in the 1800 block of North 28th Street, where he barricaded himself.
During the standoff, Kern apparently set several booby traps inside the house using water and electrical cords, and tried to entice DPS's Special Operations Team inside. He also painted the windows so officers could not see inside the house.
After four hours of negotiation, Kern broke a natural-gas line, setting the home on fire and causing extensive damage, police reported. He then left at the rear of the home through a window.
A DPS officer then Tasered Kern, who was taken into custody.
"This suspect showed total disregard for the property of everyone including the property owner whose house he set on fire as he made his escape," Warriner said.
Kern was booked into jail on two felony counts: arson of an occupied structure and second-degree burglary.
Investigators believe he also committed a string of burglaries during the time he was wanted.
The two-week search for Kern began July 11, when someone reportedly broke into Surprise Police Chief Daniel Hughes' gym locker at Mountainside Fitness Club in Surprise. The thief made off with Hughes' uniform, badge, wallet and car keys.
Police said the assailant found Hughes' unmarked, city-issued Chevrolet Tahoe, where his Glock .40-caliber handgun was stored. Hughes reported that the contents of his gym locker were empty about 7 p.m., when he finished his workout. He said another gym patron's locker near his was also targeted.
The vehicle was eventually recovered at the Brookside Center, about three blocks from the gym, with all of its contents gone.
Hughes said he "made a mental note" of a suspicious man who was watching him while he was working out, leading him to successfully identify a suspect in a photo lineup of potential culprits.
Surprise police also had surveillance tape of a man who had apparently tried to use one of Hughes' credit cards that had already been canceled and monitored.
Surprise police could not be immediately reached for comment.

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