Unsolicited advice for Peter Tesei: never, ever respond to critical letters to the editor.

Greenwich’s own, jerry dumas, had our local cops pegged (apologies and exception to GPD Folk)

Greenwich’s own, jerry dumas, had our local cops pegged (apologies and exception to GPD Folk)

Especially when it’s to the editor of a marginal publication. Tesei has taken to the digital pages of Greenwich Free Press to defend himself against a critic, and that’s just dumb: it lends an air of credibility to the original letter writer, and only strengthens his criticism, because why respond, unless it stings?

Many years ago, when printed letters to the editor of newspapers were the standard form of communication, I wrote one to Greenwich Time, poking fun at our local police force for letting one of our notorious Chimblo boys escape from a dozen officers who’d arrived at his house to arrest him. I suggested that twelve cops could have been posted, four each, to each side of the house, and prevented his escape, rather than pile the whole dozen of them on his front porch and ring the doorbell.

Imagine my surprise and delight to see a letter from a lieutenant of our GPD a few days later that started off, “we never respond to criticism from civilians but …” — I’d hit them! Hooray!

The Chimblo was apprehended a few days later, so case closed, but surely the image of Sam and Silo, looking stupid, persisted, thanks to the police department’s support.

So Peter, just ignore him.

By the skin of her teeth

1044 North street.jpg

The owner of 1044 North Street paid $1.050 in 2013 and managed to sell it today for $950,000. Not a huge victory, certainly, especially after deducting transaction costs, but she avoided disaster for a house she overpaid for originally.

I love this almost-abandoned section of north Greenwich, but it’s on the Banksville border, far from town, and not popular. Hell, it probably takes almost as long to reach central Greenwich by car today as it did in horse and buggy days, and that’s not a selling point.

Still, if you work in Banksville and want to escape, temporarily at least, exorbitant property taxes, this is the place to be.

I don't think he meant the "Merry Christmas" part seriously

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Yet another FWIW reporter, the one our paid staffer in Old Greenwich, submits this:

CT state crew assembles to remove 70 foot pine tree on Laddins Rock Road, with eleven workers, one cherry picker, one large front loader and four dump trucks. I had a larger lightning damaged tree removed, right next to my home, with two guys from a local tree service in one day, including stump grinding.  I can't wait until the government runs health care.

Merry Christmas. 

Police conduct gun swap-meet, (don’t) get what they pay for

FWIW’s New Mexico correspondent sends along this story from Baltimore, where the residents took advantage of a police “buy-back” program to get the funds to buy better guns.

Over 500 guns were surrendered to Baltimore police within the first hour and a half of a citywide gun buyback program this week. Participants received anywhere from $25 to $500 for their unwanted firearms.

Mayor Catherine Pugh and Interim Police Commissioner Gary Tuggle announced a gun buyback program—the first in six years—last week. Pugh said that the program was intended to "get the guns off of our streets."

The program reportedly cost the city $250,000, but there is little evidence that buyback programs are effective in reducing violence, or even in reducing the number of firearms in circulation—as one woman ably demonstrated.

Kathleen Cairns, a WBFF Baltimore journalist, tweeted a picture of a woman who was surrendering a 9mm. She hoped to use the money from the program to buy an even bigger gun.

The cops paid $25 for high-capacity magazines, which are available on E Bay for twelve bucks. Buy a couple of dozen, and the arbitrage is great. I myself have a Mossberg .22, purchased for me at Abercrombie and Smith fifty-five years ago by my father. It always had a lousy trigger pull, but I learned to hunt with it, Sadly neglected over the years, it’s now pitted with rust and essentially worthless, but I’m waiting for the next GPD buy back, in the hope of getting fifty bucks for it.

Fox Butterfield, call your office

The Miss America contest gets booted from Atlantic City.

I have never, ever watched the thing, and could care less if it’s hit its demise, but this article on the pageant’s woes contains a classic Fox Butterfield: *

[New Chairwoman Grethchen Carlson] this year controversially attempted to modernize the event by scrapping the swimsuit contest, but the ratings continued to slump.

[Wilipedia] Butterfield is the eponym for "The Butterfield Effect", used to refer to a person who "makes a statement that is ludicrous on its face, yet it reveals what the speaker truly believes", especially if expressing a supposed paradox when a causal relationship should be obvious.[5][6] The particular article that sparked this was titled "More Inmates, Despite Drop In Crime" by Butterfield in the New York Times on November 8, 2004.[7]

Big sale price but ....

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11 Mayfair Lane, over off Riversville/Pecksland, has sold for $10.5 million, but it started at $22 million back in April, 2016. Our MLS records this as being on the market for just 133 days, but my own math tells me that 31 months comprise more than 133 days. Ah, statistics!

A gorgeous, though dated 1930 house on 13 acres; have I mentioned that the market for these older homes has diminished?

Exhausted by the constant rush of air between her ears, the Democrats' favorite new barmaid star announces that she's going on vacation before she even reports for work

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Mind you, it’s not actually a vacation but rather a week of “taking care of herself” by which, as an oppressed member of the colored people population, she is taking a brave political stance, rather than merely goofing off.

For a woman whining about trying to pay her rent just a few weeks ago, I wonder where she’s jetting off to, and who’s paying the fare?

Ten years and a 70% price cut later, we won't have 918 North Street to kick around anymore

If Disney were to build an ersatz castle in our back country, this would be it

If Disney were to build an ersatz castle in our back country, this would be it

It’s a shame, because it’s provided great fodder as a source of chortling amusement since 2009, when it started at $16.9 million, but 918 North Street has finally sold for $4.999. I think the buyer overpaid by at least $3, $3.5 million, because the highest and best use for this horrible house is a pit, ready for a new start.

But that’s just my taste, and tastes obviously differ.

what was the stager thinking? this wall demands a flanking pair of knight’s armor

what was the stager thinking? this wall demands a flanking pair of knight’s armor

The course of a short sale is never smooth

Ear muffs for the entire family tossed in as a buyer incentive

Ear muffs for the entire family tossed in as a buyer incentive

13 Meadow Wood Drive, Belle Haven, is once again being reported as having a “contingent contract”. The house, then listed at $1.6 million, was reported as “pending” (meaning no unsatisfied contingencies) this past June but, pending or not, the deal was canceled, and the property was returned to the market at $2.7 million (!). In November a new, contingent contract was announced, but that deal, too seems to have fallen apart, replaced by yet another one today.

I can’t imagine anyone agreeing to pay anything close to $2.7 for this teardown because, Belle Haven or not, it’s right on I-95, and, at least to my ears, that ruins its value.

I’ll be curious to see if this third contract holds up.