
Kelly Hudson's kids were visiting from college for the holidays, so her family had five cars in the driveway of their home off Fairhill Circle.
"All four tires on four of them were slashed, and on my car it had two," Hudson said.
That's 18 tires, at about $200 apiece.
"It's actually frightening, because I don't understand why someone — what do they have to gain by this?" she said.
Hudson says police were quick to respond, and they were compassionate. But she feels the department just doesn't have enough bodies to patrol.
"They're stretched thin. It's tough," Hudson said. "We live on the outskirts of the town, so it was the perfect opportunity for someone to take that into account."
Brown is asking anyone else in the area with surveillance video from late New Year's Eve or early New Year's Day to share the footage with police.
"The best way, if they're going to make a report, is to dial 911," he said.
Meanwhile, Hudson says the neighborhood is bonding over the misery.
"I just hope that we can band together and find the person that would be sick enough to do something like this on New Year's," she said.