Blue Lives Matter

Woman Nabbed For Stealing From Fundraiser Honoring Fallen Yarmouth K9 Officer

Police said Maureen Wiggin was caught on video as she stole an item meant to benefit the Yarmouth Police Foundation.

Hyannis, MA – A 56-year-old woman was arrested for stealing an auction prize from a fundraiser in honor of murdered Yarmouth Police Sergeant Sean Gannon.

Maureen Wiggin, 56, hadn’t even purchased a $25 ticket to attend the event on Friday night when she showed up and helped herself to a sports-themed gift basket slated to be sold at a silent auction, the Boston Herald reported.

Police were called to the fundraiser at about 10:30 p.m. on June 22 after several people noticed something missing. The item Wiggin snatched contained a decorative blue box with golf balls, baseball hats, and a variety of shirts, according to police.

Wiggin’s bold theft was captured on surveillance video at the Cape Codder Resort and Spa where the event was held, the Boston Herald reported.

“A review of the security video showed a woman removing the item from a table and leaving the venue,” according to a statement posted on the official Barnstable Police Department Facebook page.

The fundraiser featuring the silent auction was titled “Back the Blue/A Night to Remember Sean,” and was organized in tribute to Sgt. Gannon, a K9 handler who was killed in the line of duty April 12.

Sgt. Gannon was fatally shot while trying to serve a warrant on a repeat offender who already had at least 111 charges on his record.

His partner, K9 Nero, was also wounded, but he has since recovered and gone home to live with the fallen hero’s family, WBTS reported.

Barnstable police officers located Wiggins at her home in Hyannis, and questioned her, according to the Boston Herald. She was initially uncooperative until she was confronted with the video, police said.

Eventually, the stolen auction item was recovered from the trunk of Wiggin’s car, and returned to the charitable event.

Police said Wiggin would be charged with larceny of property under $1,200.

“We as police officers see a lot of this happen in a lot of forums, but you just can’t believe someone would stoop that low to do that. This is typical of what’s happening in our society today,” Yarmouth Police Chief Frank Frederickson said of the theft to the Boston Herald.

“It’s just kind of sad that it took place. If Officer Gannon were involved in this he would probably look at the individual a little deeper than just someone who stole from a wonderful charity event. Like, what else may have been going on there?” Chief Frederickson said, as he recalled the officer’s compassionate nature.

The fundraising event was sponsored by the Behavioral Health Provider Coalition of Cape Cod and the Islands and with 100 percent were dedicated to the Yarmouth Police Foundation in Sgt. Gannon’s memory.

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Burgers Allday
Burgers Allday

I think it is possible that he was trying to stop a deadly K9 attack and that Gannon just ended up in the backdrop. I imagine that Gannon was wearing a body cam (as police officers should on these types of raids), and the court will see whether Gannon and the K9 really did cause the defendant to fear for his life and/or limbs before giving him a fair chance to surrender to biteless arrest. Maybe they will post the Gannon bodycam video here when it comes out so that we can all learn from it.

InService
InService

I guess it's only clear if you're more interested in reading about Sgt. Gannon's sacrifice than trolling for an argument.

What difference would it make which officer (Gannon or his K9 partner) he was trying to murder for executing a warrant? I think it's safe to assume this POS was trying to kill both of them and anybody else standing in the way of his escape.

Burgers Allday
Burgers Allday

No, I wasn't clear that Sgt. Gannon was the handler. I thought it was the K9. Was he trying to shoot Gannon, or was he just trying to bring down the fur missile?

InService
InService

Are we all clear that Sgt. Gannon was a handler and not the K9? Some of these comments suggest the authors believe that the fundraiser was for the K9.

Additionally, police K9s aren't "deadly weapons". They aren't trained as such and they aren't used as weapons. They are used to apprehend and incapacitate, I challenge anyone to find an instance of a police K9 being the causative factor in a person's death.

FSchloss
FSchloss

Every time one of our dogs got in a good bite, I made a point of bringing a dog biscuit into the office and giving it to the handler to give to his dog. Fuck you, burgie boy. You're on the wrong site!

Hi_estComnDenomn
Hi_estComnDenomn

@TeneteLineam Whats ridiculous is making a law against natural human reaction.

No. 31-40
Burgers Allday
Burgers Allday

@TeneteLineam: In this case, we do not know if they gave him a chance to comply with lawful arrest before Gannon sicc'd Nero on him. There is a lot we don't know here. [some text removed because I thought Gannon was a dog and not the handler] Did Gannon give the suspect a chance to surrender before bringing Nero on the scene? Did the officers in the area have a history of letting K9 units chew on arrestees who were trying to surrender?

Bottom line: let's roll tape on this one and get some answers in Sgt. Gannon's memory.

Burgers Allday
Burgers Allday

Self-defense is a legal justification already on the books. [revised post now that I know that Gannon was a person: the big question is whether he was trying to shoot Gannon or Gannon's K9 unit, Nero, or both?]

Propolice
Propolice

Hate is what was going on there. Too many stupid, mean people that need to be punished far more than they are. ❤️🇺🇸

LordSeamus
LordSeamus

I lived and worked on Cape Cod......it's not an area that I'd expect something like that to happen . I am glad they had the video cameras there.