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Pair Sentenced After Setauket Burglaries

Maurice Jones and Sion Sosa were convicted of robbing several homes on the north shore, according to Newsday.

Two men from Centereach have each been sentenced to 3-1/2 years in prison for their roles in burglarizing and causing severe destruction to several homes on the north shore, including two in Setauket, according to a report published Thursday in Newsday.

Maurice Jones, 20, and Sion Sosa, 19, were sentenced as part of a plea deal; Assistant District Attorney Erin Cho told Newsday her office had recommended five years. Two others were originally charged in the same burglaries – one of which caused a school lockdown in Three Village: Colleen Elam, 18, who recently pleaded guilty and was sentenced to five years' probation, and Darnell Lofton, 20, has yet to be tried.

Several of the victims spoke out at the sentencing, according to Newsday.

Maureen Mattern of Setauket, for whom the defendants had left an ax on her bed, said: "What was the point of leaving the ax on my bed? Was it fear? You accomplished that."

For Nicholas Seeberger of Setauket, the defendants trashed his house: they sprayed fire extinguishers, destroyed paintings and a piano, and plugged drains and turned on the water which caused a ceiling to collapse. "It is sick. It is evil," Seeberger said.

Click here to read the full report from Newsday (subscription required).

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Share something with your neighbors. Write a new post... What's up? Make an announcement, speak your mind, or sell something
Christine Sampson (Editor) May 23, 2013 at 11:32 am
Hi Anna, Drop me a note at christines@patch.com and I will share the information you are lookingRead More for. Best, Christine
Tc May 24, 2013 at 12:05 pm
I agree..maybe that is one of the reasons road pavement safety lines and striping esp. in the 3VRead More area are virtually non existent!! VERY DANGEROUS CONDITION that leaves the TOWN OF BROOKHAVEN liable involving accidents and fatalities. I think the new T.O.B. highway super, (D. L.) should make this a priority!
Christine Sampson (Editor) May 20, 2013 at 06:35 pm
Hi C., please send me a note at christines@patch.com and I will answer your question.
mary ann May 21, 2013 at 10:26 am
What a wonderful, thoughtful and giving thing to do for our soldiers!!! I applaud you all. You areRead More terrific!!! God bless.
Public Notice
Sycamore Senior May 19, 2013 at 12:38 pm
So, essentially that first residential home is being written off as the price of doing business.Read More There goes that property value. Other than as a professional residence, who would want to live by a driveway for that traffic? As for the entrance Village Automotive, that will bring even more traffic to an already busy intersection nearby. 25A is impassable/impossible in that area for large chunks of the day now.
K. B. May 19, 2013 at 08:16 am
The rezoning is for the acres of undeveloped residential land across from Ann Maries Farm stand,Read More extending down to the wooded area on 25A. A one way entrance would be placed by Village Automotive and a one way exit would come out on N. Country Rd. adjacent to the first residential house.
Public Notice
K. B. May 19, 2013 at 08:15 am
The rezoning is for the acres of undeveloped residential land across from Ann Maries Farm stand,Read More extending down to the wooded area on 25A. A one way entrance would be placed by Village Automotive and a one way exit would come out on N. Country Rd. adjacent to the first residential house.
jeanne austin May 19, 2013 at 07:01 am
Can you tell us where this property is? An address or street name?
justme May 19, 2013 at 05:45 pm
I the BOE and Union didn't allow the majority of the budget be spent on benefits and salaries maybeRead More there would be money left for supplies. With declining enrollment and cuts to programs for our kids they only ones making out are teachers and staff with too generous salaries and benefits. Vote no on Tuesday!
EG May 18, 2013 at 11:00 pm
Seriously? We are asked to send in enough supplies per kid each year to supply 5 kids. Where does itRead More all go? It gets lost, thrown out, or ends up back in the students home via backpack. The problem is not the lack of supplies, but a lack of personal responsibility. But if we send in enough supplies each year for ten or fifteen students, then we might be able to avoid the underlying problem.