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Students report theft at Waterman St. apartment, property placed on investigation list

The apartment’s keys were allegedly left with property management.

Photo of the front of a cream-colored home with a Japanese Sushi restaurant on the bottom floor.

The site of the break-in on Sept. 14. According to a Providence Police incident report obtained by The Herald, the officer at the scene found no signs of a forced entry.

When Takis Dimitrakopoulos ’26 returned from summer break to his off-campus apartment on Waterman Street, he found it ransacked and emptied of nearly all his belongings.

Dimitrakopoulos told The Herald that he leased the apartment for the 2025–26 academic year through Walter Bronhard Realty. When he moved his belongings in before leaving for the summer, he left his key with a company employee at the property management group’s instruction, he said. But when he returned on Aug. 30, virtually all of his items were gone.

Dimitrakopoulos and his roommate reported the theft to the Providence Police Department and to Brown University Department of Public Safety. According to a Providence police incident report obtained by The Herald, the officer at the scene found no signs of a forced entry.

The incident report also noted that the location has been placed on the state’s Bureau of Criminal Identification and Investigation’s list “for further investigation,” and that the student tenants “may have to get the homeowner and the property management involved.”

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“It was a ransacked apartment and all my things had disappeared,” Dimitrakopoulos said.

Among the items stolen were a desktop computer and several suitcases of clothes, according to Dimitrakopoulos and the police report.  

“They left my couch and that was it,” Dimitrakopoulos said.

Walter Bronhard Realty did not respond to a request for comment.

Dimitrakopoulos described the experience as “kind of shocking” — not only because of the financial burden, but also because of where it happened: “This is at the heart of campus, literally across from the SciLi.”

For now, Dimitrakopoulos is living with a friend for the start of the semester.

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Maya Nelson

Maya Nelson is a university news and metro editor covering undergraduate student life as well as business and development. She’s interested in studying either English or Literary Arts and loves to read sci-fi and fantasy in her free time. She also enjoys playing guitar, crocheting and spending an unreasonable amount of time on NYT Spelling Bee.


Annika Singh

Annika Singh is The Herald’s tech chief and a metro editor from Singapore. She covers crime, justice and local politics, but mainly she stands in line for coffee and looks up answers every time she attempts a crossword.



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