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Tag: firearms

  • Phan brothers murder retrial set to begin Monday, weather permitting

    LOWELL — The murder retrial of Billy, Billoeum, and Channa Phan is officially ready to proceed.

    Jury impanelment is scheduled to begin in Middlesex Superior Court on Monday morning — or Tuesday if the winter storm forces the Kiernan Judicial Center to close.

    The schedule was set on Friday during the final pretrial hearing, where Judge Chris Barry-Smith also denied a defense motion to dismiss the indictment against one of the three brothers, each charged with first-degree murder for the shooting death of 22-year-old Tyrone Phet outside his Lowell home in 2020.

    Barry-Smith rejected the bid by attorney William Dolan, who represents defendant Channa Phan, ruling that although the Middlesex District Attorney’s Office failed to turn over information tied to a gang-motive theory in a timely fashion, the lapse did not rise to the level requiring dismissal.

    The motion stemmed from the prosecution’s recent attempt to broaden the scope of gang‑related evidence in the retrial, namely introducing details about a Sept. 13, 2020 drive‑by shooting at 478 Wilder St.

    Prosecutors have argued the residence functioned as a stash house for the Outlaws, street gang, which they claim the Phan brothers are members of. Due to the shooting, a search warrant was obtained by the Lowell Police for the Wilder Street home, where officers seized guns, ammunition, 200 grams of cocaine, and 100,000 pressed pills containing methamphetamine.

    The shooting — allegedly carried out by rival gang Crazy Mob Family — triggered a retaliatory motive for the killing of Phet less than 24 hours later.

    Phet was not alleged to be a CMF member, but prosecutors contend he lived in the same Spring Avenue building where a CMF member once resided.

    Phet was shot to death in a hail of gunfire while sitting in his car outside the multi-family residence at 55 Spring Ave. Phet — a 2016 Chelmsford High graduate and captain of the football team his senior year — was struck eight times during the shooting.

    The Lowell Police recovered 21 spent shell casings at the scene from two different caliber guns.

    Barry‑Smith said the prosecution’s decision to pursue a broader gang theory in the retrial “not surprisingly” prompted the defense to seek all information police and prosecutors possessed about the Wilder Street shooting and subsequent search warrant.

    Prior to the first trial — which ended in a mistrial after jurors became deadlocked —prosecutors turned over the police report about the incident but not the underlying investigative materials, Barry‑Smith said. That omission was not a major point of contention at the time because the initial trial’s lead prosecutor — former Middlesex Assistant District Attorney Daniel Harren — had elected not to pursue a wide‑ranging gang theory.

    Once the new prosecution team sought to expand that scope, Barry‑Smith said, they were obligated to produce the full set of Wilder Street information — something they did not do until recent weeks.

    “The Commonwealth’s principal shortcoming is that failure to produce Wilder Street information once it determined Wilder Street was relevant to the case,” Barry‑Smith said, adding that a secondary issue was that prosecutors “were not adequately familiar” with what evidence had been turned over during the first four years of the case, leading to a misunderstanding.

    The judge described the discovery violation as the product of “mistake, inadvertence, misunderstanding, and a failure to be fully familiar” with prior disclosures — not an attempt to ambush the defense.

    “It was not delivered, nor was it designed to spring evidence upon the defense,” Barry‑Smith said.

    The judge reiterated that he has already denied the Commonwealth’s request to expand the scope of gang evidence for the retrial, calling the proposed showing “too thin.”

    The Wilder Street material may be considered for rebuttal, but that will depend on how the trial unfolds.

    Because prosecutors have since turned over the missing materials, and because the expanded gang theory will not be permitted, Barry‑Smith said dismissal was not warranted.

    “I don’t find that the District Attorney’s Office’s conduct was purposeful or egregious,” he said.

    As for jury selection, the expectation is it will take two days to get the needed pool of 16 jurors.

    The trial will run daily from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. each day, with an hour‑long lunch break. Barry‑Smith said the case is expected to conclude by the end of the week of Feb. 9.

    Middlesex Assistant District Attorney Thomas Brant told Barry-Smith that the prosecution intends to call more than 40 witnesses.

    Brant also raised a scheduling wrinkle: Feb. 8 is Super Bowl Sunday, and with the New England Patriots still in contention for a spot in Super Bowl 60 as of the hearing, juror availability and the scheduling of witnesses could be affected.

    “I don’t care, and my desire is to move the case as quickly as possible, but …” Brant said.

    “I hadn’t thought of that,” Barry‑Smith replied, adding that he may delay the Feb. 9 start time to as late as 10 a.m.

    “I might delay things on that Monday, but I’m not going to call it off,” he said.’

    The Sun will publish weekly wrap-ups on the trial’s progress, with summaries appearing this Sunday and again on Feb. 8. A final story detailing the verdict will follow shortly after the jury reaches a decision, with the latest possible publication date being Feb. 15.

    Follow Aaron Curtis on X @aselahcurtis, or on Bluesky @aaronscurtis.bsky.social. 

    Aaron Curtis

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  • Lowell High students released on bail after alleged armed robbery

    LOWELL — Two Lowell High School students and two unidentified juveniles are facing several charges, including armed robbery, after police say they attacked a teenage boy and stole his backpack shortly after he stepped off a bus on Lincoln Street earlier this month.

    Devonathan Thanongsinh and Fidell Chan, both 18, along with two 17-year-old boys whose names were redacted from Lowell Police reports due to their age, are accused of striking the victim in the face with a handgun that officers later recovered.

    Police said they have not determined which suspect wielded the weapon.

    The group also allegedly assaulted the victim’s 58-year-old grandfather when he tried to intervene in the attack.

    According to an officer’s incident report, the assault occurred shortly after 3 p.m. on Dec. 5, when police were called to the 400 block of Lincoln Street for a report of a teen who had been attacked “by a group of kids” on the sidewalk.

    When one of the responding officers arrived in the area, he saw a blue Mazda traveling the wrong way on a one‑way section of Lincoln Street and noticed a pickup truck farther up the road that appeared to have been involved in a crash. The Mazda, meanwhile, had heavy damage to its doors and tires, the report said.

    The driver of the Mazda — later identified by police as Thanongsinh — attempted to maneuver around the cruiser but was unable to get by. The officer activated his lights and conducted a traffic stop.

    “(Thanongsin) … denied being involved,” the officer said in the report. “I then asked what had happened to the vehicle in which he did not have an answer.”

    The officer reported that three other “young male” occupants were inside the Mazda with Thanongsinh, including the two 17‑year‑old boys and Chan, who was seated in the rear driver’s‑side seat.

    As the officer was speaking with the group, he was approached by a woman who said her son — whose name was redacted from the report — had just been assaulted by the four males in the Mazda.

    According to the report, the woman told police she was inside her Lincoln Street home when she heard screaming outside. She tried calling her son, but he did not answer. Moments later, he ran into the house and told her he had been jumped.

    Another family member approached the officer and said that one of the occupants of the Mazda had “used a handgun to pistol whip” the victim, the report said.

    With that information, the officer told the four occupants to remain in the vehicle while additional units were called to the scene. At one point, one of the 17-year-olds allegedly opened his door and tried to get out despite the instructions.

    The officer said in the report that he “commanded him to remain inside and to close the door in which he complied. I then further instructed all four occupants to remain inside and do not do anything too stupid. All complied.”

    Once other officers arrived, the occupants were ordered out of the Mazda one at a time. None of them had weapons on them, according to the report, but officers spotted a handgun on the front passenger‑side floorboard in plain view.

    The weapon turned out to be a 9mm loaded with a magazine containing nine rounds.

    The victim later told police, according to the report, that he had just gotten off a bus with friends and was walking toward his home when a group approached him and struck him with a closed fist.

    He also said he was hit in the face with a “hard object.”

    He told police he could not identify his attackers because they were all dressed in black and wearing masks.

    The teen said he “blacked out” during the assault, the report said. When asked whether he saw a gun, he said “I thought, I think I did,” but added he could not be certain.

    A friend who had been walking with him told police he saw a gun as the group approached and immediately dropped his backpack and ran. Both his backpack and the victim’s were stolen and later allegedly found in the Mazda. The backpacks contained laptops and other personal belongings.

    Police also interviewed the victim’s grandfather, who said he saw four males “punching and kicking” his grandson. He tried to intervene but said the group then turned on him, striking him multiple times in the nose and head and causing him to fall and feel as though he had been “knocked out.”

    He said he was also unable to identify the attackers because they were dressed in black and wearing masks, according to the report.

    After the alleged assault, the victim’s grandfather told police he saw the four attackers get into the Mazda and drive off. He said he got into his pickup truck and followed them around the block. As he did, the Mazda drove the wrong way onto Lincoln Street and allegedly struck a parked vehicle.

    According to the report, the 58‑year‑old told officers he then positioned his truck to block the Mazda from leaving. The Mazda then is alleged to have struck his vehicle moments before the responding officer arrived on scene.

    The officer said in his report that none of the four suspects claimed responsibility for the handgun found in the Mazda or for the assaults. He added that the incident “appeared to be a planned attack on the victims,” noting that surveillance footage showed the masked assailants punching both the teen and his grandfather before stealing the backpacks.

    Both the teen and his grandfather were taken to Lowell General Hospital’s Saints Campus following the attack.

    Thanongsinh and Chan, along with the two juveniles, were charged with masked armed robbery, assault and battery with a dangerous weapon, carrying a firearm without a license, carrying a loaded firearm without a license, assault and battery, and assault with a dangerous weapon.

    Thanongsinh also faces a charge of leaving the scene of property damage.

    Because of their ages, the outcomes of the juveniles’ cases were not available in court records.

    Lowell District Court documents show that Thanongsinh and Chan were arraigned on Dec. 8 and ordered held without bail pending 58A dangerousness hearings on Dec. 11, a proceeding used to determine whether a defendant poses a risk to the public.

    The Middlesex District Attorney’s Office requested they be held without bail. However, after those hearings, a judge set bail for both men at $2,000 cash, which they posted the same day.

    Court documents show that roughly 30 letters were submitted in support of Thanongsinh as part of his 58A dangerousness hearing, including one from a Lowell High School staff member who said the 18‑year‑old “excelled academically” in the classes he taught during Thanongsinh’s sophomore year and again now as a senior.

    “Throughout the time I have known him, Devonathan has consistently demonstrated maturity, responsibility and strong character,” the staff member said in the letter. “He approaches his coursework with diligence and focus. His academic performance as a sophomore stood out among his peers.”

    The letter described him as “polite, respectful, and genuinely well‑mannered,” adding that he “conducts himself with kindness and humility, and interacts positively with both classmates and teachers.”

    “He may have made some poor decisions, but I believe his foundation of strong character and his family will help him atone for those lapses in judgment and become the productive adult I know he can be if given the opportunity,” the staff member concluded.

    Court records show neither Thanongsinh nor Chan have criminal records.

    As a condition of their release on bail, both Thanongsinh and Chan were ordered to remain in the custody of their mothers, continue with their high school educations, avoid all contact with the victims and witnesses, possess no dangerous weapons, abstain from drugs and alcohol, and comply with a 24/7 curfew and GPS monitoring.

    According to court documents, Thanongsinh was brought back to court the day after his release for what was initially believed to be a curfew violation.

    His attorney, Thomas Torrisi, stressed on Friday that the allegation was later determined to be unfounded, explaining that Thanongsinh had not left his home and that the issue stemmed from a GPS signal problem.

    “They determined he had absolutely never left the house, so there was no violation found by the judge,” Torrisi said.

    Torrisi added about the case that “we’re very much at the infant stages at this point.”

    “There’s an awful lot that still needs to be done before we’re in a position to know the totality of the circumstances,” he said.

    Chan’s attorney, Stephen Barton, was unavailable for comment.

    The pair are scheduled to return to court for a pretrial conference on Jan. 20.

    Follow Aaron Curtis on X @aselahcurtis, or on Bluesky @aaronscurtis.bsky.social.

    Aaron Curtis

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  • Arrest log

    The following arrests were made recently by local police departments. All defendants are presumed innocent until proven guilty. Massachusetts’ privacy law prevents police from releasing information involving domestic and sexual violence arrests with the goal to protect the alleged victims.

    BILLERICA

    • Michael Parker, 50, 67 Salem Road, Billerica; assault with dangerous weapon, intoxicated licensee carrying firearm.

    • Katherine Marie Main, 41, unknown address; fugitive from justice on court warrant.

    LOWELL

    • Brian Cooper, 29, 17 Yarmouth Drive, Nashua, N.H.; warrant (unlicensed operation of motor vehicle), operating motor vehicle without license.

    • Luis Oliveras, 65, 144 High St., Apt. 2, Lowell; operation under influence of alcohol.

    • Emily Rogers, 33, homeless; warrant (shoplifting), trespassing.

    • Kosall Deth, 44, 73 Fort Hill Ave., Apt. 2, Lowell; warrant (failure to stop/yield).

    • Kenneth Eng, 21, 27 Hastings St., Lowell; warrant (operation of motor vehicle with suspended license), failing to submit motor vehicle for inspection.

    • Kevin Sok, 32, 21 Main St., Dunstable; operating motor vehicle after license suspension, failing to submit motor vehicle for inspection.

    • Nicholas Powell, 36, 301 Old Marshall Road, Dracut; warrant (failure to appear for unlicensed operation of motor vehicle).

    • Daniel Ramos-Vallejo, 23, 35 Temple St., Apt. 19, Lowell; operating motor vehicle after license suspension, failing to submit motor vehicle for inspection.

    • Thomas McGrath, 34, homeless; shoplifting, trespassing after notice.

    • Mason Cruz, 30, 619 Gorham St., Apt. 2, Lowell; assault and battery on police officer, resisting arrest.

    • Mary Foley, 45, 93 Berkeley St., Billerica; breaking and entering motor vehicle, disturbing peace.

    • Teddy Buckley, 36, homeless; trespassing.

    • Betsy Bettencourt, 60, homeless; two counts of trespassing.

    • Peter Gichuhi, 44, homeless; public drinking.

    • Kristen Butler, 25, 205 Farrwood Drive, Haverhill; warrants (failure to appear for two counts of trespassing, and shoplifting by asportation), trespassing.

    • Bryant Dottin, 28, 18 Morton St., Lowell; warrants (failure to appear for unregistered motor vehicle, and suspended license).

    • Divine Morse, 25, 271 E. Eighth St., No. 410, Boston; warrant (uninsured motor vehicle).

    • J’Lohn Moro, 33, 590 Market St., Apt. 325, Lowell; shoplifting.

    • Khaisone Sinlong, 30, 189 Walker St., No. 5, Lowell; operating motor vehicle without license, failure to stop/stop sign, warrant (malicious damage to motor vehicle).

    • Michael Picardi, 38, homeless; warrant (possession of Class E drug).

    • Joshua Rivera, 37, 57 Mount Vernon St., Lowell; warrant (distribution of Class A drug), trafficking in 18 grams or more of cocaine.

    • Jeffrey Breitwieser, 38, homeless; assault on emergency medical technician or health care provider, trespassing.

    NASHUA, N.H.

    • Nathaniel Ciardelli, 32, no fixed address; criminal trespassing, theft by unauthorized taking ($0-$1,000).

    • Dagoberto Vasquez Bamaca, 20, 46 Ledge St., Nashua; simple assault.

    • Jack Pearson Smith, 20, 56 Furber Lane, Wolfeboro, N.H.; driving under influence.

    • Trisha Morin, 40, no fixed address; nonappearance in court.

    • Jorge Lewis Curet, 40, 92 Ledge St., Apt. 2, Nashua; stalking.

    • Marion Smith, 49, no fixed address; theft by unauthorized taking ($0-$1,000), nonappearance in court.

    • Cara Kulingoski, 48, no fixed address; warrant.

    • Darryl Hudson, 43, 7 Van Buren St., Nashua; out of town warrants.

    • Cameron Joseph Sousa, 21, 24 Gillis St., Nashua; nonappearances in court, suspension of vehicle registration, driving motor vehicle after license revocation/suspension, unregistered motor vehicle, operation of motor vehicle without valid license.

    Staff Report

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  • Federal judge asked to strike down firearm age restrictions

    BOSTON — A coalition of gun rights groups are asking a federal judge to strike down Massachusetts’ ban on the sale of handguns to anyone age 18 to 20 in response to a federal appeals court ruling that overturned a federal ban.

    In a filing in U.S. District Court, the Las Vegas-based Firearms Policy Coalition and other groups ask the judge to grant an injunction blocking the state’s age-based prohibitions from being enforced. The groups argue that the 18 to 20 age group is protected by the Second Amendment and that there is “historical tradition” supporting the states restrictions.

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  • Comics, collectibles worth millions recovered in North County probe

    Valuable comic books recovered as part of a San Diego County Sheriff’s investigation. (Photo courtesy of SDSO)

    Two suspects were behind bars Wednesday, linked to 13 North County storage-unit burglaries in which comic books and other collectibles worth millions of dollars were stolen.

    Investigators discovered the spree, according to the San Diego County Sheriff’s Office, after the launch of a fraud probe in June by detectives from the Vista Sheriff’s Station.

    They began looking into allegations that individuals had used stolen personal identifying information to lease storage units.

    Between Oct. 28 and Nov. 13, detectives served three search warrants, including one at a home in the 300 block of West Los Angeles Drive in Vista, seizing the stolen comic books, trading cards and other collectibles. Two of the comics, old Spider-Man editions, bore tags with estimated prices of $11,000 and $4,000.

    Detectives also found 19 guns and nearly $100,000 in cash.

    Kyle John Henely, 43, and Veronica Merlo, 40, allegedly stole the goods during six break-ins in Escondido, five in Valley Center and two in Oceanside.

    Henely and Merlo have been booked into the Vista Detention Facility on suspicion of burglary, fraud, grand theft and conspiracy, according to jail records. Authorities initially charged them with the Oceanside break-ins, then added the counts in the Escondido and Valley Center cases.

    City News Service contributed to this report.


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  • The Inconsistency About Cannabis And Guns

    Exploring the inconsistency about cannabis and guns, where freedom for firearms clashes with outdated marijuana laws

    In the ongoing culture‑war of American politics, few issues highlight the contradictions within the conservative, pro‑Second Amendment world quite like the pairing of gun ownership and marijuana use. the inconsistency about cannabis and guns makes for odd political alliances.

    On the one hand, many on the Right argue vigorously that the individual right to keep and bear arms must be protected from government infringement. Yet on the other, that same political cohort often supports strict federal prohibitions preventing lawful — and even state‑legal — cannabis users from purchasing firearms. By contrast, alcohol use, which is legal nationwide, is rarely treated as a disqualifier for gun ownership despite strong associations with firearm violence. That contrast raises questions about consistency, principle and policy.

    RELATED: Immersive Events Redefine Millennial Nights

    Here are some of the relevant statistics:

    • According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA), in 2024 about 22.3 % of Americans aged 12 or older (roughly 64.2 million people) reported past‑year marijuana use.

    • Meanwhile, alcohol remains more widely used: in 2024, approximately 134.3 million Americans aged 12 or older reported past‑month alcohol use.

    • On firearms and substance risk: Alcohol misuse is documented to elevate the risk of firearm injury or death through homicide, suicide or unintended injury. For example, one advocacy page reports that alcohol misuse accounts for more than 140,000 deaths annually in the U.S. and that introducing firearms to alcohol‑misuse situations increases serious injury or death risk.

    Photo by Claire Anderson via Unsplash
    • By contrast, cannabis incident data tied to firearms (for example, use of marijuana plus gun‑possession) are far less publicly quantified, though one Hawaii report found that of some 23,528 firearm permit applications, 519 (~ 2.2 %) were denied — and of those, 211 (~ 40.7 %) were due to the applicant’s status as a medical‑marijuana patient.

    What emerges: legal alcohol is widespread, common among gun‑owners, and strongly implicated in firearm‑related violence; cannabis is increasingly used, often legal at the state level, but its users are often precluded from gun rights under federal law.

    At the federal level, under the Gun Control Act of 1968, 18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(3) prohibits any person who is an “unlawful user of or addicted to any controlled substance” from possessing a firearm. Because cannabis remains a Schedule I controlled substance federally, state legal‑use does not override the restriction.

    In recent years, courts have challenged this blanket prohibition. For example:

    • The Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals has held that applying § 922(g)(3) to someone who uses marijuana but isn’t intoxicated at the moment may violate the standard set in New York State Rifle & Pistol Association v. Bruen (2022) because firearm regulations must be consistent with historical traditions.

    • The Eleventh Circuit Court of Appeals ruled in August 2025 that medical‑marijuana users in Florida had plausibly alleged that the federal prohibition violated their Second Amendment rights.

    • And the Supreme Court of the United States has agreed to review whether regular marijuana users can legally own guns, with arguments expected in early 2026.

    Thus, the legal collision is clear: dozens of states permit adult‑use or medical cannabis; federal law bans gun ownership by cannabis users; and courts are now reconsidering the constitutional footing of that ban.

    RELATED: The Connection Between Country Music And Cannabis

    From the vantage of many conservative advocates, gun rights are sacrosanct: the individual right to own firearms for self‑defense, deterrence of tyranny, and personal liberty. Meanwhile, proponents of cannabis reform argue that legal adult‑use meets the same liberty standard — and yet those who support gun rights often also support or accept federal cannabis prohibition that strips gun rights from users, even when state‑legal.

    The contradictory posture arises when one considers: if gun ownership is a fundamental individual right irrespective of political views, why exclude lawful adults simply because they also use cannabis? Especially when alcohol use, far more prevalent and demonstrably tied to firearm violence, does not (in most cases) lead to automatic loss of gun rights. That asymmetry suggests an underlying value‑judgment: alcohol is socially accepted (and taxed) despite risk; cannabis is socially stigmatized even as laws evolve. The Right’s selective focus — defending guns fiercely while accepting restrictions for cannabis users — raises questions about consistency of principle.

    This contradiction has real‑world consequences: legal ambiguity for millions of Americans, a patchwork of state laws vs. federal restrictions, and potential erosion of trust in institutions when liberty claims are applied unevenly. For the Right’s long‑term credibility on individual rights, the question becomes: can you credibly champion “freedom to keep and bear arms” while endorsing a regime that denies that freedom to law‑abiding adults because of a behavior (cannabis use) that’s legal in many states?

    In short: to claim consistency, the pro‑gun conservative movement must either defend gun rights across the board(including for cannabis users) or explain why this particular group is different. Until then, the contrast between alcohol, cannabis, and firearms under the law remains a striking example of “rights for some, restrictions for others.”

    Terry Hacienda

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  • Publix allows open carry, but what about Miami-area Winn-Dixie, malls, theaters?

    Florida is now an open-carry state. But not everywhere.

    Businesses have the final say on whether customers can holster a firearm outside their clothing. So far, many aren’t putting out the welcome mat for customers who open carry, citing existing “no guns” policies.

    But Florida-based Publix has announced it is allowing open carry inside its supermarkets. That means shoppers can now stroll through the aisles with firearm in holster at their waist while perusing Pub Sub deals and BOGOs of the week.

    Florida Attorney General James Uthmeier’s recent memo to law enforcement officers that open carry is “the law of the state” followed a First District Court of Appeal ruling that Florida’s ban on open carry was unconstitutional.

    MORE: People can now carry firearms openly in public in Florida, attorney general says

    The ruling went into effect on Sept. 25. Publix’s decision to allow customers to open carry came earlier this week, about two weeks after the effective date.

    Miami-Dade’s performing arts theater also is allowing open carry, according to a county spokesperson.

    Publix spokeswoman Lindsey Willis sent the Miami Herald a statement about the supermarket chain’s decision.

    “Florida law allows the open carry of firearms. Publix follows all federal, state and local laws. Treating customers with dignity and respect is a founding belief at Publix. In any instance where a customer creates a threatening, erratic or dangerous shopping experience — whether they are openly carrying a firearm or not — we will engage local law enforcement to protect our customers and associates.”

    The decision is a switch from Publix’s stance in 2019. Back then, the Lakeland, Florida-based grocery giant said that it “respectfully requests that only law enforcement officials openly carry firearms in our stores.” That policy applied even in states where open carry was legally allowed at the time.

    So what does open carry mean for retailers — grocery chains, shopping malls, movie and performing arts theaters?

    First, understand what the ruling means. People still are prohibited from carrying guns — openly or concealed — in certain areas, including schools and university campuses; professional athletic events not related to firearms; hospitals; police stations; courts and polling places.

    And private property owners still can restrict people from bringing weapons into their spaces, concealed or open carry.

    “We continue to respect everyone’s Second Amendment rights, but it’s important to know that the open and concealed carrying of firearms remains restricted in numerous places,” Boca Raton police officer Jose Martinez said.

    Martinez, in a public service message, said the open carrying of firearms also is banned from detention facilities, prisons or jails; government proceedings, religious venues and bars.

    Some private business owners are still trying to process the change in Florida’s gun law.

    Matthew Pigatt, director of small business and membership services at the Miami-Dade Chamber of Commerce, plans on discussing the effects of the new open carry legislation with business people at an upcoming meeting.

    “We haven’t heard anything yet from our members,” he said.

    Renae Barber, the owner of POW Restaurant and Lounge in Miami Gardens, said customer safety and gun safety are important to her.

    “The right to defend your life is real, but so is the responsibility of handling weapons for safety,” she said

    Barber is a licensed gun carrier and believes that gun owners should go through mandatory training before they’re allowed to purchase firearms.

    “I feel like [people] should have training before they carry.”

    A man walking along Miami Beach’s Lincoln Road Mall is reflected in the window of a vacant shop.
    A man walking along Miami Beach’s Lincoln Road Mall is reflected in the window of a vacant shop. Alexia Fodere for Miami Herald

    While malls generally prohibit firearms of any kind inside, businesses along public streets face a different situation.

    Consider the open-air Lincoln Road, the pedestrian plaza in Miami Beach that recently broke ground on a multimillion restoration plan.

    “Lincoln Road is a public street,” said Melissa Berthier, director of communications for Miami Beach. “The city cannot restrict the open carry of firearms, however, individual stores may elect to do so.”

    Here’s a look at some of the places that responded to a Miami Herald inquiry on how they intend to practice the new open carry law.

    Supermarkets

    The Winn-Dixie storefront on Coral Way at 3275 SW 22nd Ave. The 57,124 square foot supermarket has a liquor store component and was built in 1990. The ground once was the site of the Twin Gables and later Triple Gables movie theater from 1970 to the late 1980s.
    The Winn-Dixie storefront on Coral Way at 3275 SW 22nd Ave. The 57,124 square foot supermarket has a liquor store component and was built in 1990. The ground once was the site of the Twin Gables and later Triple Gables movie theater from 1970 to the late 1980s. Howard Cohen hcohen@miamiherald.com

    Grocery stores are considered private businesses, so they have leeway in how they respond to weapons inside their stores.

    • Winn-Dixie: The Jacksonville-based grocery chain is not following Publix’s lead. Winn-Dixie’s parent company Southeastern Grocers released this statement: “Our priority is creating a safe and welcoming shopping experience for all customers and associates. As a private business, our policy remains unchanged: we do not permit open carry of firearms inside our stores. We respectfully ask customers to secure firearms safely before entering, and we appreciate the continued cooperation that helps us maintain an environment where everyone feels comfortable.”
    • Publix: Allowing open carry.
    • Sedano’s: A Sedano’s supermarket staffer said from the Little Havana store that licensed gun owners are able to carry their weapons throughout each of the local chain’s locations.
    • Whole Foods Market: The Amazon-owned chain prohibits concealed and openly carried firearms on its properties.

    The new Riviera Plaza Publix’s front main entrance at 1542 South Dixie Highway nears completion in this photo on Aug. 25, 2025. The store opened on Sept. 25.
    The new Riviera Plaza Publix’s front main entrance at 1542 South Dixie Highway nears completion in this photo on Aug. 25, 2025. The store opened on Sept. 25. Howard Cohen hcohen@miamiherald.com

    Shopping malls

    Aventura Mall in 2025.
    Aventura Mall in 2025. Courtesy Aventura

    Shopping malls are also considered private property.

    • Aventura Mall’s policy prohibits the possession of weapons of any nature on the property. This is a long-established policy the new ruling won’t change. Guests can find the code of conduct posted at mall entrances and available at aventuramall.com.
    • Simon Properties, which operates many of South Florida’s most popular malls including Dadeland, Sawgrass Mills, The Falls, Brickell City Centre and Miami International Mall didn’t respond to several Miami Herald queries about its gun policy. But the company’s online Code of Conduct, last updated in May, lists “no weapons.”

    Theaters

    The ensemble of the North American touring company of the Broadway revival of “The Wiz” performs the Emerald City scene. The cast includes Miami native Amitria Fanae’ and Fort Lauderdale’s Kameren Whigham. The show opens at the Adrienne Arsht Center for the Performing Arts on Tuesday, Oct. 7, 2025.
    The ensemble of the North American touring company of the Broadway revival of “The Wiz” performs the Emerald City scene. The cast includes Miami native Amitria Fanae’ and Fort Lauderdale’s Kameren Whigham. The show opens at the Adrienne Arsht Center for the Performing Arts on Tuesday, Oct. 7, 2025. Jeremy Daniel

    Theaters, including performance arts centers and movie theaters are private businesses, too, but there might be exceptions.

    • Adrienne Arsht Center for the Performing Arts in downtown Miami will allow open carry, spokeswoman Suzette Espinosa Fuentes said. But there is a rule she pointed to in the venue’s statement: “As a government-owned facility, the Adrienne Arsht Center complies with all applicable local, state and federal firearm laws. Visitors must present valid firearm permits at security screening points.”
    • Broward Center for the Performing Arts in Fort Lauderdale doesn’t permit weapons on site. “Other than members of law enforcement, the open or unlicensed carrying of firearms on the premises of the Broward Center is not authorized,” BCPA said in a statement.
    • Regal Cinemas and AMC Theatres: The movie chains don’t permit weapons at their movie properties. Regal posts its rule on its website and adds “props or fake weapons.” AMC doesn’t specify on its website but has signse at its theaters.

    Howard Cohen

    Miami Herald

    Miami Herald consumer trends reporter Howard Cohen, a 2017 Media Excellence Awards winner, has covered pop music, theater, health and fitness, obituaries, municipal government, breaking news and general assignment. He started his career in the Features department at the Miami Herald in 1991. Cohen is an adjunct professor at the University of Miami School of Communication.
    Support my work with a digital subscription

    Howard Cohen,Michael Butler

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  • SA Police Commissioner cleared over 1990s firearm incident

    South Australia’s corruption watchdog has cleared Police Commissioner Grant Stevens of a discipline breach for accidentally discharging his firearm during a house raid in the early 1990s.

    Commissioner Stevens had revealed in July that when he was a senior constable stationed in the northern suburbs in the early 1990s, he accidentally discharged his firearm while attempting a raid on a suspected drug dealer’s property.

    The revelation came after The Sunday Mail published a story about the incident a week earlier, but only referred to a “high-ranking South Australian police officer”.

    In a rare public statement on Tuesday, Independent Commissioner Against Corruption (ICAC) Emma Townsend revealed her agency had launched an investigation in July to examine whether the December 1990 incident constituted a breach of discipline by Commissioner Stevens.

    The investigation “refuted” the “alleged breaches of discipline”, the ICAC said.

    “The allegations made regarding the conduct of the Commissioner of Police have been independently investigated and found to be without substance,” Ms Townsend stated.

    She said the firearm incident in question “was reported on the day it occurred, in accordance with the applicable procedures”.

    “It was thoroughly investigated in accordance with those procedures,” she said.

    “That investigation was appropriately documented. The investigation resulted in then-Senior Constable Stevens receiving additional training.

    “He was not otherwise subject to any disciplinary proceedings. This was an appropriate outcome.”

    The ICAC found the allegations made regarding the conduct of the commissioner were “without substance”. (ABC News: Che Chorley)

    In its June article about the firearm incident, The Sunday Mail reported there had been a second incident “several months” after the first in which the commissioner again accidentally fired his gun.

    But the commissioner strongly rejected that claim, insisting there had “only ever been one occasion that I have accidentally discharged my firearm” — a view that was upheld by the ICAC.

    “The second alleged incident involving the discharge of a firearm did not occur,” the commissioner said.

    Ms Townsend said the ICAC’s investigation obtained and examined “relevant documents and witness statements” and reviewed the police commissioner’s file from 1991.

    She said while such investigations were typically conducted by SA Police’s Internal Investigation Section, the circumstances in this particular case were different.

    “ICAC considered the fact that the matter involved the Commissioner of Police, SA Police’s highest-ranked police officer, and that the allegations had been the subject of media reporting,” Ms Townsend said.

    “In these circumstances, an independent investigation of the matter by ICAC was likely to promote and maintain public confidence in SA Police, and was consistent with the purposes of the PCD Act.”

    While SA Police said Commissioner Stevens would not be commenting on the matter, the commissioner previously said he did not find the revelations “damaging” and that he had never “shied away from” discussing the incident with other officers.

    “I’ve actually relayed the story on occasions over the last 34 years for different reasons to let other police officers understand how fragile circumstances can be,” he said.

    “It serves as a lesson to the community that policing has inherent risks in it, mistakes do happen.”

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  • Your First Call After You Shoot Someone

    Although self-defense-insurance companies market primarily to gun enthusiasts, they are agnostic about a client’s means of self-protection. “Anytime you ever have to defend yourself with any legal weapon—dog, gun, baseball bat, car, doesn’t make any difference,” a U.S. Law Shield representative said at a recent presentation to potential customers. “We represented a lady one time, somebody broke into her house while she was cooking. She threw hot grease on him and hit him with a frying pan. That’s a legal weapon.” One client told me that he had added his young daughter to his plan, “in case my kid beats up your kid on the playground and you get sue-happy.”

    Detractors have called the product “murder insurance.” But industry representatives argue that their customers are exercising their legal rights. The companies reserve the right to deny coverage if they determine that a shooting was not in self-defense, or if the shooter was engaged in criminal activity at the time of the incident. “We’re not signing up people who say, ‘Oh, goody, now I get to go use my gun,’ ” Ken Cuccinelli, the former attorney general of Virginia, said in 2014, when he launched the company Virginia Self Defense Law, whose legal-retainer program cost as little as $8.33 a month. “This community is more law-abiding than the average citizen. These are better Americans than the average American. That’s my clientele.”

    U.S. Law Shield’s founding was inspired by a high-profile shooting. On the afternoon of November 14, 2007, a retiree named Joe Horn called 911 to report that two men were robbing his neighbor’s home in Pasadena, Texas. “I’ve got a shotgun—you want me to stop him?” Horn asked the dispatcher.

    “Nope, don’t do that,” the dispatcher replied. “Ain’t no property worth shooting somebody over, O.K.?”

    In the several minutes that followed, Horn grew increasingly agitated as the dispatcher repeatedly cautioned him against intervening. “O.K., but I have a right to protect myself, too, sir. . . . The laws have been changed in this country since September the first, and you know it and I know it,” Horn said. “Here it goes, buddy. You hear the shotgun clicking and I’m going.” Then he stepped outside and killed both men. Self-defense law in the U.S. is largely based on the English common-law principle of castle doctrine: essentially, your home is your castle, and you may use deadly force against an intruder. But, as the Republican legislator who wrote Texas’s then recently passed Stand Your Ground law—the one that Horn invoked during his 911 call—pointed out at the time, “This wasn’t his castle.”

    The case caught the attention of Darren Rice, an attorney in Houston. “Darren is a lawyer by trade, but he’s also a gun guy,” Evans said, and in Horn’s case Rice saw a sign of things to come. Stand Your Ground laws, which are now in place throughout much of the country, were expanding the scope of lethal self-defense outside the home. In Texas, a person who “reasonably” fears imminent death or injury could now use deadly force to defend themselves or others, which created all sorts of legal complexities. What type of fear counted as “reasonable”? How imminent did a threat need to be? “There were a lot of gun-law myths that people had in their head that were just completely wrong, but that just spread among the culture, on the internet and at gun shows,” Evans said. Gun owners needed two things, Rice concluded: better legal guidance about when they were justified in using deadly force, and better legal defense when they did so.

    (Horn became a right-wing hero after it was revealed that the men he’d killed were undocumented immigrants. Seven months after the shooting, after listening to two weeks of testimony, a grand jury declined to indict him.)

    The idea that gun owners might need to use a weapon to protect themselves or their loved ones is a cornerstone of contemporary gun culture, and central to the sales pitches of self-defense-insurance companies. Such situations are uncommon, although they are less rare than they used to be: the number of justifiable homicides in the U.S. has increased by more than twenty per cent since 2007, the year Texas passed its Stand Your Ground law, to around eight hundred per year; since 2019, the majority of them have been committed not by law-enforcement officers but by armed civilians. (Just because a shooting was ruled justifiable does not mean, of course, that it was necessary.)

    Many more incidents are categorized as defensive gun uses—in which a firearm is deployed, or brandished, in order to deter a crime. According to the Department of Justice, there are around seventy thousand defensive gun uses per year; gun-rights groups often cite figures ten times as high. (It is notoriously difficult to get accurate statistics around firearm use, both because the research is heavily partisan and because Republican legislators have prohibited certain forms of gun-violence research.)

    But even defensive gun uses that are ultimately ruled to be justifiable often result in legal consequences—investigations, charges, grand-jury proceedings, and sometimes trials. “A lot of people are shocked, because they’re feeling, like, Hey, I just saved my life,” Larry Bloomquist, a San Antonio-based lawyer who works with U.S. Law Shield, said. Evans told me that the company receives some three hundred “true emergency” calls per month, and regularly dispatches lawyers to crime scenes and police departments in the middle of the night. The clients of self-defense-insurance companies whom I spoke to seemed to value their attorneys for their emotional support as much as their legal expertise. “Have you ever been in a self-defense situation? It’s, like, ten-out-of-ten crazy. I’m in freakout mode,” Matt McAdams, who shot and killed a man who attempted to rob the liquor store where he was working, said. “Larry came and he held my hand the whole way.”

    Rachel Monroe

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  • Two arrested after bomb found under news vehicle in Salt Lake City

    Authorities in Utah say two men have been arrested on suspicion of placing an incendiary device under a news media vehicle in Salt Lake City. The bomb didn’t go off.Police and fire department bomb squads responded Friday when a suspicious device was found under the vehicle parked near an occupied building.Investigators determined the bomb “had been lit but failed to function as designed,” according to court records cited by KUTV.The FBI identified two suspects and served a search warrant at a home in the Magna neighborhood west of the city’s downtown. Two men, ages 58 and 31, were arrested and could face charges related to weapons possession and threats of terrorism, KTVX reported Sunday.Neighboring homes were evacuated during the search, which turned up explosives and “explosive-related components,” firearms, illegal narcotics and other paraphernalia, court records say. Authorities say they also found at least two devices that turned out to be hoax weapons of mass destruction.There was no information about a possible motive and the relationship between the two suspects wasn’t immediately known.News media have descended on Salt Lake City following last week’s assassination of Turning Point USA co-founder Charlie Kirk.

    Authorities in Utah say two men have been arrested on suspicion of placing an incendiary device under a news media vehicle in Salt Lake City. The bomb didn’t go off.

    Police and fire department bomb squads responded Friday when a suspicious device was found under the vehicle parked near an occupied building.

    Investigators determined the bomb “had been lit but failed to function as designed,” according to court records cited by KUTV.

    The FBI identified two suspects and served a search warrant at a home in the Magna neighborhood west of the city’s downtown. Two men, ages 58 and 31, were arrested and could face charges related to weapons possession and threats of terrorism, KTVX reported Sunday.

    Neighboring homes were evacuated during the search, which turned up explosives and “explosive-related components,” firearms, illegal narcotics and other paraphernalia, court records say. Authorities say they also found at least two devices that turned out to be hoax weapons of mass destruction.

    There was no information about a possible motive and the relationship between the two suspects wasn’t immediately known.

    News media have descended on Salt Lake City following last week’s assassination of Turning Point USA co-founder Charlie Kirk.

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  • Jury Selection Begins in Trump Assassination Attempt Trial

    On Monday morning, the jury selection process began in the case of Ryan Routh, the man who allegedly attempted to shoot Donald Trump on his Palm Beach golf course

    On Monday morning, at the federal courthouse in Fort Pierce, Florida, the jury selection began in the case of the man who allegedly attempted to kill Donald Trump on his golf course last year. Jury selection is expected to take three days, followed by a month-long trial. Attorneys will question three sets of 60 people to settle on twelve jurors and four alternates.

    Ryan Routh, a 59-year-old construction worker from North Carolina and Hawaii, pleaded not guilty to five criminal charges that carry a life sentence, including attempted assassination of a major presidential candidate, using a firearm in furtherance of a crime, assaulting a federal officer, possessing a firearm as a felon and using a gun with a defaced serial number.

    Despite the fact that he lacks legal training, Routh has chosen to defend himself in court. According to court filings, since he has begun defending himself, Routh has requested a “beatdown session” with Trump, asked to compete for his freedom in a round of golf with the president and suggested being part of a prisoner swap rather than going to trial.

    “I will be representing myself moving forward; It was ridiculous from the outset to consider a random stranger that knows nothing of who I am to speak for me,” Routh wrote in a letter to  U.S. District Judge Aileen Cannon in July. “I am so sorry, I know this makes your life harder.”

    Judge Cannon-  a Trump appointee who oversaw and dismissed one of Trump’s criminal cases- is letting Routh defend himself, but has outlined strict rules. If he demonstrates “vexatious, obstructionist, or obstreperous behavior,” Cannon threatened to sanction Routh or revoke his ability to maintain his pro se status. He was also barred from asking most of his proposed jury questions due to them being “politically charged” and not relevant. Routh will dress in formal attire during the trial and be allowed to use a podium, but he will not be able to roam the courtroom freely. 

    Prosecutors must prove that Routh not only planned to kill Trump, but that he also took at least one “substantial step” to carry out his plan.

    Prosecutors allege that during the early hours of September 15th, 2024, Routh hid in the bushes of Trump’s Palm Beach golf course with a rifle, which was spotted by a Secret Service agent. He allegedly fled after the agent fired at him, and was later arrested after being stopped on a nearby interstate. Prosecutors claim that Routh planned this attack for months, acquiring the military-grade rifle, over a dozen burner phones and researching Trump’s movements and campaign events.  

    Prosecutors also claim that, a month before his alleged assassination attempt, Routh attempted to purchase anti-aircraft weapons, communicating with someone who he thought was a Ukrainian, with access to military weapons.

    According to court filings, months before the assassination attempt, Routh gave a friend a box with a handwritten letter detailing his plans. Routh claimed prosecutors are misrepresenting this letter by only using part of it, and that the note in its entirety is actually about “gentleness, peacefulness, and non-violent caring for humanity.”

    “This was an assassination attempt on Donald Trump, but I failed you. I tried my best and gave it all the gumption I could muster. It is up to you now to finish the job; and I will offer $150,000 to whomever can complete the job,” the note read. “He [Donald Trump] ended relations with Iran like a child and now the Middle East has unraveled.”

    It was alleged that Routh communicated similar thoughts in his 2023 book, where he prompted readers to “assassinate Trump” in part due to his foreign policy with Iran. Prosecutors also accuse Routh of bragging about his alleged crimes in emails from jail.

    Prosecutors have shared over 40 potential witnesses and hundreds of exhibits, including forensic evidence allegedly tying Routh to the weapon found at the crime scene. Routh’s witness list encompassed two dozen people, including a group of Palestinian activists and professors, his son, a former girlfriend and Trump himself. Routh claimed two of his proposed witnesses will likely be unavailable to testify, one fearing deportation.

    Elizabeth Ahern

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  • Federal judge rejects challenge to handgun restrictions

    BOSTON — A federal judge has upheld the state’s ban on the sale of certain types of handguns following a legal challenge by gun rights groups that vow to repeal the ruling.

    In a decision issued Friday, U.S. District Court Judge Denise Casper rejected claims in a lawsuit filed by the owners of Gunrunners LLC and the Delaware-based Firearms Policy Coalition alleging that the restrictions violate the Second Amendment and are “inconsistent” with the nation’s history of firearm regulation.


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    By Christian M. Wade | Statehouse Reporter

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  • Arrest log

    The following arrests were made recently by local police departments. All defendants are presumed innocent until proven guilty. Massachusetts’ privacy law prevents police from releasing information involving domestic and sexual violence arrests with the goal to protect the alleged victims.

    LOWELL

    • Carlos Morales, 44, homeless; warrants (failure to appear for conspiracy to violate drug laws, trespassing, and possession of Class A drug).

    • Angela Lourm, 56, 28 Varney St., Lowell; operating motor vehicle without license, operation under influence of alcohol.

    • Craig Blanchard, 40, 51 View St., Dracut; assault and battery on police officer.

    • Ibrahim Kabba, 55, homeless; warrant (failure to appear for indecent exposure).

    • Jeffrey Mitchell, 18, homeless; warrants (failure to appear for negligent operation of motor vehicle, and unlicensed operation of motor vehicle), disorderly conduct.

    • Zachary Burgoyne, 27, 259 Sawmill Drive, Dracut; open and gross lewdness.

    • Jorge Santos, 46, 57 Marshall Ave., No. 3, Lowell; warrant (failure to appear for possession of Class B drug).

    • Michael Picardi, 38, homeless; warrant (destruction of property).

    • Josman Calo, 27, 83 Park Ave. W., Apt. 6, Lowell; unlawful carrying dangerous weapon/firearm, discharging gun within 500 feet of dwelling, unlawful possession of ammunition.

    • Nelson Gelardi, 44, 193 Middlesex St., Lowell; warrants (failure to appear for resisting arrest, disorderly conduct, larceny, and breaking and entering vehicle at night), possession of Class A drug.

    • Gordon Schofield, 43, homeless; warrant (failure to appear for larceny).

    • Michael Dalton, 35, 606 School St., Apt. 3, Lowell; operating motor vehicle after license suspension.

    • Christine Silva, 38, 273 Summer St., Lowell; trespassing.

    • Eddie Alvarez, 46, 193 Middlesex St., Lowell; trespassing.

    • Nysaiah Gonzalez, 19, 200 Massmills Drive, No. 219, Lowell; carrying firearm while loaded, carrying firearm without license, unlawful possession of large capacity feeding device.

    • Shawn McCarthy, 41, Lowell; warrants (failure to appear for assault and battery on person 60 or older/disabled, probation violation for threatening to commit crime).

    • Divene Sanabria, 31, 19 Varnum St., Lowell; warrant (fugitive from justice).

    • Siddhartha Sewell, 52, homeless; assault and battery with dangerous weapon (pepper spray).

    • Justin Walsh, 47, no fixed address; warrants.

    • Dennis Robinson, 41, homeless; warrant (possession of Class B drug).

    NASHUA, N.H.

    • Weston Strong, 36, 56 Gilman St., Nashua; simple assault.

    • Kenneth Gurski, 69, no fixed address; criminal trespass.

    • Kalif Ajene Brooks, 29, no fixed address; criminal trespass.

    • David Perez, 37, 2 Quincy St., Nashua; criminal trespass.

    • Eduardo Molina, 35, 48 Hampshire Drive, Apt. B, Nashua; suspension of vehicle registration.

    • Samantha Norton, 38, 53 Colonial Village, Somersworth, N.H.; willful concealment.

    • Alexander Bartholf, 38, no fixed address; simple assault.

    • Kevin Quilligana, 20, 18 E. Pearl St., Apt. 5, Nashua; operation of motor vehicle without valid license.

    • Miguel Cruz-Alvarado, 24, 66 Ash St., Nashua; disobeying officer.

    • Joseph Raso, 42, no fixed address; resisting arrest/detention.

    Staff Report

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  • Lowell Police investigate gunshots in Highlands

    LOWELL — Police are investigating gunfire early Wednesday morning in the area of Chelmsford Street near Forest Street.

    Officers responded to the scene shortly after 12:40 a.m. and found evidence confirming shots had been fired, according to Lowell Police Deputy Superintendent Mark LeBlanc. No injuries or property damage were reported in connection with the shooting.

    According to an emergency radio broadcast, the caller who reported the gunfire claimed the gunshots were directed at them by possibly two gunmen known to them. Police have not verified that account.

    Preliminary findings suggest the incident was isolated, though detectives from the Lowell Police Department’s Criminal Investigations Bureau are actively working the case.

    Follow Aaron Curtis on X @aselahcurtis, or on Bluesky @aaronscurtis.bsky.social.

    Aaron Curtis

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  • ATF busts DC student with 6 guns, says it interrupted ‘possible school shooting’ – WTOP News

    The Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives for D.C. said it seized six firearms from a student after its agents saw a post that made a potential threat to a local school.

    Special Agents from
    ATF Washington
    and Metro Transit Police Department quickly intervened and interrupted what could’ve possibly led to a school shooting incident in(Courtesy ATF Washington)

    The Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives for D.C. said Thursday it seized six firearms from a student after its agents saw an “alarming social media post” that made a potential threat to a local school.

    The ATF confirmed with WTOP it collaborated with the Metro Transit Police Department to execute a search warrant Wednesday at the residence where the student lived. The teen was placed under arrest and officials seized six weapons and over 50 bullets.

    In a post on X, Metro General Manager Randy Clarke said the officers’ “quick work prevented a very serious threat to our community.”

    Attorney General Pam Bondi said, “This is the kind of incredible police work that saves lives.”

    No information about the juvenile or the school where the threat was made has been released.

    An investigation is ongoing in this case.

    Get breaking news and daily headlines delivered to your email inbox by signing up here.

    © 2025 WTOP. All Rights Reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.

    Ciara Wells

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  • Panel urges state to offer tax breaks for ‘personalized’ firearms

    BOSTON — A state panel is recommending that lawmakers carve out a sales tax break for “personalized” firearms as part of broader efforts to reduce gun deaths.

    In a report, the Special Legislative Commission on Emerging Firearm Technology calls for passage of legislation that would authorize a sales tax break for purchases of firearms equipped with the new technology and set penalties for firearms sellers and gun owners who violate the proposed regulations.


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    By Christian M. Wade | Statehouse Reporter

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  • Healey moves to implement gun control law

    Healey moves to implement gun control law

    BOSTON — Gov. Maura Healey is moving to implement a tough new gun control law in response to a lawsuit challenging its provisions and a effort to repeal the restrictions.

    On Wednesday, Healey signed an executive order attaching an emergency preamble to the bill she signed in July that expanded the state’s bans on “assault” weapons and high-capacity magazines, outlawed so-called “ghost” guns and set new restrictions on open carry of firearms, among other provisions.

    Gun control groups praised the rare maneuver, which they said is aimed at blocking an effort by critics of the new law to block its implementation as they gather signatures to put the issue before voters in two years.

    “After years of advocating for these gun safety measures to become law, we weren’t going to stand by and let the gun lobby get in the way of our progress,” Anne Thalheimer, a survivor fellow with the Everytown Survivor Network, said in a statement. “We’re grateful to Governor Healey for standing with us and taking decisive action to ensure that this lifesaving law is implemented.”

    But the Massachusetts Gun Owners’ Action League, which has filed a federal lawsuit seeking to overturn the law’s training and licensing requirements, said Healey’s “radical move” signing the executive order makes hundreds of thousands of lawful gun owners across the state into “felons in waiting.”

    He accused the governor and Democratic lawmakers of waging a “consistent effort to silence our voices and mislead the general public.”

    “Ever since this tantrum against the Supreme Court decision Bruen started last year, the so-called ‘process’ has become even more putrid,” said Jim Wallace, GOAL’s executive director, in a statement. “At every turn, the Legislature and now the governor, have avoided honest public input, especially from the 2A [Second Amendment] community.”

    Wallace said despite the order the group is still urging the federal judge to issue a temporary injunction to block the law from going into effect as the ballot initiative and legal challenge plays out in court.

    Besides the legal fight, critics of the new law or gathering signatures to put the question before voters in the 2026 election. They argue that the restrictions will hurt businesses, cost jobs and deprive legal gun owners of their constitutional rights.

    The new law, which passed despite objections from the Legislature’s Republican minority, added dozens of long rifles to a list of prohibited guns under the state’s assault weapons ban, and outlawed the open carry of firearms in government buildings, polling places and schools, with exemptions for law enforcement officials.

    It also set strict penalties for possession of modification devices such as so-called “Glock switches” that convert semiautomatic firearms into fully automatic, military-style weapons. The state’s red flag law, which allows a judge to suspend the gun license of someone deemed at risk to themselves or others, was also expanded under the legislation.

    Massachusetts already has some of the toughest gun control laws in the country, including real-time license checks for private gun sales and stiff penalties for gun-based crimes.

    Gun control advocates argue the strict requirements have given the largely urban state one of the lowest gun-death rates in the nation, while not infringing on the right to bear arms.

    Despite those trends, Democrats who pushed the gun control bill through the Legislature argued that gun violence is still impacting communities across the state whether by suicide, domestic violence or drive-by shootings.

    Second Amendment groups have long argued that the tougher gun control laws are unnecessary, and punish law-abiding gun owners while sidestepping the issue of illegal firearms.

    Christian M. Wade covers the Massachusetts Statehouse for North of Boston Media Group’s newspapers and websites. Email him at cwade@cnhinews.com.

    By Christian M. Wade | Statehouse Reporter

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  • Gun control foes push to repeal restrictions

    Gun control foes push to repeal restrictions

    BOSTON — Opponents of Massachusetts’ new gun control law are gearing up to repeal the tough restrictions, which they say will hurt businesses, cost jobs and deprive people of their constitutional rights.

    A law signed by Democratic Gov. Maura Healey in July expanded the state’s bans on “assault” weapons and high-capacity magazines, outlawed so-called “ghost” guns and set new restrictions on the open carry of firearms, among other provisions.

    The move was in response to concerns about mass shootings and gun violence.

    But critics of the new restrictions say they are unconstitutional and argue the changes will do little to reduce gun violence. They’ve started gathering signatures on petitions to put a repeal of the law before voters in the 2026 elections.

    The chief organizer of the repeal effort, Cape Cod Gun Works owner Toby Leary, said on Thursday that the petition-gathering effort is well underway and he is seeing strong support for putting the question on the ballot.

    “A lot of businesses and jobs are at stake,” Leary said during a livestreamed briefing sponsored by the state’s Republican Party. “The effects of this law on businesses will be catastrophic. Jobs will be lost. Businesses and livelihoods will be lost.”

    Leary said among the many concerns gun shop owners have about the new restrictions is that the expansion of banned firearms will reduce the kinds of rifles and other weapons that can be sold in the state, which will hurt bottom lines. He estimates about 50% of his business will be “put on hold” if the law isn’t repealed.

    “But this is also about freedom,” Leary said. “This law is so unconstitutional on every level. A lot of ordinary people are going to run afoul of this law.”

    Massachusetts already has some of the toughest gun control laws in the country, including real-time license checks for private gun sales and stiff penalties for gun-based crimes.

    Gun control advocates argue the strict requirements have given the largely urban state one of the lowest gun-death rates in the nation, while not infringing on the right to bear arms.

    Despite those trends, Democrats who pushed the gun control bill thorough the Legislature argued that gun violence is still impacting communities across the state whether by suicide, domestic violence or drive-by shootings.

    Second Amendment groups have long argued that the tougher gun control laws are unnecessary, and punish law-abiding gun owners while sidestepping the issue of illegal firearms.

    The new law, which passed despite objections from the Legislature’s Republican minority, added dozens of long rifles to a list of prohibited guns under the assault weapons ban, and outlawed the open carry of firearms in government buildings, polling places and schools, with exemptions for law enforcement officials.

    It sets strict penalties for possession of modification devices such as Glock switches that convert semi-automatic firearms into fully automatic, military-style weapons. The state’s red flag law, which allows a judge to suspend the gun license of someone deemed at risk to themselves or others, was also expanded under the law.

    The repeal effort is one of several seeking to block the law. The Massachusetts Gun Owners’ Action League, which is affiliated with the National Rifle Association, plans to file a federal lawsuit seeking to overturn the new law’s training and licensing requirements. Other legal challenges are expected.

    Christian M. Wade covers the Massachusetts Statehouse for North of Boston Media Group’s newspapers and websites. Email him at cwade@cnhinews.com.

    By Christian M. Wade | Statehouse Reporter

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  • Staccato Announces New Team Members

    Staccato Announces New Team Members

    Creators of the Staccato 2011® Pistol Announce Jessie Harrison and KC Eusebio, Two of the World’s Top Shooters, Have Joined the Staccato Team

    Staccato, the creators of the Staccato 2011® pistol, Staccato Ammo and Staccato Ranch, today announced that Jessie Harrison and KC Eusebio, two of the world’s top shooters, have joined the Staccato team. Harrison joins the brand as Training Director and Brand Specialist, and Eusebio joins as Director of Special Projects and Business Development. 

    Harrison and Eusebio bring decades of experience and relationships in the firearms and outdoor sports industries to Staccato. They will be focused on designing and delivering firearms instruction, partnerships and experiences that reflect the fun, family and freedom that the Staccato brand offers through its ecosystem of Staccato 2011 pistols, Staccato Ammo and Staccato Ranch.

    “Staccato’s mission is to proudly serve those who protect and embody American freedoms,” said Marine Corps veteran and Staccato co-CEO Buck Pierson. “Jessie and KC strongly align with this mission and will play a key role in providing our law enforcement professionals and civilians who carry Staccato with the best firearms instruction and unique experiences at Staccato Ranch.”

    Jessie Harrison and KC Eusebio are recognized as two of the most accomplished competition shooters in the world. 

    Harrison is the first female USPSA Grand Master. She has won over 100 world and national championship titles, including the prestigious Bianchi Cup, the Steel Challenge World Speed Shooting Championships and numerous USPSA National Championships.

    Eusebio is an Army veteran, 11-time World Speed Shooting Champion and 24-year USPSA Grand Master. He was the youngest USPSA Grand Master at the age of 12. He has also trained many of the most elite law enforcement and military groups in the U.S.

    “Staccato is designing a whole ecosystem of shooting products and experiences for our customers,” said Staccato co-CEO Justin Honea. “Jessie and KC’s passion and deep knowledge training with Staccato 2011 handguns will contribute to our goal of providing everything customers need to build their confidence and shoot their best alongside other members of the Staccato family.”

    “We are proud to announce that we are joining the Staccato family,” said KC Eusebio. “Jessie and I have nearly 40 years combined experience with the Staccato 2011 platform. To be here shooting and working with the company that invented the 2011 is a dream come true.”

    “We couldn’t be more proud to join the Staccato family, shooting the best pistols in the world, made in America at Staccato Ranch in Florence, Texas,” said Jessie Harrison. “Staccato’s pursuit of excellence and deep focus on innovating for their customers align with our values and how we have approached our careers.”

    To learn more about Staccato, please visit staccato2011.com and to explore experiences at Staccato Ranch, please visit staccatoranch.com

    Source: Staccato

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  • Gun rights group chips in $100K for court challenge

    Gun rights group chips in $100K for court challenge

    BOSTON — A national gun rights group pledges to help fund a legal challenge to overturn the state’s tough new gun control law that critics say will do little to prevent gun violence while depriving people of their constitutional rights.

    The Firearm Industry Trade Association said it has donated $100,000 to the Massachusetts Gun Owners’ Action League to support the group’s legal challenge against new restrictions on firearms licensing signed into law by Gov. Maura Healey.

    “Massachusetts is known as a birthplace of the American Revolution, but these lawmakers have turned their backs to rights that belong to the people and instead are instituting an Orwellian state over the citizens of the Commonwealth,” Lawrence G. Keane, the association’s senior vice president and general counsel, said in a statement.

    “The fight to protect liberty and individual rights begins anew and we are confident that when federal courts apply scrutiny to this law, it will be relegated to the trash bin where it belongs,” Keane said.

    The new law, signed by Healey last month, adds dozens of long rifles to a list prohibited under the state’s “assault” weapons ban and outlaws the open carry of firearms in government buildings, polling places and schools, with exemptions for law enforcement officials.

    It sets strict penalties for possession of modification devices such as Glock switches that convert semiautomatic firearms into fully automatic, military-style weapons. The measure also expands the state’s red flag law, which allows a judge to suspend the gun license of someone deemed at risk to themselves or others.

    Massachusetts already has some of the toughest gun control laws in the country, including real-time license checks for private gun sales and stiff penalties for gun-based crimes.

    But Second Amendment groups argue tougher gun control laws are unnecessary and punish law-abiding gun owners while sidestepping the issue of illegal firearms.

    GOAL, which is affiliated with the National Rifle Association, has dubbed the restrictions the “The Devil’s Snare” and say it represents the greatest attack on civil rights in modern U.S. history. The group has filed a federal lawsuit seeking to overturn the new law’s training and licensing requirements. Other legal challenges are expected.

    Members of the group have also filed a petition with the Secretary of State’s Office to begin gathering signatures on a petition to put a repeal of the law before voters next year. The group wants to suspend the law ahead of a 2026 statewide referendum.

    Christian M. Wade covers the Massachusetts Statehouse for North of Boston Media Group’s newspapers and websites. Email him at cwade@cnhinews.com.

    By Christian M. Wade | Statehouse Reporter

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