Ellsworth -
Ellsworth police are hoping surveillance video will help them track down the person accused of robbing a local pharmacy earlier this month.
The video shows the suspect walking into Walgreen's on High Street on August 9th, then inside the store as well.
The person is described as a white man, in his twenties, about 6-feet tall and thin with brown hair.
He was wearing gray jeans, a black windbreaker with a hood, white baseball cap and a surgical mask.
If anyone has any information please call the Ellsworth Police Department at 667-2133.
State police say this was the 35th pharmacy robbery in Maine this year, compared with 28 pharmacy robberies in all of last year.
Ellsworth Police Release Surveillance Video in Pharmacy Robbery
-
UMaine Community Prepares For Annual Clean Sweep Sale
-
Spring Cleaning at UMaine
-
A Celebration To End Hunger In Brewer
-
A Dexter Couple Praises A Program That Has Helped Them And Other Disabled Veterans
-
Orono Man Charged With Murder of Nichole Cable
-
Friends Say Nichole Cable Knew Her Accused Killer
-
MEMA Suggests Tornado Relief Fund
-
MEMA Prepares to Help In Tornado Aftermath
-
Regulators to Vote on Rules for Maine's Eel Fishery
-
LePage: "Office of governor was totally disrespected"
Breaking News from CBS
-
Video: The next day: Search-and-rescue operations become search-and-recovery efforts
The frantic search-and-rescue operations following Monday's tornado became a grim search-and-recovery effort Tuesday. Anna Werner reports.
-
Injured third-grade teacher tells of trying to protect students
Jennifer Doan used her body to shield her students as tornado bore down on Plaza Towers Elementary School
-
Video: Saving the kids: One teacher's mission to keep her class safe
Jennifer Doan is a third-grade teacher at Plaza Tower's Elementary School in Moore, Okla. When the tornado hit, she used her body to protect as many students as she could. She came out of the rubble with a fractured sternum and spine. Vinita Nair reports.
-
Video: Tornado in Moore, Okla., was an EF5, the most powerful there is
With more than 300 people injured and at least 24 killed, government weather experts confirmed the twister that plowed through Moore, Okla., Monday was an EF5, which put the tornado in the most powerful classification. Scott Pelley reports on the latest from the ground in Moore, Okla.
-
Oklahoma tornado victim search efforts winding down
200-mph winds estimated to have caused $3 billion in damage; Students, family recall harrowing ordeal at destroyed elementary school





