Police were first called on July 2 to an unlocked car that had been
burgled in a driveway. Home surveillance footage showed a man wearing pajama pants and slippers rifling through the vehicle, police said.
Over the next week, numerous break-ins were reported to unlocked cars,
though the burglar appeared to ignore valuable electronics in favor of
loose change and dollars, police said.
A homeowner spotted a suspicious vehicle nearby at the time of one of the burglaries, and police were able to track its license plates to Ortiz’s home, where he was found smoking pot on the front porch on July 11, police said. Ortiz, a self-described “lover of pizza” who “wanted to try all kinds”, later admitted that he had gone out in May to identify pizza restaurants in Berwyn, Cicero, River Forest, Oak Park, North Riverside and Riverside, police said. He said he then went back to those towns to find money in cars overnight so he could buy slices, police said.
“That statement in itself is usual and demonstrates the length offenders will go to get what they want - in this case pizza,” Riverside Police Chief Tom Weitzel said. “This is one of the most unusual and bizarre burglary patterns I have ever come across in my 31 years in law enforcement.” Police, who dubbed Ortiz the “Pizza Man,” are still reaching out to people whose cars were broken into over the last month. Ortiz’s court information was not immediately available. His favorite pizza joint was the Slice Factory in Oak Park, police said.
A homeowner spotted a suspicious vehicle nearby at the time of one of the burglaries, and police were able to track its license plates to Ortiz’s home, where he was found smoking pot on the front porch on July 11, police said. Ortiz, a self-described “lover of pizza” who “wanted to try all kinds”, later admitted that he had gone out in May to identify pizza restaurants in Berwyn, Cicero, River Forest, Oak Park, North Riverside and Riverside, police said. He said he then went back to those towns to find money in cars overnight so he could buy slices, police said.
“That statement in itself is usual and demonstrates the length offenders will go to get what they want - in this case pizza,” Riverside Police Chief Tom Weitzel said. “This is one of the most unusual and bizarre burglary patterns I have ever come across in my 31 years in law enforcement.” Police, who dubbed Ortiz the “Pizza Man,” are still reaching out to people whose cars were broken into over the last month. Ortiz’s court information was not immediately available. His favorite pizza joint was the Slice Factory in Oak Park, police said.
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