Second of three charged with theft of safe from Muskego home containing thousands is sentenced

WAUKESHA COUNTY -- The second of three people charged in connection with the theft of a safe containing hundreds of thousands of dollars in cash from a home in Muskego has been sentenced.

Police say following the burglary, those accused in this case purchased new cars, a home and jewelry.

In court on Wednesday, December 3rd, 31-year-old Javier Rizo was sentenced to serve five years in prison, and five years extended supervision -- with credit for 316 days served.

This, after pleading guilty to a felony charge of burglary of a building or dwelling as party to a crime.

A restitution hearing has been scheduled for February 3rd.

30-year-old Dario Rizo in September pleaded guilty to a felony charge of burglary of a building or dwelling as party to a crime. He was then sentenced to serve three years in prison, and four years extended supervision with credit for 277 days.

Dario Rizo's restitution hearing is scheduled for January 6th.

25-year-old Tiffany Kapitanski faces two charges -- burglary of a building or dwelling, and theft of movable property (greater than $10,000).

Kapitanski will be sentenced on January 20th.

On November 7th, 2014, police were dispatched to a home in Muskego for a reported burglary. There, they spoke with a man, who told police he lives at the home with his mother. The man told police he had returned to the home and observed the back door of the home to be open. The man noticed $400,000 had been taken from his mother's safe that was stored in her bedroom closet.

The man told police earlier that day, he had received a suspicious phone call from a woman who asked that he meet her to discuss a snow removal estimate. He told police he went to meet the woman, but wasn't able to locate her. Attempts to identify her phone number were unsuccessful.

Javier Rizo



Fast forward two months, to January 7th, 2015: Police received a tip from a person who wished to remain anonymous. That person identified the suspects as brothers Dario Rizo and Javier Rizo.

That confidential informant told police the Muskego man's father died in some type of an accident, and the man was handling the money. That informant said the Rizo brothers planned to use a garage door opener for the home -- given to them by Kapitanski (Javier Rizo's fiancee). They then planned on calling the man away from the home -- knowing he operated some type of business, police learned.

After the burglary occurred, the Rizo brothers each purchased new vehicles at a car dealership in Milwaukee, the confidential informant told police.

Police spoke with a sales consultant at the car dealership on S. 27th Street in Milwaukee -- showing him a photo from Javier Rizo's Facebook page. The sales consultant immediately recognized Javier Rizo, police say -- and told police he sold three vehicles back in November -- one to Javier Rizo, one to Dario Rizo and one to Tiffany Kapitanski. The grand total for all three vehicles was over $84,000, and police say they paid in cash.

The sales consultant recalled the three showed up at closing time -- in a rundown Mazda. He told police he found it suspicious that they bought three vehicles with little-to-no negotiating -- paying with cash.

Tiffany Kapitanski



Through their investigation, police were able to determine that the Muskego man had been giving money to his ex-girlfriend -- money that belonged to his mother. The Muskego man admitted to giving his ex-girlfriend between $30,000 and $50,000, police say. Police learned that at the same time the man's ex-girlfriend was supposedly dating him, she was also dating and had a child in common with Tiffany Kapitanski's brother. Additionally, the man's ex-girlfriend and Tiffany Kapitanski are friends, police say.

With the help of an IRS special agent, police learned Dario Rizo had placed more than $50,000 into a Tri-City bank account in December 2014, and Javier Rizo had placed $69,000 into Tiffany Kapitanski's Guaranty Bank account.

Police obtained income information from the Department of Workforce Development, and learned that the income of the Rizo brothers and Tiffany Kapitanski wouldn't be consistent with purchasing three vehicles -- totaling more than $84,000, and making cash deposits at banks -- totaling nearly $120,000. Police say in total, the three made $19,908 in 2014.

During their investigation, police learned that Javier Rizo and Tiffany Kapitanski were in the process of purchasing a home in West Allis -- allegedly using burglary proceeds. Kapitanski's children were moved from a school in Wind Lake, to a school in West Allis, police discovered.

Police found the vehicles Javier Rizo and Tiffany Kapitanski had purchased at the car dealership on S. 27th Street outside a home on S. 94th Street in West Allis. Additionally, they found a posting on Javier Rizo's Facebook page that read, in part: "Can't wait for the house to be done. I'm ready to move in."

Dario Rizo



They also discovered Kapitanski had made an appointment for plastic surgery at Froedtert Hospital -- liposuction and abdominoplasty with a bill of more than $11,000. She paid in advance, police say -- and was set to undergo the surgery on January 21st, according to the complaint.

A search warrant was executed on the home in West Allis. Javier Rizo and Tiffany Kapitanski were arrested and taken to the police department to be interviewed.

Initially, Kapitanski and Javier Rizo denied any knowledge or involvement in the burglary, according to a criminal complaint filed in the case. Eventually though, Javier admitted that some of the money used to purchase vehicles in November came from the Muskego residence -- telling police he received information about the residence (including details on the safe) from the Muskego man's ex-girlfriend. Javier told police the man's ex-girlfriend told him she had been receiving and stealing money from the safe, according to the complaint.

The complaint says Javier Rizo eventually admitted to committing the burglary. He told police he went to the home in Muskego and waited for the man to leave the home -- then entering the home and removing the safe. He told police he then drove to a hotel on 27th Street near Franklin -- opening the safe with a screwdriver. The safe and the garage door opener used to enter the home were disposed of by Javier Rizo on the north side of Milwaukee -- police say.

Javier Rizo told police he then purchased a vehicle for himself and Tiffany Kapitanski -- saying he purchased a vehicle for his brother, Dario because Dario had allowed him to drive his vehicle to commit the burglary, according to the complaint. Eventually, Javier told police his brother Dario was the lookout when the burglary was committed.

When Tiffany Kapitanski was informed that Javier Rizo had admitted to the burglary, she told police she was upset with her brother's girlfriend (the Muskego man's ex-girlfriend) because he was giving her money and she was "always flaunting new cars and clothes, as well as cash." When she expressed her frustration to Javier, he suggested burglarizing the Muskego man's home, police say.

Police say Kapitanski provided the Rizo brothers with the man's address, and then called the man to get him out of the house. Kapitanski said after the burglary, they all met up at the hotel in 27th Street, according to police.

Kapitanski told police all of the furniture for the home she purchased with Javier Rizo in West Allis, plus new carpet, paint and plumbing were purchased with the stolen money -- along with a number of jewelry items she was wearing when she was arrested, according to the complaint.