Page 14 THE VILLADOM TIMES I • November 23, 2011 Wyckoff The Wyckoff Police Department has charged a 16year-old boy with a knife attack on another teenager in which the attacker injured himself by hacking at a car windshield with a knife. Police report that on Nov. 9 at 4:58 p.m., Sergeant Robert Mackay, Patrolman Brian Zivkovich, and Patrolman Kevin Pinches responded to a call from Boulder Run that one boy had attacked another with a knife during an argument. One boy ran inside a car and the knife-wielding attacker chased him, kicked the side-view mirror off the car, and began stabbing the windshield. He cut his own thumb with his knife. The knife wielder refused to obey orders from police to cease the attack, and had to be physically restrained by the police officers. He was transported to the hospital for treatment of the self-inflicted injury, and was charged with juvenile complaints including possession of a weapon, threatening to kill another person, aggravated assault, criminal mischief, and obstruction of the orders of a police officer. Two days later, police answered another call from Boulder Run and found that a 48-year-old Waldwick man had violated a court restraining order and come in contact with his 50-year-old girlfriend, despite the charge she had previously leveled against him for domestic violence. The Waldwick man was arrested and charged with contempt of a domestic violence order and released in $500 bail, Lieutenant David Murphy, Patrolman Terrance Murphy, and Patrolman Mark Tagliareni investigated. Also on Nov. 11, a Mahwah man reported that his iPhone and cash had been stolen from an unlocked locker at the Wyckoff Family YMCA. An investigation showed Police arrest teen in Boulder Run knife attack that the phone had been taken to Paterson, but the phone could not be traced to a specific address. Patrolman Peter Goodman investigated. On Nov. 12, a Lincoln Avenue resident reported a burglary at her home. Entry was gained by breaking through a rear window. Jewelry was reportedly stolen. Wyckoff Police Lieutenant Charles Van Dyk responded to a burglar alarm on Nov. 14, and found that a burglar appeared to have broken into a Sunset Drive home and entered a bedroom and rummaged around, but fled when the burglar alarm was activated. The area was checked with the assistance of the Bergen County K-9 dog. Lieutenant David Murphy, Detective Michael Musto, Patrolman Thomas Tully, and Patrol Office Brenda Groslinger took part in the investigation and search. Former physician again sent to jail The 46-year-old former physician from Wyckoff who was jailed and then released was jailed once again after the Wyckoff Police Department charged her with new offenses. On Nov. 8, the Wyckoff Police Department once again arrested the former doctor on warrants signed by Detective Joseph Soto. She was charged with two counts of obtaining prescription drugs from a Midland Park pharmacy on Oct. 7 and 19 under a fictitious name. She was also charged with obtaining drugs while knowing her medical license had expired. Bail was set at $100,000 by Midland Park Judge Charles Ryan and she was committed to Bergen County Jail in default of bail. The former physician had previously been committed to Bergen County Jail on burglary and theft complaints and had made bail and been released pending trial. She had reportedly entered neighborhood houses and stolen bicycles and a planter, among other objects. Also on Nov. 8, police responded to reported burglar activity on Crescent Avenue due to a triggered burglar alarm. Wyckoff Police Sergeant Kenneth Brown and Sergeant Jack McEwan found that a window at the house had been broken and that several screens had been forcibly removed, but that no entry had been gained and nothing appeared to have been stolen from the unoccupied house. A separate burglary had been reported on Nov. 5 by a Demarest Avenue resident who reported that the house had been entered by prying screens off a kitchen window. Jewelry was reportedly stolen. Sergeant Michael Ragguci, Patrolman Thomas Tully, and Patrolman Ryan Tenney investigated. The day before, a resident of Linden Avenue reported that an unlocked vehicle had been left in the driveway during the overnight hours and that the vehicle had been entered and a purse was lifted from the car and dumped outside the vehicle. The owner was uncertain as to how much money had been taken from the purse. Slander and libel trial (continued from page 6) building after Saxton and during which the board’s new president and vice president for 2008-09 were selected by the board. After Belsky made his statement, the board reacted to his criticisms with a resolution of censure which claimed that Belsky violated several board policies, including a board member’s code of ethics, that he had taken actions that were detrimental to the best interests of the board and violated various provisions of board policies, and that he failed to maintain the confidentiality of matters that are required to be held in confidence and discussed them in a public forum with one or more representatives of the news media in contravention of three board policies. Many Belsky supporters attended a public meeting of the board when the censure resolution was discussed and voiced support for Belsky’s right to criticize the administration and the resolution was then amended to eliminate several of the policies Belsky was accused of violating. At a subsequent public meeting the board, again attended by many Belsky supporters, the board decided not to proceed with the resolution of censure by a 4-3 vote, with the board president breaking a tie vote of the other board members.