Warwick man charged with theft of RIDOT backhoe

 

An indictment, information, or complaint is merely an allegation. A defendant is presumed innocent unless and until proven guilty. 

 

PROVIDENCE, R.I. – Attorney General Peter F. Neronha announced that a Warwick man has been charged in Providence County Superior Court with stealing a backhoe belonging to the Rhode Island Department of Transportation (RIDOT) in January 2023.


On May 17, 2023, the Office of the Attorney General charged Peter Dambruoso (age 59) by way of criminal information, with one count of possession of a stolen vehicle and one count of driving without a valid license.

 

As alleged in the criminal information, the RISP initiated an investigation into the theft of a 1998 John Deer backhoe belonging to RIDOT from a facility in Johnson sometime on January 3, 2023.

 

It is alleged that around 11:30 p.m. on January 4, 2023, a Providence Department of Public Works (DPW) employee witnessed the defendant operating a John Deer backhoe with State of Rhode Island plates in the back of a DPW building on Ernest Street in Providence. The witness confronted the defendant, asking him why he was operating a backhoe late at night, to which the defendant responded that he was a state employee.

 

The defendant then drove away in the backhoe and the witness followed him in a public works vehicle. The witness contacted the Providence Police while following the defendant, and shortly after, officers conducted a traffic stop of the backhoe and took the defendant into custody before transferring him into the custody of the RISP.

 

As alleged, after RISP transported the defendant to the State Police Barracks, the defendant agreed to provide a formal statement. In the statement, he described stealing the backhoe from a RIDOT facility in Johnston and subsequently driving it to the Rhode Island State House and parking it there for a couple of days before moving it again to the DPW building where he was confronted by the witness.

 

The defendant is scheduled for a pre-arraignment conference on August 10, 2023, in Providence County Superior Court.

 

President Biden is preparing to sign a new foreign aid bill into law. On Tuesday, the Senate passed a 95-billion-dollar emergency foreign aid package, which included funding for Ukraine, Israel, Taiwan, and the Indo-Pacific. The bill also laid the groundwork to ban the social media app TikTok in the U.S.       Columbia University has reached a deal with students protesting the war in Gaza. The pro-Palestinian protesters are calling for the Ivy League New York school to divest from any financial interests with Israel, and have set up a large tent city on school grounds. Columbia on Tuesday set a midnight deadline for protesters to disband. Early this morning, the school said the protesters had agreed to remove some of the tents, to make non-student protesters leave and to bar harassing language among the students, delaying possible police action for 48 hours.        Millions of salaried workers in the U.S. will soon qualify for overtime pay thanks to a new rule from the Biden administration. The rule announced Tuesday by the Department of Labor changes the threshold under which salaried employees become eligible for overtime. The department estimates that an extra four-million workers will qualify for overtime once the rule is implemented in January.        The Food and Drug Administration says the bird flu virus has been detected in some samples of pasteurized milk in the U.S. The FDA made the announcement Tuesday, less than a month after an outbreak of the bird flu was found in herds of dairy cows for the first time.        Ozzy Osbourne has a few words for his former band Black Sabbath amid his solo induction into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. In a post on X, the legendary singer said his solo career has been a much larger part of his life as a whole, so being inducted on his own just feels all the more special. He added "not bad for a guy who was fired from his last band."        The NBA playoffs continued on Tuesday with three more contests. The Minnesota Timberwolves put together a dominant 105-93 win over the Phoenix Suns at the Target Center to take a 2-0 series lead. In the East, the Indiana Pacers evened their series with a 125-108 takedown of the Milwaukee Bucks. Out West, the Dallas Mavericks downed the L.A. Clippers 96-93 in Game Two at Crypto-Dot-Com Arena.