Somerville police patrolled the world of cyberspace this week, investigating Craigslist ads and MySpace pages to catch a man allegedly responsible for an armed robbery on the city’s bike path.
The stick-up victim monitored Craigslist postings looking for the cell phone that had been stolen from him Sunday Sept. 16 as he passed Lexington Park and was robbed by two young black men, police said. He came across a phone just like his and the location was in Somerville, police said. Police regularly monitor Web sites such as Craigslist, hoping to find items taken in recent thefts and robberies, according to Somerville investigators.
Working with police investigators, the victim set up an e-mail account under the false name of Steven Villard and contacted the person selling the phone, police said. A link to the seller’s MySpace page came up and as the pictures were downloading, the victim recognized one of the men who had robbed him at knife point, Casey Kolenda, 21, of 62 Hinckley St., police said.
The victim informed Somerville police detectives Michael Kiely and Mario Oliveira of what he had learned. Oliveira called a phone number he got from Kolenda when Kolenda believed he was selling the phone to Steven Villard and arranged to purchase the phone at the Porter Square MBTA station for $300, police said. At the station, Kiely played the role of buyer Steve Villard and approached Kolenda, who he recognized from the MySpace pictures, sitting with three other men, police said.
After a short conversation, Kiely took the phone and watched as Kolenda elbowed one of the men at his side, Brandon Sheffield, 20, of 132 Central St., in what detectives believe was a signal, police said. However, before Kolenda and Sheffield could move, Kiely gave a signal of his own and an arrest team took the suspects to the ground for the officers safety, police said.
Kolenda was arrested and charged with armed robbery and receiving stolen property worth more than $250, Sheffield was arrested and charged with receiving stolen property worth more than $250 and a third man, Frankey Anfield, 19, no address, was arrested and charged with receiving stolen property more than $250.
The victim later confirmed to detectives the serial number of his stolen phone matched the serial number of the phone Kolenda had been trying to sell online, police said.
Perhaps someone should alter that graphic to say "myspace.com: a place for fiends"
Posted by: Ron Newman | September 28, 2007 at 10:02 AM
Good one!
Posted by: somervilleoldtimer | September 28, 2007 at 12:19 PM
Wow - that is some great investigative work on the part of the victim, and great work by our Somerville Police! I'm very impressed.
Posted by: Kate | October 01, 2007 at 11:38 AM
Excellent! Nice work! Stupid criminals think they have everything figured out. Don't drop the soap, Homey...
Posted by: Medfordite | October 05, 2007 at 03:53 PM
Does the Somerville News have archived photos from the early days of the City newspaper? I'm particularly wondering about the early 1930s.
My maternal grandmother lived at 15 Fiske Ave as a child beginning in 1882. She ran for Alderman in 1927. The family moved out of Somerville in the late 1950s.
Posted by: gerard tobin | October 12, 2007 at 12:56 PM
This newspaper goes back only to the 1970s, so you're probably better off asking at the Journal, which is much older.
Posted by: Ron Newman | October 12, 2007 at 01:04 PM
this dude is one bad azz mother plucker..
Posted by: shaft | January 17, 2008 at 02:33 PM
this dude is one bad azz mother plucker..
Posted by: shaft | January 17, 2008 at 02:33 PM
I personally Know the mastermind Casey R. Kalenda. On May 1, 2008 the same group of three headed by Kolenda proceeded to Break and Enter a fellow friends home in Watertown, Ma.stealing 5,000 dollars worth of jewelery,clothing,Ps3,Xbox360 and expensive water bongs loading the loot into a grey honda that belonged to an unknowing female driver. This heist was observed by the entire street's residents. The subjects apparently became lost and led the police from three surrounding towns in a game of follow the criminals. Eventually running out of gas and coming to a halt in Arlington, Ma. Upon being arrested and booked Kolenda proceeded to make a call to a friend informing him that someone had snitched. Police then used the recorded conversation in court at his arraignment. Police also found 24 grams of cocaine in Kolenda's pants pocket but he was able to dive and flush them in the toilet when the officer placed them on a bench briefly while continuing the search. Kolenda is being held at cambridge jail on no bond status. The judge was reluctant to grant bail when it was known to the court Kolenda had 5 open cases not including the bike path robbery.
Posted by: A.J. Brignolio | May 11, 2008 at 05:02 PM