Jewish citizen patrol group Shomrim helps nab 2 teens

Police are applauding community members help in the case of two teen suspects accused of carjacking a man in northwest Baltimore Sunday night.

The armed teens were tracked down quickly with the help of neighbors, members of a citizen patrol group, a city councilman and police officers, authorities said.

Mikayal Hendris, 16, and another teenager walked up to a 64-year-old man near the intersection of Pearce and Strathmore avenues in Park Heights neighborhood around 11 p.m. Sunday, and forced him out of his van at gunpoint, police said. The suspects demanded the victim's keys, police said.

Several people in the neighborhood saw the teens before the carjacking happened and called members of the Jewish citizen patrol group Shomrim.

"Several members of the community saw this occur, and those individuals not only did they call police, but they also began to follow the vehicle and they were able to relay this information to officers," Baltimore police Detective Jeremy Silbert said.

Coincidentally, Councilman Isaac "Yitzy" Schleifer was in the area doing his weekly ride-a-long with police.

"Those guys from the safety patrol, they were relaying block-by-block, so every single turn they made, they were relaying it to me. I was sitting next to the officer. I put it on speaker phone and we were just relaying that information," Schleifer said.

Officers caught up with the teens about two miles away near Patterson and Wabash avenues. Hendris has been charged as an adult. The other teen -- a 15-year-old -- is charged as a juvenile.

The councilman and police said there have been several other carjackings in that area in recent months.

"We had another incident not long ago in this same general area, and again community members saw a crime happen. They were able to reach out to police. They followed this vehicle, and we were able to made several arrests out of that case, so when we talk about police working with the community and the community working with police. This is something that happens every day," Silbert said.

"This kind of community police-relationship is a model for the city. There are so many problems that you hear routinely, but you don't hear about the victories," Shomrim spokesperson Nathan Willner said.

Investigators said the teens also took money from the victim. Authorities did not recover a gun.