http://littlecitynames.livejournal.com/ ([identity profile] littlecitynames.livejournal.com) wrote in [community profile] davis_square2014-02-11 09:02 pm
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Claim your missing mail!

According to the Somerville Times, a Malden postal worker was found to have thousands of pieces of mail in his apartment belonging to people from Somerville, Medford, Malden, and Melrose. USPS will be delivering the unopened mail, but much of it was opened so they don't know who the intended recipients were. If you think your mail is missing, you should contact the USPS at their contact info bolded in the article below.

Middlesex District Attorney Marian Ryan and Malden Police Chief Kevin Molis informed the public today that a former postal worker has been charged with stealing more than 7,000 pieces of mail – including mail containing gift cards, cell phones, and Christmas cards and presents – from residents of Malden, Somerville, Medford and Melrose.

Steven Bozzi, 36, of Malden, was arrested February 1, 2014 and charged with larceny over $250, breaking into a depository, receiving stolen property, possession of a burglarious tool, and possession of a Class B controlled substance. He was arraigned today in Malden District Court. Judge Dominic Paratore ordered him held on $2,500 cash bail with conditions that he be placed on a GPS monitoring device, take no drugs, and submit to random drug screenings.

“For the past three months, we allege, this defendant has been stealing from post office collection boxes from several communities, stealing personal cards, gifts and packages,” said District Attorney Ryan. “Not only did this defendant allegedly defraud our postal service, he stole gifts and cards that were to be exchanged among families and loved ones during the holiday season.”

As a result of the investigation, police discovered 7,689 pieces of mail in the defendant’s home, 5,156 of which had been opened, and none of which belonged to the defendant or his family. Among the stolen items recovered were a computer, six cellular phones, a Kindle, more than twenty gift cards, Massachusetts drivers licenses and identification cards, and thousands of items of personal mail.

The investigation began on January 22, 2014, when Malden Police were contacted by a local business reporting that a man, identified as the defendant, was attempting to use a gift card that had been voided after the purchaser did not receive the gift card in the mail. Malden Police contacted the USPS Postal Inspector, as the defendant was a postal worker.

Through the course of the investigation, postal investigators received information that the defendant was allegedly illegally accessing mail collection boxes at sites that were not part of his route. Investigators also found discrepancies in the sign out procedures for keys used to access mail collection boxes.

On February 1, 2014, police observed the defendant access several blue collection boxes and place mail into his car, which he was not authorized to do. The defendant was then arrested by Malden Police. Bozzi subsequently consented to a search of his home, where police discovered the thousands of pieces of mail and stolen items.

All unopened mail is being sent to postal authorities to be appropriately delivered. All parties who believe their mail may have been stolen are asked to file a report with the USPS Office of the Inspector General by emailing their name, address, the date mail was sent, specific contents of the items mailed, and its value to prossi@uspsoig.gov.

These charges are allegations and defendant is presumed innocent until proven guilty.

The case is being investigated by Malden Police, US Postal Inspectors of Boston, and USPS Office of the Inspector General. The arraignment was handled by Assistant District Attorney Anna Evans.

– Middlesex District Attorney’s Office

[identity profile] beinneighe.livejournal.com 2014-02-12 03:02 am (UTC)(link)
Checking the mail just got even more exciting--I'm not missing anything that I know of, but I choose to hope that someone sent me a $1000 Amazon gift certificate that got "rerouted" and that I'll be getting it in the mail any day now.
kelkyag: notched triangle signature mark in blue on grey (signature mark blue on grey)

[personal profile] kelkyag 2014-02-12 04:07 am (UTC)(link)
Thank you for pointing this out!

(Huh. I wonder if this explains the whereabouts of a couple of missing pieces of very dull and yet annoying-not-to-have mail.)

[identity profile] pekmez.livejournal.com 2014-02-13 03:09 am (UTC)(link)
Yeah, this might explain a screwup with our homeowners' insurance billing, too. (Our insurance agent swapped providers and bundled our homeowners with our auto insurance which was already on this provider, and then we never got a bill at the time I would've expected it to come...until a few weeks ago when we got a "pay us now our we will cancel your insurance" notice. It's solved now, but I *was* wondering why we hadn't actually received the bill, and thought it had something to do with the bundling and the reshuffling and that maybe we'd get billed when the auto portion renewed, rather than when the homeowner's portion renewed, or something.)
irilyth: (Only in Kenya)

[personal profile] irilyth 2014-02-12 04:10 pm (UTC)(link)
That's sort of weird that you have to report all these details of the mail that you might be missing. How would you necessarily even know, if it wasn't something that the recipient necessarily expected? In any case, it seems like if they've got the unopened mail, with people's names and addresses *right there*, they could just, you know, deliver it. :^)

[identity profile] missdimple.livejournal.com 2014-02-12 04:15 pm (UTC)(link)
OPAll unopened mail is being sent to postal authorities to be appropriately delivered.

It's the opened mail with no corresponding envelopes that the Inspector General is working on further.
irilyth: (Only in Kenya)

[personal profile] irilyth 2014-02-12 04:24 pm (UTC)(link)
Ah! Reading comprehension failure. :^p Thanks!

[identity profile] bareblueskin.livejournal.com 2014-02-12 08:49 pm (UTC)(link)
Wow - any clue how far back this goes? I sent a box to myself from a post office in NYS two years ago, and it never arrived. I'm still mad about it, as it contained things I had pulled from my childhood home and never saw again. Any chance those things would still be in his apartment? *sigh*

[identity profile] maclou.livejournal.com 2014-02-13 04:02 am (UTC)(link)
He only worked in Somerville for like a week right before he got caught.

[identity profile] pekmez.livejournal.com 2014-03-19 01:39 am (UTC)(link)
Today I discovered that I never received not one but two important pieces of mail around mid-December to early January -- the second one being the notification that it's time to renew one's parking permit for another 12 months. And thus I completely failed to notice that that big 2014 on my parking sticker meant that it had just expired, and even stared at it for a full minute with the parking ticket placed right on top of it before I figured it out. *oops*

But when I asked about this at the Somerville Post office they had no idea what I was talking about and whether it was for real.

Has anyone had missing mail and found out that this is more than just some bizarre rumor? I never saw it reported in the Somerville Journal, for instance.