September 26, 2023

DA to thieves: Stay away

Delaware County Chief Detective Jim Nolan, left, and District Attorney Jack Stollsteimer check out the interior of Wegmans before meeting with store management.

Delaware County District Attorney Jack Stollsteimer has a message for would-be thieves coming into DelCo, “You will be prosecuted.”

He specifically singled out theft rings from Philadelphia: “If they think they can steal and only get a citation from the District Attorney’s office, we don’t do that in Delaware County. If you steal from our retailers, if you steal from anybody who sells products here in Delaware County, you will be caught and prosecuted. You will not be given just a citation. You’ll be fingerprinted and charged. We take retail theft very seriously.”

Delaware County District Attorney Jack Stollsteimer talks with reporters about retail theft.

Stollsteimer, speaking with a group of reporters outside of Wegmans in Concord Township, added that some thieves from Philly who get caught in the county are surprised that they get more than a slap on the wrist, that they’re prosecuted. The DA added that even for low-level cases that don’t go to the Court of Common Pleas, there’s a separate program in the county that happens on the municipal level to make sure the suspects are “taking courses and paying the price for what they’ve done, including a course on how retail theft affects our communities.”

He mentioned incidents in other parts of the country where retail thefts are increasing. “There have been horrendous theft rings happening in some of the larger cities. The people are organized going into stores and stealing thousands and thousands of dollars’ worth of merchandise. That does not happen in Delaware County, and we want to make sure it continues not to happen in Delaware County.”

With the district attorney was Chief County Detective Jim Nolan, the former chief of police in Chester. Stollsteimer credits Nolan for reducing homicide rates in Chester by more than 6o percent.

“From a law enforcement perspective,” Nolan said, “if persons think that retail theft is not a crime that we would investigate, they’re absolutely wrong. We do go into this wholeheartedly, as we do any other crime. However, we have increased our computer forensics capabilities, including surveillance methods.”

That amounts to being able to catch thieves after the fact even if the theft can’t be prevented, Nolan said.

After the brief press conference, Stollsteimer and Nolan went into a private meeting with Wegmans management team.

According to Stollsteimer, the meeting was a partnership between the National District Attorneys Association and the National Retailers Association.

“We’re here visiting stores to make sure that we are familiar with their security procedures and they’re familiar with our law enforcement people. We want to stop retail theft,” the district attorney said.

About Rich Schwartzman

Rich Schwartzman has been reporting on events in the greater Chadds Ford area since September 2001 when he became the founding editor of The Chadds Ford Post. In April 2009 he became managing editor of ChaddsFordLive. He is also an award-winning photographer.

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Fall Harvest Festival returns to Newlin

Fall Harvest Festival returns to Newlin

After a three-year hiatus, the annual Fall Harvest Festival is returning to Newlin Grist Mill on Saturday, Oct. 7 from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. The last one was in 2019.

Clarissa Dillon demonstrates hearth cooking.

The festival will feature a variety of demonstrations and displays of traditional skills and trades. This year’s theme, Food Traditions Past and Present, will highlight historic foods and cooking, along with the trades that made it possible to put food on the table in early America. Scheduled demonstrations and displays include open-hearth cooking, beer brewing and cider making, primitive fire making, colonial herbs and spices, early American horticulture, and Chinese tea traditions.

Woodworking, textile arts, and silhouette cutting will be demonstrated, and the Millwright Shop and Blacksmith Shop will also be open throughout the day.

The festival will also include plenty of hands-on activities and entertainment for all ages. Visitors can learn colonial dancing with the Heritage Dancers, listen to the historical harmonies of the Colonial Revelers singers, enjoy performances by Tuckers’ Tales Puppet Theatre, and play traditional games. Family activities from years past will be returning, including face painting, pumpkin painting, and hayrides.

Kids show off face and pumpkin painting.

A Colonial Market will offer up handcrafted goods for sale, including soap, woodcrafts, historic pantry and toiletry offerings from The Georgian Kitchen, and fresh baked goods straight out of the Half-Crown Bakehouse’s wood-fired oven. The Tavern will feature beverages from Deer Creek Malthouse and Penns Woods Winery. Food trucks will also be onsite offering delicious 21st-century eats.

Admission to the Fall Harvest Festival is free but parking is $5 per car. Shuttle buses between the parking area and the festival site will run every 15 minutes throughout the event. Additional costs apply for hayrides and pumpkin painting. For more information, visit www.newlingristmill.org or call the site at 610-459- 2359.

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Photo of the Week: Final Approach

Final Approach

A zipliner crosses Lums Pond and heads to the shore for a landing on the last sunny Saturday of summer.

About Rich Schwartzman

Rich Schwartzman has been reporting on events in the greater Chadds Ford area since September 2001 when he became the founding editor of The Chadds Ford Post. In April 2009 he became managing editor of ChaddsFordLive. He is also an award-winning photographer.

Photo of the Week: Final Approach Read More »

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