Police find glass on park bench
Deepa Bharath
NEWPORT-MESA -- Adding more wrinkles to already worried parents in
Costa Mesa and Newport Beach, police added another park to the growing
list of places where strategically placed sharp objects have been found.
Newport Beach police volunteer John Lippman found a triangular piece
of sharp glass jutting from between slats of a park bench Friday
afternoon, Sgt. Steve Shulman said.
The discovery marks the eighth in a series of disturbing findings of
sharp objects, mostly razor blades, placed on playground equipment in
parks over the last month. Nobody has been hurt so far.
Lippman was checking playground equipment and benches in Cliff Drive
Park, at the corner of Riverside and Cliff drives, when he spotted the
glass, Shulman said.
“We don’t know yet if this incident is related to the others,” he
said. The police report shows the shard was placed there deliberately
with the intention of hurting somebody.
According to the report, the glass was found “wedged between the
slats” and Lippman had to use a pocket knife to remove it. It was also
placed close to the middle of the bench, about 12 inches from the edge,
the report said.
Lippman, who inspected the rest of the park, found no signs of any
broken glass objects in the area, officials said.
Shulman said volunteers, as well as police officers, will inspect city
parks several times a day, as they have been doing over the last few
weeks.
He said police have notified schools and homeowners associations to
make people aware of the presence of sharp objects in parks.
“We are continuing to put up warning signs in parks and playground
areas in English and Spanish,” Shulman said.
Razor blades have been found in two Newport Beach parks so far --
Wednesday at Bolsa Park, at the the corner of Bolsa and Broad streets,
and March 23 at Marina Park, located at 18th Street and West Balboa
Boulevard.
Similar findings were reported in three Costa Mesa parks -- three
times in Heller Park on 16th Street on March 30, and April 1 and 17; in
Pinkley Park on Ogle Street on April 16 and at Lions Park on West 16th
Street on April 24.
Costa Mesa and Newport Beach police are working together and sharing
information, Shulman said.
Residents are also crossing city borders to help the police find the
culprit or culprits, said Costa Mesa resident Bud Haley, who is trying to
put together a reward fund for a tip that results in an arrest. He has
already received pledges for $2,000.
Haley said he has received pledges and calls from people who don’t
even go to the affected parks.
“This is an amazing little community we have here,” he said. “People
here are totally concerned in Newport Beach, as well as Costa Mesa.”
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