China News Service, May 27. According to the US "World Daily" report, the 68th Police Department, which administers Berridge, Brooklyn, New York, said that there have been many robbery and theft cases in the area recently, and many Chinese were recruited; one A 50-year-old Chinese man was violently robbed on the street a few days ago, and he lost thousands of yuan (US dollars, the same below) and multiple bank cards, credit cards and mobile phones.

  The news pointed out that at 1:10 a.m. on the 22nd of this month, a 50-year-old Chinese man called in front of the apartment building at No. 1254 Berridge Avenue, unaware that a strange man was approaching him; when he responded, the other party did not respond. He threw a punch directly at him in the face, and while the victim fell to the ground, the robbers stole his wallet and mobile phone.

  The victim revealed to the police that there were multiple credit cards, bank cards, ID cards, and 6,000 yuan in cash in the wallet; the robber then fled in an unknown direction, and the victim returned home to call the police. The whereabouts of the robbers were traced.

  At about 6:15 pm on the same day, in the restaurant at 6324 Fort Hamilton Parkway (Fort Hamilton Parkway), an elderly Chinese couple lost their backpacks due to carelessness; the 71-year-old Chinese woman at the time lost the backpack Give it to the husband, who forgot to take the backpack in the bathroom when he went to the toilet.

  Not long after her husband came out, the elderly Chinese woman did not see the backpack and urged the other party to go back to the toilet to look for it, but the backpack was no longer in place. Although the police have been involved in the investigation, there has been no progress so far.

  The police are currently investigating the above cases. If the public has any clues, they can immediately call the crime prevention hotline (800) 577-TIPS (8477), or log in to the crime prevention website, or send a message to 274637 (CRIMES) via mobile phone, and then enter TIP577 , or on Twitter @NYPDTips, or via the Crime Stoppers mobile app "CS-NYC," with sources strictly confidential.

(Yan Jien)