GPD: Burglary/grand larceny at Lola Saratoga

— Photo from stuyvesantplaza.com

Lola Saratoga sells designer handbags.

GUILDERLAND — Three men smashed the front window of an upscale boutique in Stuyvesant Plaza at about 12:43 a.m. on Tuesday, stealing merchandise, according to a release from Guilderland Police.

Lola Saratoga, according to its website is “a destination for luxury accessories offering authenticated designer handbags from Louis Vuitton, Chanel, Gucci, YSL, Prada and Hermés, among others.”

The store also carries shoes, jewelry, and gift items.

“The suspects fled in a newer model, white Honda SUV,” said the police release. “Anyone who may have surveillance video or may have observed suspicious individuals, vehicles or activity in that area are urged to contact Investigator Christopher Oades at 518-356-1501 or email at oadesc@gpdny.org.”

 

More Guilderland News

  • Farnsworth is heated with three Lochinvar boilers — two were purchased in 2021 and the third in 2022 — and all three have had their cores fail, according to Guilderland school Superintendent Daniel Mayberry.

  • ​​Developer Markstone Group made the claim to members of the Guilderland Planning Board late last month that 30 of its proposed project site’s 51 acres constitute buildable land, entitling the developer to place 210 apartment units on 11 acres of the site. The planning board disagreed, arguing only 10 acres were viable for construction, drastically cutting the potential number of units Markstone could construct from 210 to 120. 

  • Those who oppose the gridlocked measures — one of several issues holding up the state budget — include consumer advocates and trial lawyers who maintain the proposals would make it harder for injured parties to sue, would increase insurance-companies’ profits, and that there is no guarantee insurance costs will be lowered.

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.