ESCAPED KILLER CHARGED IN HOLDUPS; Pair of Businesses were Robbed

Byline: By Michael O. Allen, Record Staff Writer | Friday, January 24, 1992

The Record (New Jersey) | 5 Star | NEWS | Page B01

A convicted killer who escaped from a Connecticut prison and was recaptured in Paramus over the weekend was charged Thursday with two armed robberies in Rutherford and Montvale, authorities said.

Police linked Frank Vandever to the Jan. 7 robberies of a Rutherford jewelry store and a Montvale 7 Eleven after Vandever was captured at Garden State Plaza on Saturday, Bergen County Prosecutor John J. Fahy said.

Ronald Rutan, who also escaped from the Connecticut prison and was recaptured last week, was also charged Thursday in the holdups, Fahy said.

Vandever and Rutan are also suspects in the robbery of a 7 Eleven in Waldwick on Jan. 9, the prosecutor said.

Connecticut authorities on Thursday charged Vandever, 37, and Rutan, 34, with breaking out of the Somers Correctional Center on New Year’s Eve, and with kidnapping a couple and stealing their truck at knifepoint the day after the escape.

The two inmates broke out of prison by cutting through the bars of a window near the kitchen and then through two perimeter fences, authorities said. A fence alarm failed to sound.

Vandever, a former stockbroker serving a 40-year term for murdering a client, and Rutan, a convicted burglar, then led authorities in Connecticut, New York, and New Jersey on a manhunt. Rutan was captured in Spring Valley, N.Y., on Jan. 15.

Rutherford Police Chief Edward P. Caughey said that at about 5 p.m. on Jan. 6 Rutan went alone into Crosby Jewelers at 50 Park Ave. and asked a clerk if he could look at diamonds because he was shopping for an engagement ring.

Rutan returned with Vandever about the same time the next day. Vandever held a knife on the store clerk and Rutan brandished a gun that was later determined to be a toy, Caughey said.

Despite a warning from Rutan when he announced the robbery, however, the store manager pressed a silent alarm.

“When he pulled the alarm, they both turned around and fled,” Caughey said.

Neither victim was injured, and nothing was taken from the store.

About 11:46 p.m. the same night, Rutan held a 10-inch knife to the abdomen of a 7 Eleven clerk in Montvale, said borough Police Chief Joseph Marigliani. After Rutan left with about $300, Vandever, who allegedly was in the store pretending to be a customer, paid for a newspaper and also left.

The clerk then called police.

Fahy said he intended to prosecute the case after the two men are dealt with by Connecticut authorities.

ID: 17366857 | Copyright © 1992, The Record (New Jersey)

FIRE GUTS PARKWAY RESTAURANTS

By Michael O. Allen, Record Staff Writer | Sunday, February 24, 1991

The Record (New Jersey) | All Editions | NEWS | Page A03

A predawn fire destroyed the two restaurants at the Garden State Parkway’s Montvale service area Saturday and forced the closure of the southbound lanes for five hours as firefighters ran a hose across the road.
Only the walls of the building that housed the Roy Rogers and Bob’s Big Boy restaurants remained standing.
Trooper Peter Kempe said water pressure in the fire hydrants at the service area was so low that state police had to close the southbound lanes so a fire hose could be run across the roadway to a hydrant at an office building.
But Montvale Fire Chief Jerry Dellabella said the hose was run because “with the number of equipment operating, we needed more water. “
About 80 firefighters from Montvale, Park Ridge, and Woodcliff Lake, with support services from the Teaneck Fire Department, combined to combat the fire, Dellabella said. The first call came into the station at 1:29 a.m., about 25 minutes after the restaurants manager first saw smoke, he said.
“We had no difficulty getting to the fire,” Dellabella said. “The biggest thing that hampered us was the high winds. It just fans the fire. It just blew the fire right through the building. . . . When the call came through, the fire [had] already broken through the roof. The building was totally involved. “
Investigators ruled that the fire was accidental and that the cause was probably electrical, Dellabella said.
State Trooper John Soto, in his report on the fire, said Fritzner Demoin, the restaurants night manager, noticed smoke inside Roy Rogers about 1 a.m. A customer informed Demoin about the same time that smoke was coming from the roof. Demoin checked, then ordered all customers out of both the restaurants, Soto said.
It was unknown how many patrons were evacuated.

Keywords: FIRE; RESTAURANT; MONTVALE

Caption: 3 PHOTOS – JOHN DECKER / THE RECORD 1, 2 & 3 – Above and at left, firefighters attacking a blaze that was fanned by high winds early Saturday at the Garden State Parkway’s Montvale service area. Two restaurants were destroyed by the fire.

ID: 17334089 | Copyright © 1991, The Record (New Jersey)