John Clark
(8
Feb 2006)
"Fed-up church members stand
guard, beat suspect"
http://www.palmbeachpost.com/pbccentral/content/local_news/epaper/2006/03/25/m1a_Church_0325.html
Fed-up church members stand guard, beat suspect
By Bill Douthat
Palm Beach Post Staff Writer
Saturday, March 25, 2006
WEST PALM BEACH — For two months, they spent their nights
as volunteer security guards in their burglary-plagued house of God.
The vigilance paid off early Friday when a suspected
burglar broke through a window and encountered a half-dozen church members
wielding baseball bats and broom handles.
When police arrived, at about 1 a.m., they found the
man battered and bound with rope on the roof outside a second-story window
of the Church of the Nazarene in northern West Palm Bea! ch.
"We think it was the same burglar who broke in two months
ago. He used the same window," said Aristeo Paxtor, 31, who was the first
to confront the suspect.
The action began around 12:50 a.m. when the makeshift
guards, waiting in the dark, heard the pattering of footsteps on the roof.
They then heard a window break, and one dialed 911.
Paxtor was the first to make contact, swinging a bat
at the suspect as he opened a door, striking him across the chest and sending
him reeling backward.
By then, volunteer guard Esteban Mendoza had made his
way to the roof and was waiting for the suspect to scramble out the same
window he entered. When he was halfway out the window, Mendoza hit him
in the back with a bat, according to police reports.
Using rope purchased just for this occasion, the volunteers
tied him up and waited for police to arrive.
"We were simply defending ourselves and our church,"
said Juan Delfin, 26, one of the volunteers. "The police can't be everywhere."
Police arrested Ralph Thomas, 47, and charged him with
burglary and possession of burglary tools. Thomas has been arrested 27
times since 1981, including six times on burglary charges, according to
state records.
He was taken to St. Mary's Medical Center for cuts on
his legs, broken fingers and broken ribs, West Palm Beach police spokesman
Ted White said.
The church members are not under investigation for their
actions, White said.
"They were trying to protect themselves," White said.
"At the very least, they were trying to protect the property."
Church pastor Galo Poveda said his congregation of mostly
Guatemalan and Mexican immigrants was frustrated a! bout the three burglaries
they have endured in the year since he purchased the building.
"The neighborhood is not the greatest," he said. "To
survive, you have to protect yourself."
Despite the biblical admonition to turn the other cheek,
Poveda used the Bible to justify the use of violence to capture the suspect.
"The thief only comes to steal, kill and destroy," Poveda
said, quoting from the book of John.
Some of the volunteer guards suggested that righteous
indignation sometimes calls for forceful action.
"When someone comes in and steals in the house of God,
we have to protect those things," Paxtor said.
The volunteer guards, six at a time, stood watch from
10 p.m. to daylight, sleeping in shifts on sofas — three upstairs, three
downstairs — while some remained awake. Each stayed awake for two-h! our
intervals.
Delfin said the church would have installed alarms or
video cameras, but the building has no electricity.
Poveda said the city demanded so many improvements when
he took over the building from Planned Parenthood a year ago that he hasn't
been able to get the permits to open.
Services at the church, called the Iglesia del Nazareno
Belen, are held during daylight hours on Sundays. Poveda said he needs
to hold services or face losing his 200-strong congregation.
Burglars stole about $1,200 in cash after the church
moved into the building at 5312 Broadway, he said. Two months ago, about
$7,000 worth of property was taken, including audio equipment.
The team guarding the building Thursday night included
five Guatemalan immigrants and one immigrant from Mexico. The guards said
the suspect had an accomplice waiting i! n a truck, but the truck pulled
away when it was apparent the building was occupied.
Delfin said the suspect was carrying a flashlight and
a hammer, but insisted after his capture that he wasn't trying to steal
anything, Delfin said.
"He said he didn't have any money for rent and that he
comes to the church to sleep," Delfin said. "We knew that wasn't true."