Wauwatosa|News|
Burglars Target Two Homes in East Jacobus Park Area
Break-ins share a lot of similarities and one big difference – one resident was home and asleep when someone was rummaging through her house.

Email: james.price@patch.com
Phone 414-218-2779
Hometown: Wauwatosa, WI
Birthday: February 21, 1956
Bio: I've wanted to write ever since my father introduced me to the complete works of Mark Twain when I was a child, but I didn't get my start in journalism until 1986 when I began supplementing my income as an English major through freelancing for the Chicago Reader. Getting paid to write seemed better than not, so after graduating from the University of Illinois-Chicago, I applied to the graduate program of the University of Missouri School of Journalism, the first and I believe still the best J-school in the world.
Still a poor student, I begged my way onto the copy desk of the Columbia (Mo.) Daily Tribune. After five years of journalistic boot camp, I made my way to The Milwaukee Journal, settled in Wauwatosa, and I've been here ever since, editing and writing for The Journal and Journal Sentinel and teaching journalism at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee. I'm thrilled to be a Patch editor in my adopted hometown of 22 years.
Our Beliefs
At Patch, we promise always to report the facts as objectively as possible and otherwise adhere to the principles of good journalism. However, we also acknowledge that true impartiality is impossible because human beings have beliefs. So in the spirit of simple honesty, our policy is to encourage our editors to reveal their beliefs to the extent they feel comfortable. This disclosure is not a license for you to inject your beliefs into stories or to dictate coverage according to them. In fact, the intent is the opposite: we hope that the knowledge that your beliefs are on the record will cause you to be ever mindful to write, report and edit in a fair, balanced way. And if you ever see evidence that we failed in this mission, please let us know.
My Politics
I am unashamed to call myself a liberal in my personal political beliefs, and I don't think anyone should think it's a dirty word, because I believe this nation was founded on the most liberal principles the world has ever seen: that all people are equal and should govern their own affairs as equals. That said, I agree with my hero Thomas Jefferson about the limits of government and with many people today who believe that our government has in many ways outgrown that notion. In any case, I have 25 years of training and experience in journalism and I can assure readers that I have never let any personal beliefs affect my sense of fairness and balance in reporting or editing any story.
My Religion
I grew up in the Methodist Church, and although I do not practice any religion now, I still adhere to much of the guidance of that church, which taught that we should all act toward others and conduct ourselves in accordance with certain beliefs that underlie Christian morality.
Local Hot-Button Issues
The hottest button in Wauwatosa, I believe, is in the undercurrents that swell to the surface from time to time as we try to deal with being the closest suburban community to urban Milwaukee and the socio-economic issues that sometimes spill over our borders.
Break-ins share a lot of similarities and one big difference – one resident was home and asleep when someone was rummaging through her house.

Break-ins share a lot of similarities and one big difference – one resident was home and asleep when someone was rummaging through her house.
A roundup of recent store thefts includes an employee who was tapping the till.
A night of celebration turns into a long early morning of being handcuffed and hauled in for booking because of a poor choice to drive while impaired.
Victim is as much a mystery as alleged perpetrator because he won't finish the story he started in a message saying someone tried to rob him with a gun.
After jolting his passenger off his motorbike, Brookfield man leaves her in the street while he tries to hide out from police.
Driver walks off and leaves her car sitting in traffic after crashing into light pole, but police track her down before she can sober up.
A burglary last week in the Washington Highlands has come to light, but only after police catch a suspect who may have been involved in a rash of crime.
Traditionally slower weekdays are an excuse to run some specials, and North Avenue's new go-to place has a slate of them.
Federal Railroad Administration is reviewing the safety of "certain crossings" even though the city believed it had already performed all needed upgrades.
Officers chase suspect from Highlands into Washington Heights, where he scales a fence and interrupts a backyard party, drawing gunfire from an armed guest, who is now also under arrest.
Blending history and some fantasy, song and story, Stuart Stotts takes kids on a journey outside the walls of the library Monday morning and afternoon.
Officer sees driver orbiting construction barricade on Blue Mound Road and finds he's wanted for continuing to drive after his first OWI conviction.
As construction continues on local routes leading up to freeway interchange work, major thoroughfares will be closed for about a week and a half.
Some say it's a good problem to have, while others bemoan the inconvenience. But the fact is, it's here and it isn't going away.
For the second time in a week, man's home was broken into with nothing stolen – but this time he finds "Die" and "Your Dead" painted on his walls, doors and windows.
For the second time in two weeks, a home in the Washington Highlands is entered while residents are home, and keys and a car is stolen.
A mosh of fans mobs Mayfair to see dreamy Erin Heatherton treat Milwaukee to a look at glamour, after our fair city votes in the top three to see oh-so-pretty.
On another perspiring day, a multitude takes to the waters, and Friday will be hardly less heated. The weather is forecast to break for the weekend, though.