Date: Fri 04-Dec-1998
Date: Fri 04-Dec-1998
Publication: Bee
Author: ANDYG
Quick Words:
Riverside-intruder-Northrop
Full Text:
Additional Charges Lodged Against Riverside Intruder
BY ANDREW GOROSKO
Police this week arrested a 28-year-old Riverside man on a charge of
second-degree burglary stemming from a June 1997 nighttime intrusion at a
Riverside residence, marking the fourth illegal entry for which the man has
been charged.
Following his arraignment Monday in Danbury Superior Court, Kennith J.
Northrop of 86 Alpine Drive was released on a $50,000 bond for a December 17
court appearance. Northrop is scheduled to enter a plea to the burglary charge
at that court appearance.
Northrop surrendered to police Sunday night after learning police had a
warrant for his arrest. Police held him overnight on a $100,000 bond for his
arraignment the following day.
Those illegal entries occurred in the area of Underhill Road, Bankside Trail
and Dock Drive, where Interstate-84's Rochambeau Bridge crosses the Housatonic
River. No physical injuries resulted from the incidents, police said.
The latest burglary charge in the so-called nocturnal intruder case against
Northrop stems from the earliest of four Riverside nighttime intrusions which
occurred on June 21, 1997 at an Underhill Road home.
"(The) investigation determined that an unknown person entered the (Underhill
Road) home during the nighttime hours and removed a six-month-old infant from
its crib and put the infant on a lawn chair on the backyard patio. The unknown
intruder then fled the area," according to the arrest warrant.
Police pressed the second-degree burglary charge against Northrop based on
similarities between the June 21, 1997, crime and similar crimes he allegedly
committed in Riverside on June 30, 1977, and August 5, 1997.
According to the arrest warrant, on June 30, 1997, "An unknown person forced
entry into (a Bankside Trail) house during the nighttime hours and entered the
bedroom of two female youths. The unknown intruder then fled the area."
On August 5, 1997, "An unknown person forced entry into (a second Underhill
Road) residence during the nighttime hours and entered the bedroom of an
infant. The unknown intruder then fled the area," the warrant states.
Town police and state police collected evidence at the three crime scenes.
State police analyzed it at their forensic laboratory.
Dock Drive
On June 23, 1998, at 2:52 am, police responded to a Dock Drive residence after
the homeowner informed them someone had entered a tent in the backyard where
children were camping out.
The homeowner's daughter, 14, and her friend, 13, had been sleeping in the
tent when the friend was awakened by a noise, according to the warrant. The
friend then saw a flash of light and spotted someone who had partially
unzipped the tent door, reached inside the tent and touched the foot of the
homeowner's daughter, according to the warrant.
The homeowner confronted the intruder who was kneeling on a walkway between
the house and garage, about 15 feet from the tent, according to the warrant.
The intruder, who was later identified as Northrop by police, "resisted
attempts to be restrained...but was detained (by the homeowner) until police
arrived," the warrant states.
Police then charged Northrop with second-degree criminal trespassing and
breach of the peace.
The state police's Western District Major Crime Squad then collected evidence
at the Dock Drive residence.
Evidence from the 1997 incident at the first Underhill Road home was compared
with evidence from the other 1997 incidents at the Bankside Trail home and the
other Underhill Road home, the warrant states.
Also, "Fingerprints of Kennith Northrop (gathered at the Dock Drive residence)
(in June 1998) were identified as those being obtained at the (second
Underhill Road) residence (in August 1997)," according to the court document.
An oily substance found at the Bankside Trail home and the second Underhill
Road home was consistent with an oily substance found on Northrop's body at
the Dock Drive residence, according to the warrant.
That substance was a vegetable-based cooking oil, which Northrop had planned
to use to perform massages on his victims, according to police.
Last September 29, town police, state police and the Federal Bureau of
Investigation went to the Northrop home and charged Northrop in connection
with the Bankside Trail and the second Underhill Road incidents. Police
charged Northrup with one count of second-degree burglary and two counts of
fourth-degree sexual assault in connection with the Bankside Trail incident.
The second Underhill Road incident resulted in one count of second-degree
burglary and one count of fourth-degree sexual assault.
Latest Arrest
The latest arrest of Northrop in connection with the June 21, 1997, incident
on Underhill Road is based on the facts and circumstances of the three 1997
nighttime entries, plus facts and descriptions which have been provided by
Northrop, according to the warrant.
"(Police have) reason to believe that only the person involved in the entry of
the (first Underhill Road) residence on June 21, 1997 would know such facts
and circumstances," the warrant states.
All eight charges against Northrop are pending in court.
The nighttime incidents led police to boost surveillance in the Riverside area
and conduct door-to-door interviews of residents in a lengthy investigation of
the case.
In the summer of 1997, police conducted a neighborhood meeting for area
residents concerned about the nighttime intrusions, and raised the possibility
that residents form a neighborhood crime watch to keep an eye on suspicious
activity.
Police sought the latest arrest warrant October 12. Judge Dennis Eveleigh
approved it November 20.