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Police Make Headway In Baltimore Co. Mystery
#1
PIKESVILLE, Md. (WJZ) ―

Officers Vickie Warehime and J. Posluszny Jr. have solved a lot of mysteries, but this one is over their heads--literally.

In fact, it may be about 30 to 40 feet in the air.

For months, the Baltimore County Community Outreach officers have been investigating a bizarre phenomenon disturbing neighbors in an area of Pikesville near Beth Tfiloh Community School.  Now, they say they may be closer to an answer.

Derek Valcourt reports 911 callers complain about a deafening explosion and a bright flash of light in the middle of night.

"The bedroom actually lights up like day," says Elaine O'Mansky, who lives in the Stevenson Commons condominium building near Beth Tfiloh. "It's instantaneous and wakes us up out of a very deep sleep."

She isn't alone. Barbara Friedman is Homeowner's Association president for the area.

She was up late one night sweeping her back patio when she heard the boom.

"I hit the deck," Friedman explained. "It was so loud, I thought I was being shot. I literally hit the deck."

After she realized she hadn't been shot, she started emailing other homeowners to see if they heard it too.

"Then my email got flooded because hundreds of people were hearing these noises and thought it was their imagination," she said.

The noise was so upsetting, Elaine O'Mansky decided it was time to start keeping track of the phenomenon when it occurred.

From late September until now, she's heard it 25 times, always between midnight and 7 a.m. with no consistent pattern.

Convinced something was wrong, Friedman and O'Mansky contacted police, who were skeptical at first.

"We were a little bit concerned that this was maybe a little bit of an exaggeration," said Sgt. Vickie Warehime. "They were saying they could see (the light) through their window blinds."

Police were concerned that if something really was as loud and as bright as neighbors described, it could potentially be dangerous. So they began to investigate.

Like many of the neighbors in the area, police first guessed that the noise could be coming from a hunter's rifle. But O'Mansky reminded them of the bright flash of light.

So police started investigating whether it was an electrical or gas problem.

Experts with BGE began checking all of the power equipment in the area. They climbed on rooftops of the nearby Beth Tfiloh School and nearby condo building to check all of their electrical equipment and air compressors, but found no evidence of problems. There was no electrical charring, burning or malfunctioning equipment.

A BGE spokesman confirms their investigation found no electrical problems or gas leaks in the area.

Then police decided to take the next step and install two cameras hoping to videotape the boom.

Elaine O'Mansky volunteered to wake up every night around midnight to turn on the camera officers had set up in a fifth floor window of her building.

"It wasn't until we caught it on tape that we realized the magnitude of what they were actually talking about," said Sgt. Warehime. "The sound is almost deafening. You can't describe it. Seeing it on tape without hearing the sound doesn't do it justice."

Videotape taken at 3:34 a.m. on April 23 does show a flash of light that lasts a fraction of a second and lights up an area the size of a football field in the middle of the night.

The flash on the tape is accompanied by loud boom that sounds like a crack of electricity or lightning.

WJZ meteorologist Bernadette Woods analyzed the dates, times and weather conditions when the phenomenon occurs.

"There's nothing coming out of the sky," said Woods, who added that weather likely isn't the primary cause of the flash and boom, but it may be a contributing factor. "The atmospheric conditions could be such that they are supporting the event."

Cameras have videotaped the event on two other occasions. Police have used the shadows cast by the light flash to determine an approximate area where they think the light source may be coming from--30 to 40 feet in the air in the parking lot between the Beth Tfiloh Community School and the Stevenson Commons condominiums building.

Officer Posluszny has already repositioned two cameras several times hoping to see the source of the boom and flash.

"So when we get it again, and we will get it again, we should be able to narrow down where it's starting," said Posluszny. "I will not retire until I find out what this is."

Police say they've consulted with many experts and they're running out of options.

"Everything we can rule out, we are ruling out, and we're almost at a loss right now," said Warehime. "We need some help."

"Whatever it is there's a scientific explanation," said Johns Hopkins University Physicist Dr. Peter Armitage, who reviewed the video tape evidence and went to the neighborhood where it's happening to see if he could find any possible causes.

Armitage says more evidence is needed before he can form a scientific conclusion.

"Right now it's hard to say the phenomenon is definitely occurring though," said Armitage. "It's not some people with creative imaginations that's for sure. When there's repeated eyewitnesses, and then there's something on tape like this, you really have to pay attention."

For now, neighbors like Bonnie Friedman and Elaine O'Mansky say their quality of life depends on whether this mystery is solved.

"We would like it to stop," said O'Mansky. "You go to sleep at night just wondering in the back of your mind, 'Is it going to happen again?"

Friedman agrees. "We even said maybe it's aliens. We're at the point where we'll listen to anyone's theory. We just need to stop it because my homeowners need to sleep."

Police say they will release more information about the case Tuesday afternoon.

Video and story at this link:
http://wjz.com/local/baltimore.county.my...10503.html
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#2
Baltimore Co. Light & Boom Mystery Solved

Reporting Derek Valcourt

PIKESVILLE, Md. (WJZ) ― Mystery solved.  A bail hearing was held Wednesday for the Pikesville man who is accused of causing the loud bang and bright flash of light disturbing a neighborhood.

Fred Mackler was being held on a million dollars bail Tuesday, but Wednesday morning the judge changed that to no bail at all.

The judge considered Mackler a dangerous risk to the neighborhood.

His attorney called Mackler's actions a cry for help and said he was chronically depressed and self-medicating.

Derek Valcourt explains he never thought he'd be reporting that the mystery is solved just hours after it first aired on Eyewitness News.

Police say the cause of the disturbance was a frustrated neighbor.  But even more surprising is what police found inside his home.

The man behind this mystery is now behind bars.  Police blame 59-year-old Fred Mackler for the flashes of bright light and loud bangs that bothered neighbors in Pikesville for years.

"The noise is deafening and wakes us up out of a very deep sleep," said Elaine O'Mansky.

They called police, who set up cameras to catch it.  Police studied the shadows in these images and changed their camera angles accordingly.

"So when we get it again and we will get it again, we should be able to narrow down where it's starting," said Officer Posluszny.

And cameras did catch it again this weekend.  This time, the tape had evidence.

"After actually evaluating this videotape, the bomb unit technician was almost able to pinpoint the exact condominium where this was actually coming from," said Cpl Mike Hill with Baltimore County Police.

That's how police met Mackler, who apparently confessed to creating the disturbance.  Inside his home, investigators found quantities of drugs, guns and fireworks.  Police say he had been having problems with neighbors in the building.

"He would get up in the middle of the morning, around 2 a.m., fire one of these pyrotechnic devices and be done," Hill said.

Elaine O'Mansky said she and others are thrilled to know the noise will end and are stunned to know a neighbor was responsible.

"We had no idea what he was doing.  We knew that he was going down to Costa Rica periodically on vacations and now in hindsight when he was away, there was no noise going off," she said.

He was charged with disturbing the peace, reckless endangerment, two counts of possessing fireworks without a permit, possession of narcotics with intent to distribute, paraphernalia possession, concealing a dangerous weapon, another firearm charge and two further narcotics possession charges.

http://wjz.com/local/pikesville.flash.ba...11090.html
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#3
What an interesting character Fred is:

  • He's a well-off retired businessman, 59 years old, tanned and sporting a gray goatee.
  • Fred told police he's "the bad boy of the condominiums" and that he was "mad at his neighbors".
  • 12 handguns, an Uzi submachine gun, a .223-caliber rifle, two shotguns and 200 rounds of pyrotechnic devices -- as well as cocaine and marijuana -- in Mackler's apartment in the upscale Stevenson Commons Condominiums.  ( Starting to sound like Hunter Thompson here)
  • NO BAIL! 
  • Judge feels Fred will "blow up the neighborhood".
  • Bail set at 1 million!... then revoked.
  • His lawyer said Fred's been "chronically depressed and self-medicating".
  • For more than two years he would wake up at night, "fire shots out of his fourth-floor window" and then go back to bed.
  • His lawyer told the court the noise and flashes heard by neighbors did not come from fireworks but from a "bird-banger" -- a device used by farmers to keep birds and animals from crops.
  • Fred was born in Pennsylvania and lived in Florida and New Jersey before moving in 1975 to the Baltimore area, where he established "substantial ties," fathered a daughter and was generous toward various causes, including the Chizuk Amuno Congregation, his attorney said.
  • Mackler retired 18 months ago as president of Consumer Lighting Products Inc., a business he owns with his brother.
  • Fred owns a home in Costa Rica.
  • Monday, a camera caught "a small light flashing" from a fourth-floor window in the condo building. "A few seconds later you hear a loud bang," the charging document said.  The window turned out to be in unit 406 -- Mackler's apartment.
I like to put names into the anagram generator.  Fred Mackler = Framed Clerk.

Link to where I got more info on Fred is here.
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#4
That’s interesting info you came up with. Fred does sound like an interesting character.
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