Jewelers’ suspicions lead to arrest of serial burglars

July 24, 2010

William McBurney

By KAREN VELIE

After Atascadero police failed to link a stolen diamond ring report with a report of two suspicious-looking men trying to sell an expensive diamond ring to a jewelry store, the victim took it upon her self and tracked down her wedding ring worth approximately $25,000.

The ring was allegedly stolen out of the victim’s vehicle at her Atascadero residence.

The actions of three employees at K-Jon’s Jewelers in Atascadero and the victim, who officials declined to identify for this story, would lead to the arrests of two men who allegedly burglarized more than 100 cars – including one owned by a police detective – during the past year.

The co-owner of All That Glitters jewelry store in San Luis Obispo was also arrested on suspicion of allegedly receiving stolen property.

On March 23, the victim discovered that her wedding ring, watch and iPod  – valued at about $26,000  – had been stolen out of a pouch she had left in her car overnight.

Atascadero police officer David Sanchez made out an incident report, which he labeled inactive because he had no leads, according to a police report.

A few days later, two men attempted to sell the expensive diamond ring at K-Jon’s Jewelers in Atascadero, police said.

K-Jon’s sales associate Pam Maxville became suspicious of the men, took a photo of the ring, wrote down the license plate numbers from the men’s black Chevrolet pickup truck and told the two that the store did not buy jewelry. She then called police.

Atascadero police officer Keith Falerios told Maxville that the two men from Atascadero were cousins, Bryan Nothstein, 19, and Eugene Kriewitz, 20. Falerios noted that he had interacted with the two men on numerous occasions in the past.

On March 31, Falerios called Kriewitz to verify his address, according to the police report. At the time, Kriewitz was on probation for felony assault with a deadly weapon and Nothstein was free because of a deferred judgment for marijuana possession.

Nevertheless, Falerios, who was unaware of the reported stolen ring, took no other action against the two.

A few weeks later, the owner of the ring and other valuables taken from her car called K-Jon’s to ask if anyone had attempted to hawk her missing wedding ring. After jewelry store employees and the victim were able to identify the missing ring from the photo taken at the store, they called Atascadero police.

K-Jon’s provided police a video camera tape of the two men attempting to sell the ring, photos of the ring and made a positive identification of the suspects, according to the police report.

Police used the evidence to get a search warrant for Krewitz’s and Nothstein’s home in Atascadero. The officers’ search turned up a barrage of stolen property, including a backpack and handcuffs belonging to Atascadero police Detective Nick Coughlin, cell phones, radar detectors, iPods, purses and cameras.

The car thieves allegedly told police that they had broken into approximately 100 cars over a year’s time and that they usually only took cash.

Police arrested Krewitz and Nothstein on suspicion of grand theft, conspiracy and possession of stolen property. Kriewitz was also charged with violating his probation.

Both plead no contest and were sentenced to 90 days in the San Luis Obispo County Jail and three years probation.

As for the victim’s wedding ring, the cousins said they had sold it to All That Glitters in San Luis Obispo for a $204 store check, less than one percent of what the ring was worth.

When Atascadero police asked All That Glitters co-owner William McBurney, 56, if he had bought the ring from the two men, McBurney told police he had not purchased the ring. He noted that he had searched through invoices and check ledgers searching for the alleged purchase.

Police then went back to K-Jon’s for help in identifying the diamond they suspected may have been removed from its setting.

On May 4, an undercover officer – hoping to determine whether All That Glitters actually buys second-hand jewelry without a license, approached the store and asked that it purchase an $8,000 to $11,000 diamond ring. The store offered to buy the ring for $1,800, officers said.

Shortly afterwards, officers, armed with a search warrant, discovered the victim’s wedding ring at All That Glitters.

On June 29, Atascadero police arrested McBurney, the San Luis Obispo store’s co-owner. The San Luis Obispo County District Attorney’s office charged him with two felony counts of receiving stolen property and misdemeanor charges of delaying an officer in the performance of their duties and purchasing secondhand jewelry without a license.

In 2008, San Luis Obispo police officer Scott Cramer had attempted to assist All That Glitters in getting a secondhand license after officers discovered that the store, in fact, was in possession of stolen property. McBurney, however, failed to attend an application appointment.

Cramer said he “rotated out of the investigation bureau prior to being able to take any enforcement action against All That Glitters,” according to a police report.

In January, during an investigation into “numerous residential burglaries in San Luis Obispo,” San Luis Obispo police receiving information that All That Glitters was purchasing stolen property, according to police reports.

McBurney is scheduled to be in court for a pre-preliminary hearing on July 29.


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I have always respected law enforcement, but these last few years has been an embarrassment not just to APD going from a sleaze bag police chief to one who is just inept, but also the sheriffs dept. and all it’s corruption and waste of tax payers money……SLOSD and north count police depts all need a clean sweep!


And what the heck is McBurney smiling about? What a creep.


Well,the Keystone Kops are at it again.

A while back there was a arson fire in town,place called A Crucial Point. They had

1. Motive

2. A witness

3. Links to others possibly involved.

You guessed it,came up with nothing.

A few weeks after the fire,the place was broken into through the back door.Apd was notified and responded with 4 or 5 uniforms.After being inside for 10 minutes or so one of them stated “Look,there’s a footprint!” Another one said (and I’m not joking),”that’s from your shoe,look at the bottom.” “Oh.” True story!

But…they sure know how to write those tickets and harass the the local kids.

I’m sure that there are in fact some fine dedicated folks on the dept. Unfortunatly,the other screwups make the whole dept. look bad.


I hadn’t heard anything about an arson fire. I googled them and I found that they were a tatoo parlor on El Camino but I didn’t find anything about an arson fire having occurred there?


Look, a foot print,

that’s your foot print,

oh!

That’s funny.


Yup.Broke a window and threw an “incendiary device” in at around 3:00AM.


Congratulations to Pam and all the other wonderful and watchful employee at K-Jon’s Fine Jewelers in Atascadero.

I had the honor of working with this staff and we trained constantly for emergencies (see 911 story) and for suspicious looking or acting customers. K-Jon’s did not at that time purchase used jewelry, although they did occasionally allow a customer they knew to consign jewelry but only if they knew the ownership of the piece. K-Jon’s also offered full value trade in/trade up for any diamonds that where purchase from K-Jon’s.

There is a lesson here for many. This is just one more recent incident that shows why choosing a jeweler you can trust is important. It also tells the consumer to check with local Pawn shops if you have a loss but also go to area jewelry stores to see if they had seen it. In the end it’s up to the customer to do the diligence of going beyond just calling the police and your insurance company.

And finally isn’t it nice to see the SLO PD do something effectively without using any physical force..


What in the world is APD doing? Why are we paying these bozos? There is no excuse for this except poor police work. Barney Fife could do a better job. Sad.


1) To take a report of a stolen item this valuable and decide that the case is immediately inactive is ridiculous. With all the vehicles that were being broken into at that time, I would think there would have been a great big “active” file with a list of all the stolen items from all the vehicles as eventually locating any one of those items might have lead police to the culprits.

2) To receive a phone call from a reputable jeweler informing them of the attempted sale of such a valuable piece of jewelery was a lucky hit for the APD. To fail to make the connection to the report of an identical ring stolen two weeks earlier in the same town was a gross blunder.

3) I find it completely moronic that the APD knew who these two guys were, knew they were in possession of a ring worth 25K, knew they were on probation and failed to pay them a visit, not just moronic but plain indifferent to their number one duties.

APD = Keystone Cops.


There is no shortage of Atascadero LEO. They can be found hiding around corners all over town looking for people committing minor traffic violations so they can issue expensive tickets to them. They are no longer working for the people, they are working for themselves and looking to generate revenue. There are stop signs that people frequently “roll” through because there generally is no one to stop for, those are the area’s the APD frequent. Those tickets are in excess of $200. each. People beware.


Thank You K-Jon’s for looking out for us citizens. Taking photo’s of the ring, identifying points in the diamond and getting the license plate of the con artists was outstanding. I wonder why the APD marked a report of a stolen $25,000 wedding ring as inactive? I wonder if they doubted the victim? It’s wonderful that the victim was able to do the detective work and re-direct the APD’s attention to locate the where about’s of her stolen property, thanks to K-Jon’s and the admirable efforts of their employee’s.


Why is it that these thieves, complete with priors only spent three months in jail and are now back out on the streets? They admitted to breaking into at least 100 cars in A-Town! They even broke into one of the cop’s cars! Looks like we are all back to square one, whose car is next or have they graduated to home invasions? We know that they won’t be going to K-Jon’s or All That Glitters, no doubt they got educated at the county jail with contacts to out of town front men.


Nice. I like proactive law enforcement by the citizenry. We can all learn good lessons from this.


Now, that is investigative journalism. Thank you CCN for giving us the full story. It is sad that the victim is the only true detective in the story. This, combined with other failures of the APD, lead one to believe that there is an organizational attitude of doing the least they possibly can for the community. Isn’t K-Jons the store that ATPD blew off the call for assisance with a suspicious person for several days? Yes, I thought so. How many of the 100 additional victims could have been spared the pain of loosing their property if ATPD had acted proactively? It is obvious that we need a law enforcement reformist to modify how police work is conducted in the entire county (with just a couple of exceptions.) The moral of the story is the criminals don’t need to worry about the cops, just worry about upset victims who want their wedding ring back.


A while back Cindy claimed her APD should not be included in our Keystone Kops fiasco here in this county. Maybe this sad story of bumbling cops will make my earlier point that every dept north of Pismo has major problems. What a triple whammy. The APD can’t quite get it together, the crooks get off with a slap, the SLOPD guy is helping a private business with their affairs even after they know the store is crooked. More fuel for the fire-what say you Ian Parkinson about your kops and department?


Stop it hotdog, I didn’t call the A-Town cops “my APD”. You had dragged them into the story about the SLOSD and the criminal deputies that transgressed upon Matt Hart, along with stories about the hothead, pepper spraying brutes in the SLOPD. I said that we don’t have those types of problems with “our APD”. I didn’t say that they don’t bungle or occasionally brush other cop incidents under the rug, we know they have done so in the past. I said that we don’t have the police brutality or the overall disdain, contempt and lack of respect for the citizenry and their civil rights here in A-Town like what happens with the SLOPD and the SLOSD. I also pointed out that two of the memorable incidents that occurred in Atascadero by the PD was in fact not perpetrated by the APD but it was the SLOPD who misbehaved in A-Town and dragged our cops into it.


BTW, if anyone, while reading this latest story, is wondering where they heard the name Scott Cramer before, he is the SLO off duty cop who chased down a disabled citizen here in A-Town and beat him up on his (the victim’s) own property. He got away with it and last we heard, the victim’s attorney was still trying to procure a copy of the 911 tapes from the APD. I never said the APD doesn’t try to cover for other LEO. i.e. Guzzens, Solomon’s gun, Cramer all come to mind.

They do get kudo’s for the Bolts incident.


Can’t argue with that. : )