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Law and Order: Recently arrested Pavilion man also accused of burglary

By Howard B. Owens

Joshua L. Webster, 25, of 7882 York Road, Pavilion, is charged with burglary, 3rd, grand larceny and criminal mischief, 4th. Webster is accused of burglarizing a residence April 12 on Clinton Street Road, Bergen. Webster allegedly stole more than $1,000 in property. Bail on this case was set at $10,000 cash or $15,000 bond. Webster was previously arrested over the weekend and accused of fleeing from an accident on West Main Street, Batavia, and escaping through Batavia Downs.

Robert Charles Polcyn, 70, of Renouf Drive, Rochester, is charged with possession of untaxed cigarettes and failure to keep right. Polcyn was stopped at 3:57 p.m. on Byron-Elba Road, Byron, for an alleged traffic violation by Deputy Timothy Wescott. Polcyn was allegedly found in possession of 4,400 untaxed cigarettes.

Trisha Rose Santora, 29, of Seneca Avenue, Batavia, is charged with criminal contempt, 2nd. Santora is accused of violating an order of protection.

terry paine

Tim Wescott just taught that 70 year old man a lesson in acting like free human. All paid thugs defend their actions by saying "just following orders". That excuse has been used thoughout history by violent authoritarians.

Apr 17, 2012, 2:32pm Permalink
Doug Yeomans

Terry, the cops are good at being intimidating. These people get caught because they answer questions that they don't need to. When a cop asks you where you're coming from and you know you have 4400 cigarettes in the trunk, it's pretty silly to give "the rez" as an answer. You don't have to lie, either. You can deflect the question with a question. You never have to answer the first question at all.

Cop: "Where ya coming from?" You: "Why did you pull me over, sir/ma'am?" Cop: "Why do you think I pulled you over and where are you coming from?" (The officer is fishing..it's their job..you don't have to admit to anything. They want you to incriminate yourself..confessions make their job as easy as pie.) You: "Am I getting a ticket, sir/ma'am?" Cop: "I pulled you over for (descriptive violation)." The officer may ask if he or she can look in your vehicle but you can politely decline. If they're asking, they might be suspicious but they don't have probable cause. If they did, they wouldn't be asking.

I'm not saying that it's a good idea to do any of the above, but if you're going to make cigarette runs to the rez, it's probably best to learn the game first. If you're going to go to the rez for untaxed cigarettes, I believe the limit is 400 cigarettes per person in the vehicle and each person needs their own receipt.

Apr 18, 2012, 9:47pm Permalink

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