Four Seasons Limousine serving the Hopewell Junction NY area since 1989 with excellent service. 845-855-0200
Call us first and it will be the last. We have the most experienced drivers in the area. When the other companies dress bad drivers in a nice black suit it doesn't work out well for you.
This unique blog is for the entertainment and knowledge of the Hopewell NY area and its neighboring towns. We will be posting pictures, current events, history and news about the town and its people. This is sponsered and maintained by the folks at Four Seasons Limousine




Tarrytown Man Charged With Felony Larceny In Croton
Call us first and it will be the last. We have the most experienced drivers in the area. When the other companies dress bad drivers in a nice black suit it doesn't work out well for you.
This unique blog is for the entertainment and knowledge of the Hopewell NY area and its neighboring towns. We will be posting pictures, current events, history and news about the town and its people. This is sponsered and maintained by the folks at Four Seasons Limousine
![]() |
Alex with Four Seasons Limousine in Hopewell Junction NY |
The creative act lasts but a brief moment, a lightning instant of give-and-take, just long enough for you to level the camera and to trap the fleeting prey in your little box.
-Henri Cartier-Bresson-
|
A Tarrytown resident has been charged with felony grand larceny by New York State Police.
Theodore R. Kozelka, 33, of Tarrytown, was charged with felony grand larceny. State Police would not release the details of the charges, and said the investigation is ongoing.
Kozelka was charged about 4 p.m., Jan. 11, in the Village of Croton-on-0n-Hudson.
Also reported on the New York State Police blotter:
|

Police in Massachusetts investigating a 1975 cold case homicide hope mid-Hudson Valley residents will recognize a medallion found on the victim’s body — which is linked to a former motorcycle club in Poughkeepsie — and help authorities identify the man.
The man died of two gunshot wounds to the head. His body was found in a shallow grave in the woods in Burlington, less than 20 miles outside Boston. The man may have been buried for about six months when his body was found May 22, 1975, the Burlington Police Department said.
The victim is described as a white male, about 5 feet 8 inches to 6 feet tall, and possibly in his late 20s to early 30s. He was wearing a T-shirt, jeans, canvas sneakers, an Army fatigue-type jacket (size small), a military-style black leather belt with a metal buckle and a medallion on a necklace, police said.
It’s precisely that necklace that police hope will create new leads in the case.
In the 1980s, a man recognized a photo of the medallion printed in a newspaper article about the case. He told authorities in Burlington the medallion was made by a jewelry store in Boston for a motorcycle club on Church Street in the City of Poughkeepsie, police said.
The club was not named in the man’s statement, but he had told authorities the medallion was given to all of its members. It was coined in either 1970 or 1972, and 1,500 were produced.
Police said they think the victim was a member of the club.
Burlington police Lt. Glen Mills said that, in recent years, police have not been able to track down the man who gave that statement. They do not know the name of the Poughkeepsie motorcycle club or the jewelry store in Boston.
“The only link we had to New York was the medallion, and the group was supposedly from there,” Mills said. “The only thing that’s really solid about this whole thing is the medallion. And who even knows if that’s accurate, too?”
He said the man does not match anyone reported missing from New York at the time. He said the man might have served in the military.
Police in Massachusetts investigating a 1975 cold case homicide hope mid-Hudson Valley residents will recognize a medallion found on the victim’s body — which is linked to a former motorcycle club in Poughkeepsie — and help authorities identify the man.
The man died of two gunshot wounds to the head. His body was found in a shallow grave in the woods in Burlington, less than 20 miles outside Boston. The man may have been buried for about six months when his body was found May 22, 1975, the Burlington Police Department said.
The victim is described as a white male, about 5 feet 8 inches to 6 feet tall, and possibly in his late 20s to early 30s. He was wearing a T-shirt, jeans, canvas sneakers, an Army fatigue-type jacket (size small), a military-style black leather belt with a metal buckle and a medallion on a necklace, police said.
It’s precisely that necklace that police hope will create new leads in the case.
In the 1980s, a man recognized a photo of the medallion printed in a newspaper article about the case. He told authorities in Burlington the medallion was made by a jewelry store in Boston for a motorcycle club on Church Street in the City of Poughkeepsie, police said.
The club was not named in the man’s statement, but he had told authorities the medallion was given to all of its members. It was coined in either 1970 or 1972, and 1,500 were produced.
Police said they think the victim was a member of the club.
Burlington police Lt. Glen Mills said that, in recent years, police have not been able to track down the man who gave that statement. They do not know the name of the Poughkeepsie motorcycle club or the jewelry store in Boston.
“The only link we had to New York was the medallion, and the group was supposedly from there,” Mills said. “The only thing that’s really solid about this whole thing is the medallion. And who even knows if that’s accurate, too?”
He said the man does not match anyone reported missing from New York at the time. He said the man might have served in the military.
|
No comments:
Post a Comment