Holy Rosary loses $15,000-plus in break-in

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Pastor urges church members to cancel checks
By ROBIN HINDERY
Article Created: 11/26/2007 10:32:11 AM PST

At least $15,000 was stolen from Woodland’s Holy Rosary Catholic Church Sunday night - a crime the church pastor believes was committed by a person or persons familiar with the building’s layout and the location of the safe. Father Terry Fulton discovered the break-in early Monday morning when he arrived to empty the church’s safe for counting, he said.

“Somebody had used a torch to cut through the side of the safe and then pulled all the money out that way,” he said, estimating the loss was between $15,000 and $20,000 in cash and checks.

The burglary occurred after a particularly busy weekend, he said, noting that in addition to the packed English and Spanish masses - two on Saturday and seven on Sunday - the church had been the site of 24 weekend wedding ceremonies. The church, located at 301 Walnut St., regularly serves more than 3,000 local families, Fulton said.

(Note: This is my parish.)
 
Here’s a link to the article…
dailydemocrat.com/news/ci_7562660
Pastor urges church members to cancel checks
By ROBIN HINDERY
Article Created: 11/26/2007 10:32:11 AM PST

At least $15,000 was stolen from Woodland’s Holy Rosary Catholic Church Sunday night - a crime the church pastor believes was committed by a person or persons familiar with the building’s layout and the location of the safe. Father Terry Fulton discovered the break-in early Monday morning when he arrived to empty the church’s safe for counting, he said.

“Somebody had used a torch to cut through the side of the safe and then pulled all the money out that way,” he said, estimating the loss was between $15,000 and $20,000 in cash and checks.

The burglary occurred after a particularly busy weekend, he said, noting that in addition to the packed English and Spanish masses - two on Saturday and seven on Sunday - the church had been the site of 24 weekend wedding ceremonies. The church, located at 301 Walnut St., regularly serves more than 3,000 local families, Fulton said.

(Note: This is my parish.)
 
“That’s my biggest concern,” Fulton said of those whose checks - and, therefore, bank account information - are in the wrong hands. “It’s going to be a real burden on a lot of people.” “I would not want to be the people who did this,” he added. “They didn’t steal money from us; they stole money from God.”
(Note: This is my parish.)
I’m so sorry to hear this. I am from Sacramento, married in Woodland. I know the area. I’ll keep your parish my my prayers. If you don’t mind I’m going to send this on to our parish priest in case he hasn’t heard.

We have been having theft out our way as well (Elk Grove) In our Church news letter last Sunday we were told to take our purses with us for communion as someone came in and took off with a womens purse as she was taking communion. And in another parish near ours a families car was broken in to while they were in Church.

I decided to just leave my purse at home. I don’t want to take it with me to receive our Lord. My husband drives so I don’t need it.

Good Lord, both Woodland and Elk Grove are such beautiful places. This is very sad.
 
24 weddings in one weekend. Plus nine regularly scheduled Masses.

Wow.
 
From the Sacramento Bee sacbee.com/749/story/521744.html

Thieves steal holiday collections from Woodland church

**By Hudson Sangree **

Published 12:13 pm PST Monday, November 26, 2007
%between%http://del.icio.us/post

Thieves broke into the Holy Rosary Catholic Church in Woodland on Sunday night, used a blow torch to cut open a large safe, and made off with more than $15,000 in cash and checks.

Father Terry Fulton, the church’s priest, discovered the break-in at 6:30 a.m. Monday. He said much of the money, from $6,000 to $8,000, was collected on Thanksgiving and would have been used to feed the poor.

Fulton said whoever robbed the church must have been familiar with it.“Somebody had to know exactly where the safe was,” Fulton said. “They had to know there was a huge collection.”
The long holiday weekend included the Thanksgiving service, 24 weddings and nine Masses, all with generous donations, he said.

Many of the donations were made by check, and Fulton said parishioners should cancel their checks and monitor their bank accounts. The church is the only Catholic church in Woodland and one of the area’s largest.
 
The revised article that was printed in the Sacramento Bee sacbee.com/101/story/522785.html

For church thieves, nothing is sacred

Safe cracked, thousands stolen from a parish in Woodland

By Hudson Sangree


Last Updated 12:18 am PST Tuesday, November 27, 2007
Story appeared in MAIN NEWS section, Page A1

It isn’t often that a police officer has to dust a statue of Jesus for fingerprints, but that’s what Kelly York found herself doing Monday afternoon at Holy Rosary Catholic Church in Woodland.

She wasn’t happy about it.

“He’s pretty clean,” York said after delicately, and reluctantly, brushing the figure with black fingerprint powder.

York and two other Woodland officers were at Holy Rosary because overnight someone broke into the white, mission-style church at the corner of Court and Walnut streets downtown.

Intruders smashed a window, used a blowtorch to cut a hole in the church’s safe and made off with thousands of dollars collected over the holiday weekend. Much of the money was from a special Thanksgiving service and was meant to feed the poor.

A tall processional cross, bearing a silver likeness of Jesus, stood beside the broken window. Investigators thought the thieves might have grabbed the crucifix for support as they climbed down from the high windowsill.

At the crime scene, shards of glass crunched underfoot. A homemade wooden ladder lay on the floor. Police theorized it was used it to reach the street-side window and then dragged in.

The Rev. Terry Fulton, pastor of Holy Rosary, found the ladder, the broken window and the empty safe at 6:30 a.m. Monday.
Fulton said he thought the bandit or bandits were familiar with the church. The safe is in the sacristy, a room behind the altar, and the thieves knew exactly which window to use.

There are 3,000 families registered with the church, or about 8,000 individuals, Fulton said. Holy Rosary is the only Catholic church in Woodland and among the region’s largest.

The sacristy, he said, is a pre-Mass gathering place, and the safe sits in plain view.

The burglars likely knew the church had collected donations from a Thanksgiving service, a large wedding ceremony and nine Masses over the weekend, he said. He estimated there was easily $15,000 to $20,000 in the safe, perhaps more.
Donations from the Thanksgiving Mass alone totaled $6,000 to $8,000, Fulton said, and that money was earmarked to provide food to needy families through the church’s Saint Vincent de Paul Society.

Fortunately, the church is insured against theft, Fulton said. It also has a stockpile of food, and other aid organizations in town feed the hungry, he said.

On the advice of law enforcement authorities, Fulton is warning contributors to cancel their checks and possibly change their bank accounts to avoid financial fraud. About half the donations stolen were checks, he said.

On Monday, the church’s heavy steel safe, nearly 4 feet tall and bolted to the floor, bore a jagged hole in one side. A flap of metal had been wrenched aside like the top of a soup can.

The last time Fulton saw it, the safe had been filled with canvas bank satchels, stuffed with cash, coins and checks. It must have been difficult for the thieves to pull the sacks through the hand-size hole, the priest said.

Fulton said he found $20 bills and a lot of change scattered on the floor in the morning.

“They must have been in a hurry,” he said.

Water from a nearby sink covered the floor by the safe. Police guessed the money had caught fire from the blowtorch, and the robbers doused the flames.

Police are hoping the culprits will try to cash one of the stolen checks and get caught on a security camera. They also are hoping the criminals might make a common mistake.

“Sometimes people who do things like this, they can’t help but run their mouths,” Woodland Police Sgt. Jason Brooks said Monday as he surveyed the crime scene.

Monsignor James Murphy, rector of the Cathedral of the Blessed Sacrament in downtown Sacramento, said he couldn’t recall a church crime of similar magnitude or sophistication in the area.

The cathedral’s flimsy votive-candle donation boxes used to be pilfered by homeless people before they were replaced with steel, he said. And would-be thieves once hacked at a Vacaville church safe with a hammer, without success.

“Good Lord, it’s a warning to us all,” he said of the Woodland church theft. “We’ve just got to be careful. It’s the people’s money, and in this case it’s money for the poor.”

Fulton said those who robbed the church should return the money and confess. He said he had once forgiven teenagers who set fire to his church office in Chico, and now could forgive those who robbed the Woodland church.

“We’re Catholic,” he said. “We have to.”
 
I saw this in the news. Fr. Fulton seems like a very good priest.
 
I saw this in the news. Fr. Fulton seems like a very good priest.
He is a very good priest. He is very orthodox. His route to priesthood is very interesting. In a nutshell. He heard the calling at 14 yrs old while he was a evangelical christian. He converted at 19 yrs old. But, did not enter the seminary until 50 yrs old after adopting and raising his 4 nieces on his own (never married).
 
This is one of the 😦 saddest things that I can ever imagine having happen…:nope:Robbing a church??:crying: :crying:
 
A couple of year back someone broke into St. Peter’s Chaldean Catholic Church (my parish) and stole the gold crown off the Blessed Virgin…lets just say I really pity that guy since he is going to have to deal w/ Her Son.
 
I’m sorry this has happened:(

There were a couple thousand taken from the Newman Center here a few months back, so there were video cameras set up and the thieves were caught. They were parishioners.
 
I’m sorry this has happened:(

There were a couple thousand taken from the Newman Center here a few months back, so there were video cameras set up and the thieves were caught. They were parishioners.
That’s what Christ was talking about when He said:

Matthew 13:24-30
24] Another parable he put before them, saying, “The kingdom of heaven may be compared to a man who sowed good seed in his field;
25] but while men were sleeping, his enemy came and sowed weeds among the wheat, and went away.
26] So when the plants came up and bore grain, then the weeds appeared also.
27] And the servants of the householder came and said to him, Sir, did you not sow good seed in your field? How then has it weeds?' **28**] He said to them, An enemy has done this.’ The servants said to him, Then do you want us to go and gather them?' **29**] But he said, No; lest in gathering the weeds you root up the wheat along with them.
30] Let both grow together until the harvest; and at harvest time I will tell the reapers, Gather the weeds first and bind them in bundles to be burned, but gather the wheat into my barn.’”
 
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