Cornwall woman arrested for NYC vandalism

Cornwall woman arrested for NYC vandalism
Clara Kraebber, who helped organize a Black Lives Matter rally in Cornwall last June, has been arrested in New York City for vandalism during a similar rally on Sept. 4. The Cornwall rally was peaceful and did not include any property damage.
Photo by Lazlo Gyorsok

CORNWALL — Clara Kraebber, 20, whose parents own a home in Cornwall, was arrested on Sept. 4 for “rioting during demonstrations in Manhattan,” according to a posting on the New York Police Department Twitter. “They were part of a large group breaking storefront windows.”

Kraebber helped organize a Black Lives Matter protest in Cornwall Bridge last June. She was described as “supporting” the event, which was put together by Cornwall resident Caroline Kosciusko. Cornwall’s Camilla and Sabina Busby were also credited with helping to put together the protest on the Green. The gathering was well-attended and peaceful. 

Kraebber is the daughter of Markus Kraebber, a child psychiatrist, and architect Virginia Kindred. They purchased a circa 1730 home in Cornwall in 2005, according to town records. 

An article in the New York Post says the woman, who is now a student at Rice University, was one of eight people who did an estimated $100,000 in damage to five banks, two Starbucks coffee shops and one drugstore, between the Flat Iron District (near 23rd Street and 5th Avenue) and the downtown neighborhood known as SoHo. 

The Post article said the Kraebber family also has an Upper East Side apartment. 

Kraebber is mentioned in a July 2020 article in Rolling Stone magazine about the arrest of Nikki Stone, 18, by New York Police on July 28. The article said Stone was arrested “on multiple counts of vandalism and criminal mischief for five incidents between June and July. They include allegedly spray-painting graffiti in various locations around Manhattan and painting over four NYPD surveillance cameras near the former site of the Occupy City Hall encampment.”

The police said that the protesters in the July 28 incident had been throwing rocks and bottles at law enforcement. Kraebber is quoted in the article saying, “None of that happened whatsoever. We literally turned the corner and were met with a line of police who attacked us without warning.”

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