The Charles County Sheriffโ€™s Office has arrested five teenagers for destroying mailboxes and writing racially-offensive remarks on March 9.

The investigation began March 9 at 10:30 p.m., when the Sheriffโ€™s Office received a call from a citizen who said he observed several people damage a mailbox in the 17000 block of Creekside Drive in Brandywine. When the citizen observed the vehicle flee the scene, he followed it until it turned down Scout Camp Road, which has no outlet. He quickly erected a barricade from some rope and a wooden โ€œNo Trespassingโ€ sign and called police. When officers arrived, they found the vehicle behind the barricade. It was occupied by three juveniles, who were subsequently were identified and arrested. They had destroyed other mailboxes in neighborhoods off of Woodville Road that night. As a result, they were charged with multiple counts of malicious destruction of property valued at less than $500 and were released to their parents. Two of the juveniles are 17 years old, the other is 15 and all are males. Officer G. Barnhart investigated.

On March 10 at 8:15 a.m., officers responded to a residence in the 4400 block of Clayton Court in Waldorf for the report of a hate crime. Investigation revealed the victim was leaving his residence when he discovered his mailbox had been damaged. He also found a second mailbox next to his on which someone had used a black marker to draw swastikas and write a reference to Hitler, a racially offensive phrase and other inappropriate phrases.

While Officer S. Hawkins was investigating he discovered a possible link between his case and Officer Barnhartโ€™s. When Officer Barnhart arrested the three juveniles for the incident on Creekside Lane, he found books about the Third Reich in the back seat of their vehicle. Officer Hawkins responded to the residence of the registered owner of the vehicle, the father of one of the juveniles and found the books and a black marker in the car. Officer Hawkins subsequently charged the 17-year-old with a hate crime and destruction of property valued at less than $500. He was charged as a juvenile and released back to his father. Officer Hawkins determined the teenagerโ€™s two accomplices in the Creekside Drive incident and two other 17-year-old Waldorf boys were also involved in the Clayton Court incident. Three of the boys were charged on March 11 and the other boy was charged on March 12.

The accused were interviewed by detectives with the Charles County Hate Crimes Task Force, which includes detectives from the Sheriffโ€™s Office and FBI agents, and admitted to their roles in the hate crime and in destroying the mailboxes on March 9 in neighborhoods off of Woodville Road. They also acknowledged destroying more mailboxes March 2 in the Friendship Estates and Cartagena Highlands subdivisions after assembling at a former military site in the Laurel Branch subdivision. They are all charged as juveniles with one count of a hate crime and 19 counts of destruction of property valued at less than $500.

โ€œThese arrests are the result of excellent police work and the efforts of a Good Samaritan,โ€