87°F
weather icon Clear

Local resident arrested for graffiti, defacing property

A local man was arrested last week on graffiti-related charges. Boulder City resident Daniel Michael Dryjanski , 23, was arrested Aug. 11 on one misdemeanor charge of placing graffiti on or otherwise defacing property, police say.

Detective Scott Pastore, who investigated the case, declined to provide specific details about Dryjanski’s case. However, Pastore told the Boulder City Review before the Aug. 11 arrest that an arrest warrant was to be issued for a local tagger who also had been stopped in Las Vegas by Metropolitan Police Department officers.

“A tagger they stopped out there happened to be from Boulder City. We researched the tags, and that was him,” Pastore said.

The Boulder City Review has not confirmed that this tagger was Dryjanski, although Dryjanski was arrested on a warrant. Additionally, Boulder City police are working on a second warrant in a different graffiti case, Pastore said.

Boulder City police see graffiti “all the time” in places such as local parks and school restrooms, Pastore said. Boulder City Review witnessed graffiti on and near the Elaine K. Smith building in June.

“It’s appalling to see this graffiti right down the street from my home and in clean, green Boulder City,” Avenue H resident Wendy Foster told the Boulder City Review in June.

Foster also worried that gangs were moving to Boulder City. But according to Pastore, neither of the police’s graffiti suspects are believed to be gang members.

Graffiti is a hard crime to solve, Pastore said, because those committing the crime are mobile, and it is difficult to match the works to the individuals. However, when a graffiti suspect is local, it does make it easier to catch him or her, he said.

“It’s easer to get the people in town,” he said. “They tag their own town up and they leave bread crumbs.”

Dryjanski has a pretrial hearing scheduled for Oct. 1 at 3 p.m. in Boulder City Municipal Court.

MOST READ
THE LATEST
City, businesses talk parking

The goal is pretty clear. The city must comply with federally required standards related to the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA).

Senior sendoff

Photos by Ron Eland/Boulder City Review

One-fifth of $21M in COVID funding remains

Boulder City still has nearly 20% of the more than $21 million it received from the American Recovery Plan Act or ARPA. So, what is ARPA, where did it come from and how is the money being spent?

City tracks bills with unfunded mandates

Things that happen at the state level can have a big impact on local jurisdictions such as Boulder City, which is why city staff keeps track of bills coming before the state Legislature every other year when they are in session.

Lady Eagles undefeated in league play

Finishing the regular season undefeated in 3A play, Boulder City High School softball is riding an emotional high into the postseason, following a 7-4 victory over rival Virgin Valley on May 1.

Garrett ending year in style

As the school year winds down, Garrett has so much to celebrate. From academic honors and athletic achievements to traditions and a strong school community, our Bobcats are finishing the year strong and proud.

Project will change street parking throughout downtown

A plan to reconfigure parking along the historic district stretch of Nevada Way has taken a big step forward as a request for bids on the work is currently out and expected to close on May 8.

Flamingo Inn Motel future in flux

Just a week after the future fate of the old Flamingo Inn Motel seemed certain to be demolition, a string of events has left that at least somewhat in doubt.

Shakespeare in the park

Photos by Ron Eland/Boulder City Review