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Burglar heists church's Christmas Eve offerings

Crook knocks off church on Christmas morning

STORY SUMMARY | READ THE FULL STORY

This story has been corrected. See below.
Up to $8,000 in cash donated to a Mililani church was stolen early Christmas morning, shocking the congregation.

The Rev. Manuel Hewe and some members of St. John Apostle and Evangelist Catholic Church made the discovery on Dec. 26 as they arrived to count the offerings from Christmas Eve Masses.

Church officials suspect the brazen burglar or burglars were familiar with the church routine and knew where to look for the combination to the safe.

— Rosemarie Bernardo



FULL STORY >>

By Rosemarie Bernardo

POSTED: 01:30 a.m. HST, Jan 06, 2009

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Parishioner Lynn Kanno cannot fathom how a burglar could steal thousands of dollars from a church in Mililani - on Christmas Day, no less. "It's unthinkable that it happened on such a sacred day," said Kanno. "It makes you question people. ... Why?"

An estimated $5,000 to $8,000 in cash was stolen from St. John Apostle and Evangelist Catholic Church at 95-370 Kuahelani Ave. sometime between 2 and 5 a.m. Dec. 25.

The Rev. Manuel Hewe and some members of the church who volunteer to count donations arrived later Christmas morning and discovered the theft from the safe in one of the offices at the rectory. The stolen cash was collected from parishioners at Masses at 6 and 9 p.m. Christmas Eve and a third Mass at midnight.

"I was shocked when we opened it," said Hewe.

Offerings of personal checks were left behind.

The culprit is believed to have entered the rectory through a kitchen window. Three glass louvers were removed and left in the kitchen, and the screen was cut, said Hewe.

Somehow the burglar or burglars found the combination to the safe, which had been well hidden, said Hewe.

That leads church officials to suspect those responsible had inside knowledge.

Kanno said she was shocked to hear of the missing money when she attended Sunday Mass after the unprecedented break-in. Her reaction was echoed among the estimated congregation of 3,000.

"Everybody knows at Christmastime, the congregation is tenfold," said Kanno. "It didn't make a difference how much it was. It happened at a church. It breaks your heart."

Donations collected from Mass go toward the church's rent, Christian doctrine classes for children and outreach programs.

"He or she is stealing from the worshipping community, not just one person," Hewe said.

A number of the congregation's members have since donated to help replace the stolen money. Their generosity surprised church officials, Hewe said, especially with the current state of the economy.

Police said they are continuing their investigation. Anyone with information on the case is asked to call Lt. Stanford Afong of the Criminal Investigation Division's Burglary/Theft Detail at 621-8442.

CORRECTION

About $5,000 to $8,000 in cash was discovered stolen from St. John Apostle and Evangelist Catholic Church in Mililani on Dec. 26. This story originally said the discovery was made Dec. 25.

Parishioner Lynn Kanno cannot fathom how a burglar could steal thousands of dollars from a church in Mililani - on Christmas Day, no less. "It's unthinkable that it happened on such a sacred day," said Kanno. "It makes you question people. ... Why?"

An estimated $5,000 to $8,000 in cash was stolen from St. John Apostle and Evangelist Catholic Church at 95-370 Kuahelani Ave. sometime between 2 and 5 a.m. Dec. 25.

The Rev. Manuel Hewe and some members of the church who volunteer to count donations arrived later Christmas morning and discovered the theft from the safe in one of the offices at the rectory. The stolen cash was collected from parishioners at Masses at 6 and 9 p.m. Christmas Eve and a third Mass at midnight.

"I was shocked when we opened it," said Hewe.

Offerings of personal checks were left behind.

The culprit is believed to have entered the rectory through a kitchen window. Three glass louvers were removed and left in the kitchen, and the screen was cut, said Hewe.

Somehow the burglar or burglars found the combination to the safe, which had been well hidden, said Hewe.

That leads church officials to suspect those responsible had inside knowledge.

Kanno said she was shocked to hear of the missing money when she attended Sunday Mass after the unprecedented break-in. Her reaction was echoed among the estimated congregation of 3,000.

"Everybody knows at Christmastime, the congregation is tenfold," said Kanno. "It didn't make a difference how much it was. It happened at a church. It breaks your heart."

Donations collected from Mass go toward the church's rent, Christian doctrine classes for children and outreach programs.

"He or she is stealing from the worshipping community, not just one person," Hewe said.

A number of the congregation's members have since donated to help replace the stolen money. Their generosity surprised church officials, Hewe said, especially with the current state of the economy.

Police said they are continuing their investigation. Anyone with information on the case is asked to call Lt. Stanford Afong of the Criminal Investigation Division's Burglary/Theft Detail at 621-8442.

CORRECTION

About $5,000 to $8,000 in cash was discovered stolen from St. John Apostle and Evangelist Catholic Church in Mililani on Dec. 26. This story originally said the discovery was made Dec. 25.

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