Police find vending machine vandal suspect The suspect used a crowbar in attempts to break in to campus vending machines; damages have cost $2,100 Caron Alarab Safety/Crime/Transportation Reporter The Department of Public Safety has received 25 reports of vandal ized vending machines since Sep tember 2002, with more than $2,100 in damage to units on cam pus. But after months of investiga tion and a long day of close-calls, a foot pursuit and the capture of a suspect, DPS and Eugene Police De partment officers said they have identified and charged an individual linked to several campus reports of damage or theft. The suspect, who has been re leased from custody, is not consid ered responsible for all of the re ported vandalism, Associate Director Tom Hicks said. However, DPS has not received any new re ports on campus since the suspect’s apprehension. “But maybe that’s just pure coin cidence,” Hicks said. Since fall term, DPS received eight vandalized phone card ma chine reports — all of which oc curred in the EMU — equaling $1,700 in damage. Approximately $400 in damage has been estimated as a result of 15 vandalized vending machine reports, which have oc curred in the Education Building, Gerlinger Annex, PLG, Hamilton Complex and Huestis, Pacific, Straub and Willamette halls. One gumball machine and one video game machine in the EMU have also been vandalized, both of which in curred unknown damage costs. The suspect linked to at least four of these incidents, 38-year-old John Charles Graves, was spotted attempt ing to vandalize a vending machine with a crowbar in PLC at about 5 p.m. March 8. The instructor who witnessed the incident reported that Graves fled the scene with a black duffle bag before the arrival of EPD officers, who proceeded to contact DPS. DPS officers informed them of a recent investigation regarding sever al vandalism reports linked to a simi larly described suspect. An hour later, a DPS officer called for assistance during a foot pursuit of Graves, who was spotted at Agate Hall. Before he fled the scene in his vehicle, Graves dropped a crowbar wrapped in a jacket. Lane County Sheriffs officers later apprehended Graves after he tried to hide in bushes along Interstate-5 in the Glen wood Area. DPS positively identified Graves from the Agate Hall pursuit, and he was logged at Lane County Jail for two charges of burglary. The next afternoon, DPS officers retrieved a duffle bag that matched the description reported at the PLC incident in the brush along a trail at Laurel Hill, northeast of Moon Mountain. EPD spokes women Pam Olshanski said the bag contained an undisclosed amount of money, as well as a collection of “burglary tools.” After Graves was apprehended, DPS was able to link him to several burglary and theft cases, including vandalism to a phone card machine in January from which fingerprints were obtained, EPD Lt. Herb Homer said. “He got so comfortable coming here without getting caught that he just got bolder,” he added. Graves was released from Lane County Jail shortly after his arrest because the jail system in Eugene is understaffed and overflowing, Homer said. “If the individual poses no physi cal threat, the jail does not hold on to him for very long,” he said. The manager of Canteen Vending — the local company responsible for installing, servicing and repair ing damaged machines at the Uni versity for more than 20 years— confirmed Hicks’ assertion that no vending machines have been van dalized on campus for the past three weeks. “We really applaud DPS for their investigations of these crimes,” Dis trict Operations Manager Dave King said. “These guys have really been bulldogs on this thing.” King said the task of servicing machine vandalism varies greatly from assessing small damage to tak ing entire units to the junkyard. “Some are totally destroyed,” he added. “And the University doesn’t cover the cost — we do.” DPS officers advise students and faculty to report all suspicious sub jects, activity or evidence of vend ing machine vandalism as soon as they are witnessed. Contact the reporter at caronalarab@dailyemerald.com. Photo illustration: Adam Amato and Mark McCambridge Emerald DPS has received 25 reports of vending machine vandalism since last September, and DPS and EPD have tracked down a suspect. y our opinion The College Student Report was recently sent to a randomly selected group of 1,000 UO Freshmen and Seniors. If you were selected from among your classmates to represent the UO, make your opinions known. The survey takes about 10 minutes to complete and offers the option of submitting by snail mail or the web. The NSSE College Student Report is sponsored by the UO Division of Undergraduate Studies. Who knows more about the quality of your UO education than you? About what goes on inside and outside the classroom. About whether or not you have meaningful contact with faculty. About how your experience at the UO has or hasn’t helped you succeed academically, socially or in the job market. Here’s your chance to tell it like it is. 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