It started in March of 2014 with a few eggs pelting 85-year-old Albert Clemens Sr.'s Euclid, Ohio home.

Then, the eggings kept coming: Several a week, always after dark and sometimes as late as 2 a.m.

And they haven't stopped.

According to Cleveland.com, Clemens and his family have suffered through over 100 eggings with "phenomenal accuracy" as Clemens describes them. Amazingly, the egg attacks likely aren't coming from right outside the home.

Police think someone is firing the eggs from one or two blocks away. Despite the incredible distance, Clemens says the eggs "almost invariably hit the front door."

Clemens' son told Fox 8 in Cleveland that "eggs are about 80 percent of the items thrown at his home. There have also been apples, oranges, lemons, limes, grapefruits and canned goods."

With the egg barrage continuing, police are befuddled. Stakeouts, canvassing the neighborhood and testing the eggs to determine their origin have resulted in a grand total of zero leads, according to police.

Fingerprints are useless as proteins in the egg destroy DNA.

The culprits even have the audacity to launch their eggs with police officers standing outside the home. On one night, an officer took an egg to the foot while he filed a report for the previous egging.

For Clemens, the eggings have destroyed the front of his home. The dried egg residue has caused deterioration in the aluminum sliding and his insurance company won't fix the problem until someone has been arrested for the vandalism.

Clemens told Cleveland.com that he used to clean up after every attack, but eventually they became so frequent that he couldn't keep up.

No other houses have been targeted, but several have been hit by rogue eggs fired at Clemens' home.

For more details on this bizarre series of vandalism, check out Cleveland.com's full story on the eggings.

