Wednesday, February 20, 2008

Ibiza Rolex thief awaits sentence

<These articles were originally submitted to ThinkSpain Today on 3 December 2007. ThinkSpain Today was the country's only national English-language newspaper until it was closed down at the end of December 2007>


A 20-year-old man from Naples Vicenzo Tolomelli has been found guilty of stealing a 25,000 euro Rolex and the attempted violent theft of another expensive watch. His arrest in July came as police pursued a “Rolex Gang” which was terrifying wealthy tourists in Ibiza over the summer.


Police then said the gang was made up of members of the “Camorra”, the Neapolitan equivalent of the Sicilian Mafia. The gang was blamed for 27 violent robberies involving luxury watches between 31 May and the eventual arrest of six Italians in July.


Tolomelli was arrested as he tried to steal a watch from a man in the centre of Ibiza Town. The man fought back and prevented the robbery. In the course of the tussle he was injured and the watch was damaged. The victim is to receive more than 2,500 euros in compensation.


After he was arrested Tolomelli was recognised as the thief who snatched a 25,000 euro Rolex watch from a tourist in an Ibiza Town supermarket car park. Tolomelli has been held in jail since his arrest.


People attending Ibiza penal court number two said that Tolmelli did not act as if he was a “Mafiosi”. He apologised in particular to his father who he said was a Naples council employee who, despite only earning 1400 euros a month, had managed to gather together almost 28,000 euros in compensation for the victims.


The public prosecutor has asked for a sentence of three years prison while Tolomelli’s lawyer has asked that this be reduced to one-year nine months. The judge will decide whether the compensation paid to the victims is sufficient to reduce the sentence.



New law threatens another Ibiza clubbing tradition


The spectacular parades which promoters used to publicise parties at Ibiza’s nightclubs are under threat from new laws. For years the island’s councils have tried to reduce the numbers of flyers handed out as they end up littering beaches and tourist spots. San Josep council, which includes the world-famous Space, has voted to increase the maximum fine to 30,000 euros for serious infractions by promoters. That’s ten times as much as the maximum fine for clubs breaking the new laws on opening hours.


The threat to the parades comes from another part of the same law which bans advertising activity by people not meeting “basic conditions of decency and good taste”. Many of the parades feature women wearing little more than tiny swimsuits and it’s not clear whether this is now illegal. The new law also bans people from handing out flyers with prices or calling them out. They also won’t be able to publicise their activities outside rival clubs.


Coke bust in Denia


A 38-year-old Brazilian has been caught with almost three kilos of cocaine as he tried to board a ferry from Denia to Ibiza. Members of the Denia Guardia Civil and its specialist dog-handling section from Alicante the Service Cinológico became suspicious of the man. When they searched his car they found 2.78 kilos of cocaine stashed in a number of places.


This is the second significant bust on the same ferry route in recent weeks. On 13 November two Dominicans were caught with 200 grams of cocaine hidden in their underwear.


Better dead than read in Ibiza


Almost 60 (58.9%) per cent of the population of the Pitiüses islands (Ibiza and Formantera) have not read a book in the last year. That puts them behind the rest of the Balearics. For Majorca the figure is 43.6% and for Menorca 48.5%. However the annual “Barometer of Communication and Culture” shows Ibiza to be slightly above the Balearic average for internet use with over 60% using it in the week before interviews were carried out.


Porn phone call sentence


A 34-year-old man has been fined 480 euros for making a series of calls to sex phone lines for which his neighbours paid the bills. He was given a reduced sentence as the judge recognised that the suffered from bipolar disorder (what used to be called “manic depression”)


The former telecommunications worker had managed to hack into his local telephone switchboard in Sant Carles Ibiza so neighbours would pay the bill for calls to sex lines amounting to over 11,000 euros between February and June 2005. One of the calls lasted seven hours.


Fourth time unlucky


Police in Ibiza have arrested the same 34-year-old local man four times in three weeks for breaking into cars and removing the documentation. Three of the arrests happened on successive days as he tried to enter a parked vehicle. Following his last arrest he was found to be carrying items which appeared to have been removed from other vehicles showing signs of having been broken into. He apparently left a note in at least one car demanding 200 euros for the return of the documentation to the driver.

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1 comment:

Anonymous said...

I wish the Police would arrest the "domesticated" thief who not only robbed us at home but used the toilet, left the seat up (must have been a bloke) AND flushed it too! Anyone seen a Cartier watch and assorted ladies jewellery lately or indeed a brand new Pentax K100D camera....