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The morning after Christmas, a thief stole more than just a Christmas-themed flamingo from a home on Wright Avenue — he appears to have stolen some Christmas cheer as well.

“It’s not so much the cost, it’s like, how rude is that?” said Andrei Fenner, who put up the flamingo on his front lawn with his wife and kids, ages 3 and 7. “The kids are saying, ‘Why would someone take this from us?'”

It wasn’t just any plastic lawn flamingo; it was a motorized one with Christmas lights and a Santa Claus hat. There was even a faux palm tree with Christmas lights to go with it. The uniquely Californian setup stood apart from the typical snowmen and nativity scenes and neighbors loved it.

“It just became a neighborhood joke because no one else really has this type of thing,” Fenner said. “We all really got into decorating like crazy. Everyone in the neighborhood came by to take pictures of it with their kids. We were just glowing about all this.”

Police told Fenner that they don’t have the resources to look for a flamingo thief, even if the thief’s fingerprints were left on a screwdriver used to unscrew the flamingo. Fenner found the screwdriver on the lawn.

And that is a shame, he said. “For the kids who probably did it, it is probably not going to be the last time they are going to do something bad or illegal,” Fenner said.

The family hopes that someone reading this knows where the flamingo is and will return it to its home at the corner of Wright and Granada streets. Police can also be tipped about the flamingo’s whereabouts at (650) 903-6344.

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1 Comment

  1. I wonder which resources the police “don’t have” to look for stolen property? Would those be political resources? Mental resources? Financial resources? Even if you don’t intend to look for stolen property, can’t MV’s Finest at least muster some interpersonal resources and politely lie to those you’re “serving”???

  2. “Posted by greycat, a resident of another community, 3 hours ago

    I wonder which resources the police “don’t have” to look for stolen property? Would those be political resources? Mental resources? Financial resources? Even if you don’t intend to look for stolen property, can’t MV’s Finest at least muster some interpersonal resources and politely lie to those you’re “serving”???”

    To be perfectly frank, they simply don’t think that this kind of theft ranks as important enough to investigate. I am a local Neighborhood Watch Block Captain in Mountain View, and I’d been trying to get them to investigate the theft of recyclables from people’s bins. Now, some people don’t care, and that’s fine, but the law states that when you leave recyclables in your city-provided bin on the street, they are no longer your property, but the city’s. So, anyone rifling through bins is stealing from the city, and theft is theft.

    Moreover, I have personally taken photos/video of “rummagers” going through not just the recyclables bins, but people’s garbage bins, doing dumspter-diving, taking PAPERWORK out of bins, likely trying to steal someone’s personal info for identity theft. Basically, the local PD’s take is: “Meh.”

    If you want to protect your home and personal property, and indeed, your family…You’re just going to have to take steps to do it yourself. That’s what I do.

    I wish that all people were nice and had everyone else’s best interests at heart…but in this economy, with reduced police resources and a scale of importance for response to crimes, we simply don’t live in that world.

    Stay safe out there,
    ~The Eye~

  3. “For the kids who probably did it, it is probably not going to be the last time they are going to do something bad or illegal,” Fenner said.

    Right, let’s blame the kids, because there’s not enough wild finger-pointing going on in the world today.

    Having said that, whoever stole such an adorable flamingo and holiday cheer from a family and their small children the day after Christmas should be thoroughly ashamed of themselves!

  4. Just to clarify a few things. First the flamingo was stolen the Sunday before Christmas, so it wasn’t like I could take the decorations down and hide it from the kids. Secondly, responding to “bark”, I assumed it was kids due to the half dozen basketball prints on the back of my car that I found in the morning, who really bounces a basketball off a car while commiting a crime…? I am not sure what we are going to even do next year, I don’t really feel like replacing it and adding more stuff just to risk another theft. I am still hoping that someone finds who did, even if I never see it back. What they did is wrong and I am getting tired of certain crimes being chosen over others to investigate, ie IdeaFarm.

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