Coin-jar burglar sentenced to four years

Frank Markus

A Delmar man was sentenced on Jan. 3 to four years in state prison as a second felony offender; the prison time will be followed by five years of post-release supervision.

Frank Markus, 50, of 489 Orchard St., was sentenced by Judge Peter A. Lynch in Albany County Court.

He had pleaded guilty on Nov. 11 to one count of second-degree attempted burglary for a crime he committed a month before, on Oct. 10.

That evening, he took a taxi from Albany to Wormer Road in Guilderland, walked into a house through an unlocked door, and, while the 90-year-old resident watched, stole a jar containing small bills and lose change totaling $150, according to police. 

Markus then left the man’s home, and got back in the taxi. He wanted a ride back to Albany, the driver who alerted police said, but instead the cabbie drove him to the Price Chopper in the Hamilton Square Plaza (formerly 20 Mall), where he cashed in the change using a Coin Star machine, police say.

“The defendant knew that the elderly man lived at that residence and targeted him,” said Cecilia Walsh, spokeswoman for the Albany County District Attorney’s Office, by e-mail, responding to an Enterprise question.

Assistant District Attorney Matthew Hauf of the Major Offense Unit prosecuted the case.

— Melissa Hale-Spencer

More Regional News

  • The state’s SNUG program uses a public-health approach to address gun violence by identifying the source; interrupting transmission; and treating individuals, families, and communities affected by the violence. In Albany County in 2024, there were 52 shooting incidents in which people were injured, down 7 percent from 2023; 63 people were injured by gunfire, down 10 percent; and seven people were killed by gunfire in 2024.

  • “When those executive orders came in, when that news came in,” said Assemblywoman Gabriella Romero, “our office was flooded and we were getting tearful constituents coming to us and, for me, as a new member, that was very scary. I wasn’t expecting that.”

  • Governor Kathy Hochul announced this week the temporary closure of all live bird markets in several downstate counties after seven different markets found positive cases of bird flu, which has been evolving in ways that are worrying to human and animal health experts alike. 

The Altamont Enterprise is focused on hyper-local, high-quality journalism. We produce free election guides, curate readers' opinion pieces, and engage with important local issues. Subscriptions open full access to our work and make it possible.