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Conroe woman arrested after cemetery mausoleum theft caught on camera, constable says

Woman accused of stealing keepsakes from Houston cemetery now faces two felony charges

Renee Amber Fennel, 37, of Conroe, was arrested as a suspect after surveillance video showed a woman allegedly taking items from a west Houston cemetery mausoleum. (Harris County Precinct 5 Constable's Office)

HARRIS COUNTY, Texas – A Conroe woman accused of stealing keepsakes and valuables from inside a west Houston cemetery mausoleum has been arrested, according to Harris County Precinct 5 Constable Terry Allbritton.

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Newly filed charging documents offer more detail about what investigators say happened.

Renee Amber Fennel, 37, was arrested Wednesday evening at her home in Conroe, the constable’s office said. Precinct 5 detectives, deputies and the agency’s Strategic Response Unit were involved in the investigation and her arrest, officials said.

According to a probable cause affidavit filed in Harris County, the case was reported June 15 after a theft call at Memorial Oaks Funeral Home, 13001 Katy Freeway.

The funeral home manager told investigators he discovered two mausoleum “niches” had been entered on June 6 at about 8 p.m. The affidavit describes niches as glass-fronted displays inside an enclosed mausoleum where cremated remains and personal belongings are kept.

The affidavit says surveillance video showed a woman arriving in a silver SUV, entering the mausoleum and opening multiple locked niche cases before taking items. A young child believed to be 3 to 5 years old was with her, according to the document. Allbritton’s office said the toddler seen in the surveillance video was with Fennel at the time of her arrest and was released to a family member.

Investigators noted the mausoleum is normally open to the public only during business hours, Monday through Saturday from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. The document states the doors were mistakenly left unlocked that night, allowing the suspect to get inside after hours.

Family members later provided investigators with descriptions and estimated values of what was missing, the affidavit says. In one case, a son reported that three gold Mahjong pieces were removed from a 13-piece set placed in his father’s memorial. He estimated the set’s value before the theft at about $3,700 and told investigators the remaining pieces lost value to the family because the set was no longer complete, according to the affidavit.

In the second niche, a relative reported that a silver James Avery cross worn by the deceased at the time of death was missing, with an estimated value of $150, the affidavit states. The same family member also reported an “Agua” rosary valued at about $20 was taken.

The affidavit says the constable’s office shared the surveillance video publicly in an effort to identify the suspect. A tipster later provided a name, which investigators said led them to Fennel through a combination of law enforcement records and database research.

The document states investigators linked her to a silver Lincoln MKC and matched visible damage on the vehicle to the SUV seen in surveillance footage. License plate reader data also placed the vehicle in the Houston area the day of the incident, the affidavit says.

Fennel was arrested on two felony charges of burglary and theft from a graveyard, Allbritton’s office said. Officials also said she was turned over to the Montgomery County Sheriff’s Office for questioning related to other cases in that jurisdiction.