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Ram raid at Newtown butchers 19.11.09

by Damian Dowds, Inishowen Independent

NEWTOWN butcher Gerard McDaid has been left counting the cost of crime after his premises on the village’s Main Street was burgled in an overnight ram raid.
Thieves made off with a large quantity of cigarettes and lottery scratch cards, and also stole five charity collection boxes containing a substantial sum of money.
The raiders are understood to have used a vehicle to ram the doors at the entrance to Mr McDaid’s premises before making off with their ill gotten gains. The robbery was discovered when Mr McDaid arrived for work last Thursday morning.
Gerard McDaid “It’s an awful setback for me,” Mr McDaid said. “It’s hard enough to keep the business ticking over in a climate like this without having to deal with a robbery.”
“Not alone did they steal the poor boxes, cigarettes and lottery tickets, but they also wrecked the till and it has cost me a pretty penny to replace it.”
“It’s particularly heartless for the thieves to have stolen these charity boxes,” local Garda sergeant Michael Galvin said. “That shows the mentality of the people we’re dealing with – a robbery like this could put a small trader out of business. But we’re hopeful that the case can be solved.”
Mr McDaid has been a butcher in Newtown for almost nine years and had recently extended his premises to include a convenience store. “I will be making an insurance claim, but those things take time and this has come as a big blow just as I’m getting ready for the Christmas rush,” Mr McDaid said.
Gardaí have appealed for anyone who saw anything suspicious in the village last Wednesday night or Thursday morning to contact Newtown Garda Station on 07491 56113.
He also warned business owners and householders to be extra vigilant in the run up to Christmas.
“We appeal to all business people, indeed everyone, to be extra vigilant at this time of year and report anything suspicious to the Garda,” Sergeant Galvin said. “It’s better to err on the side of caution by reporting something rather than regretting it afterwards.”
Gerard McDaid re-opened his store immediately after gardaí had finished their technical examination on Thursday. “There was nothing else for it but to get right back into it and we opened as soon as the guards left,” he said, adding that he will install barriers to prevent the recurrence of a ram raid.
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