73.3 F
The Villages
Wednesday, April 24, 2024

Students arrested after offensive graffiti spree leaves damage at Lake Weir High School

Anthony Rich
Hunter Lee Alexander

Two teenagers were arrested Tuesday and charged with breaking into a local business and vandalizing Lake Weir High School.

Hunter Lee Alexander, 17, and Anthony Rich, 16, are accused of causing thousands of dollars in damage to the business, Safety Kleen, and the high school they attend. The two are facing multiple felony charges.

A concession stand at Lake Weir High School was vandalized with offensive and racial graffiti, some of which has been blurred out.

According to a Marion County Sheriff’s Office report, officials from Safety-Kleen Systems in Ocala reported Tuesday morning that someone had broken into one of their sheds the night before, stolen several cans of spray paint and vandalized several pieces of equipment with the paint, including a semi-truck, a trailer and three railroad tanker rail cars. They said the graffiti contained several offensive words and images.

Lake Weir’s school resource officer, Deputy Erik Deangelis, also found similar offensive graffiti scattered across the campus Tuesday morning on trash cans, windows, a concrete patio pad, a gazebo in the school’s courtyard, the band room wall and both concession stands by the football field. One of the concession stands also had been broke into, the report says, adding that items inside were broken and a fire extinguisher had been discharged.

A semi-truck at Safety-Kleen Systems in Ocala was damaged with graffiti and paint covering its headlights and a window. Offensive words have been blurred out.

In addition, the seat to an ROTC golf cart was flipped up and two wires had been pulled out.

Later Tuesday, Deangelis identified both Alexander and Rich as suspects. He noted that both had paint on their hands when he met with them.
During a subsequent interview with property crimes Detective Wady Sedan, the teenagers admitted to the burglaries and vandalisms of both the business and the school, the report said.

A racial slur, which has been blurred, was painted on a wall at Lake Weir High School.

Rich admitted to discharging the fire extinguisher and said he also let the air out of the golf cart’s tires. Alexander admitted to ripping the wires out from under the seat of the golf cart. And each claimed that the other one ripped the seat off the cart, the report says.
Both teenagers were charged with two counts of felony criminal mischief, two counts of burglary to an unoccupied structure and one count of burglary to an unoccupied conveyance (vehicle). Rich also was charged with one count of discharging a fire extinguisher.

The teens were booked into the Marion County Juvenile Detention Center. Alexander was later released to a guardian and given a notice to appear in court per his juvenile probation officer, while Rich was still being held Wednesday afternoon.
Damage to the school is estimated to be between $2,500 and $3,000. Damage to the semi-truck, trailer and railroad tanker cars at Safety-Kleen Systems, a company that provides services such as collecting and recycling oil, providing industrial cleaning, and handling industrial waste, was estimated at $1,150, with the stolen paint valued at $90.

Two keys that were taken from Safety-Kleen, one to a Bobcat tractor and another to a semi-truck, were recovered.

What’s the real story when it comes to golf courses in The Villages?

A Village of Hadley resident, in a Letter to the Editor, says he is trying to get to the bottom of the reason for the problems at golf courses in The Villages.

Why can’t The Villages get a Trader Joe’s?

A reader from Summerfield says that The Villages has done a great job of reeling in businesses, but can’t seem to land a Trader Joe’s.

Here’s the Secret Recipe when it comes to The Villages

Is there a Secret Recipe when it comes to The Villages? A Village of Fenney resident thinks so and he’s ready to offer his observations in a Letter to the Editor.

Vietnam veterans grateful for community support

An official with Vietnam Veterans of America Chapter 1036 is grateful for community support. Read his Letter to the Editor.

Serious top-down management failure in The Villages

In a Letter to the Editor, a Village of Collier resident has been studying the golf course crisis in The Villages and has concluded there has been a serious top-down management failure.