They Left Behind The Doors

by Paul Bass | November 26, 2007 12:30 PM | | Comments (11)

adam%201.jpgThe burglars took just about everything else. Now a new homeowner’s Edgewood neighborhood gut-rehab job is back at the beginning.

Adam Bazylewicz expected to have moved with his wife and young children by Christmas into the circa-1920 Victorian home he has been renovating at the corner of Elm Street and the Boulevard.

Instead, after two recent burglaries, he’s haggling with an insurance company to recover some of the thousands of dollars he spent on copper pipes, radiators, and tools that disappeared in two heists within the same week.

He’s putting up sheetrock walls while wondering how he’s going to rebuild the rest of the guts of the beautiful but devastated home that anchors a key block in a stretch of New Haven that perpetually straddles the line between rebirth and decline.

Police are still investigating the robberies, which took place the second week of November.

adam%27s%20house.jpgBazylewicz, a Polish native whose family came to the U.S. 14 years ago, bought the 3,000 square-foot house out of foreclosure in August for $225,000. His wife was pregnant with their second child. Renting in West Haven, they needed a bigger place of their own.

The house was a mess. It had been abandoned for two years. The pipes had burst; the basement and much of the first floor were flooded. Mold covered the walls. The flooring, the walls needed to be replaced, the plumbing built anew.

Bazylewicz, who has a contractor’s license, undertook the job largely on his own in between 12-hour shifts at his job as a printer in North Haven.

He needed a plumber, though. He called all the companies he could find. Those that bothered calling back said they were booked up.

A neighbor referred Bazylewicz to an East Haven plumber who happened to have plenty of time open. Bazylewicz hired him to help put in new plumbing. They bought materials. The plumber came twice to look over the house and plan the job.

On Nov. 12, Bazylewicz was at the house waiting for the plumber to show up to begin work. The plumber arrived hours late. They went downstairs. Something looked strange.

“I look at the boiler. There had been a big pipe over there. The big pipe is missing,” Bazylewicz remembered noticing. “It took me a couple of minutes; I was in shock. I look around. My power washer is gone. The copper pipes. There were 50 or 60 fittings on the floor; it’s all gone.”

Same with Bazylewicz’s masonry tools, chainsaw. Twenty copper pipes in all. A good $800 of materials, gone. The burglars had entered by ripping a basement window off its hinges on the eastern side of the house.

“I told the plumber, ‘I’m calling the police.’ He said, ‘I gotta go.’”

The police came, took prints. Turned out the burglars wore gloves.

Bazylewicz thought about the burglary. “I had this kind of feeling in my stomach: This house was empty for so long. Anybody could get in this house and steal anything they wanted.” But they hadn’t, not for those years it stood vacant. “The plumbing was still in the basement. Why now?”

Bazylewicz forged ahead, though coordinating work with the plumber was frustrating. He would promise to come each day, then call and say his car had broken. Then his wife’s car had broken. He’d show up for two hours at a time, then leave. He’d speak of having financial problems, of selling goods over Craig’s List, of a brother in Maine who sells drugs, according to Bzylewicz. He acted funny, in Bazylewicz’s opinion.

But Bazylewicz needed to move ahead as fast as possible. He had taken two weeks off work at the print shop to try to get the plumbing done so he could start moving in his wife and child before the cold weather set in. Bazylewicz himself was staying much of the time on the third floor, but wouldn’t be able to once December hit, because of the cold, unless he got the radiators and water working.

Bazylewicz bought $1,200 worth of radiators and PEX pipes. He switched from copper to the special plastic pipes to save money.

On Saturday morning, Nov. 17, Bazylewicz came to the house after work. A neighbor told him that someone had burglarized a home two doors away, a home that’s also under construction. (That home is owned by a group affiliated with the Gan School/ Yeshiva of New Haven. The group’s leader, Eli Greer, said Sunday that the burglars “really failed,” carting away “less than $300” worth of tools. Fortunately, painters had secured most of the tools in a “humongous” lock box, and the burglars apparently didn’t realize the value of the spindles and newel posts in the basement.)

Alerted to this burglary, Bazlyewicz looked inside his own home. The radiators that had been on the first floor — gone. Along with pipes and other materials. Not just on the first floor, but the second, too.

The second floor … the only way the burglars could have gotten there was to climb up beams on the first floor, through a crawl space in a closet. Only someone who’d previously been inside the house on the first floor and taken a good look around would have known how to do that.

Guess whom Bazylewicz was suspecting now.

He called the plumber, told him about the burglary.”His emotion — he was not sad at all. ‘You’re kidding…’ I had a feeling he was high.”

“Is your insurance going to cover my stuff?” the plumber asked.

“My insurance doesn’t want to cover anything right now,” Bazlyewicz replied.

The plumber showed up in a van Bazylewicz didn’t recognize. He took his remaining tools away, as police officers asked questions and watched what was going on.

“The building department and the insurance company,” Bazylewicz told the plumber, “want to know your license number.”

The reply, according to Bazylewicz: “Right now I have enough problems. I can’t give you my license number.” And he left.

The “Plumber’s” Side

The plumber, who’s 26 and lives in East Haven, gave a different story when contacted by phone Monday. He said he’s not even a plumber.

He said that he usually does odd jobs like cleaning drains; he said he lost his regular job recently and has a 7-month-old daughter to support. He claimed he never represented himself as a plumber to Bazylewicz. He offered to help Bazylewicz do the work, he said.

“I had nothing to do with the plumbing work,” he said. “I was helping him do different odd jobs. He was much pretty much doing his own work there.”

He said that the last time he came to pick up his tools Bazylewicz’s father accused him of committing the burglaries. “I definitely didn’t do it. I lost thousands of dollars of tools. I’m out a lot of money,” he said. “I don’t know what I’m going to do now.

“I was having vehicle problems. He knew I was having vehicle problems.”

“He bit off more than he could chew. He way overpaid for that house,” he added.

Bazylewicz responded the man definitely identified himself as a plumber and showed him a plumber’s license when they began work.

Help Wanted

Since the burglaries Bazylewicz has been wrestling with the insurance company, which told him that he wasn’t living in the house and thus wasn’t covered. He’s pressing ahead with putting up the sheetrock — and wondering how he’s going to find the money to replace the plumbing and radiators and get the work done. He’s put his ‘99 Volvo S80 up for sale for $4,500.

Meanwhile, he’s staying in a West Haven apartment with his wife, who’s nine months pregnant, and two-year-old daughter, while hustling to meet $1,700 monthly payments on his new Elm Street house.

He could use some help. Anybody want to contribute new piping — or work alongside Bazylewicz this holiday season as he starts over making a Victorian gem inhabitable again? If so, email him here.







Comments

Posted by: nfjanette [TypeKey Profile Page] | November 26, 2007 1:07 PM

It's heartbreaking that Adam has been working so hard to fix up an abandoned house in the neighborhood and has been victimized by these thefts. He is exactly the kind of honest, hard-working person you want moving into your area, someone who is willing to put money and sweat equity into improving the property. I hope the police make quick work of finding the guilty people and bring them to swift justice - not that it will help Adam or his neighbors much. Hang in there Adam!

Posted by: Fairhaven Dave [TypeKey Profile Page] | November 26, 2007 1:54 PM

It sounds like someone needs to put the "thumb screws" on another sketchy plumber.

By they way, why was his/her name and company not mentioned in the article so that the rest of us don't have to avoid every plumber in East Haven?

Posted by: jz | November 26, 2007 2:12 PM

These days copper is just about gold and extremely tempting for burglers. I work for a developer who rehabs and we do a few things to prevent theft: no tools get left on the sites ever. It all gets put in the truck at the end of the day. You'd be surprised who's watching you load and unload the truck. If you're working somewhere in a neighborhood that's less than stellar, you're being watched. Empty houses, even in good neighborhoods, are sitting ducks. Do your best to make it unattractive to theives. Building material that gets left behind, because it's too heavy to move around, gets chained. The alarm system goes in long before the house is finished. Board up windows, particularly on the first floor & basement. Chain the bilco door.

Don't use fly by night contractors, particularly for the big things where you need accountability(plumbing, electrial, heating). That should be easier now that work has slowed down and legit contractors have less work. Use people who can pull a permit and check out their license by calling to make sure it's valid. A real plumber will buy their own supplies and bill you. Not vice versa. They get discounts that you don't. Yes, you'll pay more for good labor, but you can save in other areas, like not buying copper to begin with. Make contractors responsible for their own tools and materials and make it clear that nothing gets left on the site without being secured. Check to make sure that's happening.

Sorry to hear about the loss. Don't skimp on the alarm system after you move in.

Posted by: cedarhillresident [TypeKey Profile Page] | November 26, 2007 2:40 PM

This is truly sad, but it happens all the time.
Handy men can be a few hundred dollars cheaper but only hire them if you know them and or someone recommends them, someone that you know well recommends them.
He said the house was vacant for 2 years so a squatter would know that house inside and out.

And no one in the area saw this happening?
New Haven cops took prints??

I hope they can get in there soon and I am sure the police are working on it....they took prints!

Posted by: Hartford Johnson | November 26, 2007 4:12 PM

Name the insurance company! Let's see if this is a covered incident after they get some negative press coverage.

Posted by: Cicerone | November 26, 2007 9:20 PM

Incredible. I agree with Hartford; let's see which insurance company this is.

Posted by: Chris Gray | November 27, 2007 1:58 AM

If I am remembering correctly, John & Marge Hiller got me to help them pass out water to runners in the New Haven Road Race from in front of this house for years.

It is lovely and to read this story is truly heartbreaking.

As I am both poor and seriously disabled, I can only wish to help Adam but, beyond agreeing with Hartford and Cicerone about getting bad press for the insurance company (though I am less hopeful than they about it being effective) I can only suggest that the Road Race people be contacted for help as well.

Adam may never have had a hand in that small kindness to the runners, but might there not be some residual loyalty to the house itself among them.

Plus, how about pressuring the police department into closing a case that doesn't involve a murder for once? Of course, even those don't always get closed, either.

Posted by: Adam Bazylewicz | November 27, 2007 9:40 PM

I will like to thank you all who read my story special thanks to the editor Paul Bass who was so kind to see me and take my story. I am hanging in there I have some help form my family , my brother who is coming form New York every other weekend and helps me with the work. For those readers who ask about the insurance company it is Liberty Mutual , as of the police when I showed them the fresh foot prints on the ground lefted by the burglars they ignored it and something else police don't take prints from the door knobs??

Thank you for words of hope Adam.B

Posted by: jms | November 27, 2007 11:15 PM

JZ makes very good points which I will second.

1. Leaving copper construction materials (pipes/wiring/etc.) laying around on an unsecured jobsite is like leaving cash laying around. Copper prices/values these days are through the roof which creates a huge incentive for thieves.

2. NEVER leave tools (or anything of value) laying around on an unsecured jobsite.

I feel awful for Mr. Bazylewicz but all of this could very likely have been prevented if he had a ten minute conversation with any experienced contractor before undertaking the work himself. These are common sense practices and hardly trade secrets.

And this advice is not in any way exclusive to one neighborhood or another. Thieves target construction sites in ANY zip code.

Live and learn.


JMS

Posted by: Onebyd | November 28, 2007 10:23 AM

While I feel very sorry for Adam and his family, I completely agree with JZ and JMS in that this unfortunate episode could have been avoided had Adam did just a bit of research and applied some common sense. If your "plumber" is constantly showing up late for work or not at all, works a couple hours, then leaves, or gives you the run around about how long or how much it will take to complete the job, then the alarms hould have been blaring to Adam to stay away from this person!

I appreciate that he is trying to do alot of the work himself, and sometimes when you are a DYI-er you tend to cut corners, but with all the horror stories out there with contractors, you HAVE to check out anyone who you let come into your home to do ANYTHING these days. As for the theft, like JMS said, it is equal opportunity, so it doesn't matter where you live, times are hard, and people will take it if they know they can. So you NEVER, EVER, EVER leave anything behind on a job site and what you do leave, you secure as best as possible.

Again, I hope that all works out well for Adam, and I am glad to see that he is receiving help. Happy Holidays to you and your family Adam, everything will work it, and this person whoever he is, will get what's coming to him!

Posted by: Dave | November 28, 2007 6:44 PM

Good Luck Rehabbers, Sweat equity adds value. What's the name of the plumber? Consider using PVC pipe that passes local plumbimng codes for houses un-occupied during rehab. This can cost less and works well under normal conditions (except freeze ups). Only take the tools you need for the job that day. It's great to have a storage place with a friendly neighbor

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