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Tag: middlesex superior court

  • 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.

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  • After 8-year legal battle, Dracut doctor pleads guilty in landmark opioid case

    WOBURN — A case that stretched more than eight years reached its conclusion this week, as retired Dracut physician, Dr. Richard Miron, pleaded guilty to involuntary manslaughter and other charges tied to the illegal prescribing of opioids that led to a Lowell patient’s death.

    Attorney General Andrea Campbell’s office said Miron, 83, became the first doctor in Massachusetts to be convicted on involuntary manslaughter for prescribing opioids — a conviction that stemmed from the 2016 death of 50-year-old Michelle Craib. He also pleaded guilty to defrauding MassHealth and illegally prescribing medication to patients for no legitimate medical purpose.

    Miron was ultimately sentenced in Middlesex Superior Court in Woburn on Monday to what amounts to five years of probation, allowing him to avoid prison time.

    Miron’s attorney, Stephen Weymouth, said on Wednesday that he was prepared and confident to go to trial in a case that has faced a series of delays over the years, but after a conversation with his client earlier this month, the main concern became the possibility of serving time behind bars.

    “From the very beginning he said, ‘I didn’t do anything wrong, and I want to go to trial,’” Weymouth said about Miron. “But then he said he did not want to go to jail.”

    Weymouth pointed out that Miron was facing 47 charges, and any one of them could have resulted in a jail sentence. He said that prosecutors had previously sought four to five years in a plea deal, and the involuntary manslaughter charge carried a maximum of 20 years.

    “Going to trial would have been a mistake because all it would have taken was one guilty hook and he would have gotten a pretty lengthy sentence, and I just couldn’t do that. I just couldn’t take any chances,” Weymouth said. “If he had gone to trial and lost, who knows what would have happened.”

    Miron was indicted by a Middlesex County grand jury in December 2018 following an investigation that began in September 2017 by the AG’s Office, then headed by now-Gov. Maura Healey. Aside from involuntary manslaughter, he was charged with 23 counts of illegally prescribing controlled substances and 23 counts of filing false Medicaid claims.

    From September 2015 to February 2016, the AG’s Office said Miron, a solo practitioner of internal medicine, was the largest provider of high-dose, short-acting oxycodone prescriptions among all MassHealth care providers statewide.

    The Chief Medical Examiner’s Office determined Craib’s death was caused by acute intoxication from the combined effects of fentanyl, morphine, codeine, and butalbital — all prescribed by Miron. The AG’s Office said Miron was aware that Craib had previously overdosed on opioids he had prescribed, yet he continued to issue large doses to her on multiple occasions leading up to her death.

    Prosecutors also said Miron illegally prescribed opioids to several other at-risk patients for no legitimate medical purpose. The illegal prescriptions Miron issued led pharmacies to unknowingly submit false bills to MassHealth for medication.

    MassHealth terminated Miron from its program in September 2017, and he stopped practicing medicine in November 2018, following an agreement with the Massachusetts Board of Registration in Medicine.

    In 2023, Miron’s daughter, Linda Miron, penned a 17-page letter to the AG’s Office urging that the case be dropped. She argued that prosecuting her father — who had already relinquished his medical license and lived under pretrial probation since 2018 — was not in the interest of justice.

    “To bring this flawed case to trial does not seem to me to be the best use of the Commonwealth’s resources, and I urge you to drop your prosecution of this case in the interest of justice,” Linda Miron said in the letter. “More broadly, I fear that prosecuting someone who was willing to take on disenfranchised, medically and psychologically complicated patients here in the Commonwealth, when some other physicians refused to take on MassHealth patients, will further discourage other physicians from treating these patients who deserve compassionate care.”

    The case marched on until Monday, when Miron appeared in Middlesex Superior Court before Judge Cathleen Campbell, where it was finally resolved.

    According to the AG’s Office, Miron was sentenced to two and a half years in a house of correction on illegal prescribing, suspended for five years — meaning he will serve the term as probation rather than prison time, unless he violates probation, in which case the sentence could be imposed. He was sentenced to five years of probation on the involuntary manslaughter charge. For Medicaid fraud, Miron was sentenced to six months in a house of correction, suspended for five years.

    As part of his probation, Miron was ordered to pay full restitution to MassHealth and barred from practicing medicine or seeking reinstatement of his license.

    According to Weymouth, Miron was glad to put the case behind him and most of all to avoid prison time. He noted that Miron had already given up his medical career and had no intention of practicing again.

    “I’m glad it’s over,” Weymouth added. “I know he’s glad it’s over.”

    In a press release announcing the case’s conclusion on Tuesday, the AG’s Office said the case reflects their “commitment to addressing the root causes of the opioid crisis and holding companies and individuals accountable for their role in contributing to the nationwide epidemic.”

    Earlier this year, the release states, Campbell helped negotiate a $7.4 billion settlement in principle with Purdue Pharma and the Sackler family, which is expected to bring up to $105 million to Massachusetts. To date, the office said they have secured more than $1 billion in opioid-related recoveries, with more than $390 million already received. Those funds are being directed to the state’s Opioid Recovery and Remediation Fund and distributed to cities and towns to support prevention, harm reduction, treatment and recovery efforts.

    The AG’s Office added in the release that valuable assistance with the investigation into Miron’s case was provided by the Lowell Police Department, the State Police, the Drug Enforcement Administration, and MassHealth.

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

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  • Still no verdict in trial for alleged murderer Timmy Chan

    Still no verdict in trial for alleged murderer Timmy Chan

    LOWELL — Approximately 11 hours of jury deliberations and still no verdict in the trial for alleged murderer Timmy Chan.

    On Tuesday, for the second day in a row, Judge Robert Ullman sent the Middlesex Superior Court jury home with Chan’s fate still hanging in the balance.

    The jury, composed of nine women and three men, began deliberating in the late morning on Monday, after the closing of witness testimony in the trial, which began May 6.

    Tuesday marked the first full day of deliberations, lasting approximately six and a half hours. The jury did not submit a single question throughout the day. The only question the group has asked thus far came on Monday, and it involved a technical issue they experienced while attempting to watch surveillance footage entered as evidence.

    The issue was resolved.

    Jurors are scheduled to dive back into the case at 9 a.m. Wednesday.

    Chan is charged with several crimes, the most serious first-degree murder, for the shooting death of 20-year-old Nathaniel Fabian on the night of Oct. 13, 2021. The murder charge carries a mandatory life sentence without the possibility of parole.

    If they decide against first-degree murder, the jury has the option of instead finding Chan guilty of the lesser charges of either second-degree murder, or voluntary manslaughter.

    Fabian’s death was the result of online bullying initiated by Samantha Chum. Middlesex Assistant District Attorney Christopher Tarrant said during his opening remarks that Chum was Fabian’s ex-girlfriend who “did not take the breakup well.”

    The target of Chum’s bullying was Thailynn Voraphonh, who was in an on-again, off-again relationship with Fabian. Voraphonh reached out to Fabian in the hopes he could put an end to the harassment. Fabian tried by contacting Chum, ultimately setting off the firestorm that ended in his death.

    After Fabian contacted her, Chum reached out to her friends, Isabella Lach (Chan’s girlfriend), Jessie Sadia Segal-Wright, Chan, and Brian Lach (Isabella Lach’s brother, and Segal-Wright’s boyfriend), recruiting them to confront Fabian.

    During the trial, Brian Lach and Segal-Wright, who were granted immunity for their testimony, implicated Chan as the gunman. Both were with Chan before and after the shooting, while Brian Lach testified he was with Chan at the time of the shooting. Segal-Wright, meanwhile, testified to using her car to drive them both from the murder scene. Isabella Lach was in the car at the time.

    Chan is the only one who was charged for the crime.

    As the jury began deliberating on Monday, Fabian’s mother, Stacey Braley, who along with many other loved ones has been in the courtroom gallery throughout the trial, expressed disappointment that more people were not charged for her son’s death.

    At the same time, she pointed out she understood the prosecution’s decision to grant immunity to Brian Lach and Segal-Wright if it helped them capture the person who actually pulled the trigger.

    Braley pointed out that all those involved in the shooting, except Chum, did not even know her son.

    “The thing I keep on thinking of is if all these kids that were involved actually knew my son, they would have loved him,” Braley said. “Everybody he met, they always fell in love with him. … He was genuinely a very good person, and if they had an opportunity, they really would have liked him.”

    Chan’s attorney, Jeffrey Sweeney, has contested during the trial that Brian Lach was the gunman. During his closing statements, he insisted to jurors that Brian Lach and Segal-Wright lied on the stand as a means to protect themselves.

    Right before the jury was dismissed for the day on Tuesday, Sweeney said the trial “went as well as it could have gone.”

    “The evidence came in really well,” he said. “Everything came in as I expected it to.”

    In addition to murder, Chan is charged with unlawful possession of a firearm, unlawful possession of a loaded firearm, unlawful possession of ammunition, and discharging a firearm within 500 feet of a building.

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  • Trial date set for Timmy Chan murder case

    Trial date set for Timmy Chan murder case

    LOWELL — As officers escorted alleged murderer Timmy Chan into the courtroom on Thursday morning, the mother of his alleged victim, 20-year-old Nathaniel Fabian, broke down into tears as she sat in the courtroom gallery.

    The still-grieving mother, Stacey Braley, said afterward that she had hoped Chan would face her as he walked into the courtroom.

    “I wanted him to see my face and I wanted to see his,” said Braley, who keeps a trinket containing Fabian’s ashes around her neck. “I wanted to know if he felt any sorrow or guilt for what he did.”

    Chan, 21, of Lowell, charged with crimes including first-degree murder for allegedly gunning down Fabian in October 2021, was in Middlesex Superior Court on Thursday for his final pretrial conference. His trial is slated to begin with jury impanelment on April 29.

    If convicted, Chan faces a sentence of life in prison without the possibility of parole.

    During the conference held before Judge Robert Ullman, Middlesex Assistant District Attorney Ashlee Mastrangelo provided background of the evidence set to be presented during the trial. Mastrangelo and Assistant District Attorney Christopher Tarrant are prosecuting the case.

    The shooting occurred shortly before 10:30 p.m. Oct. 13, 2021, in the area of Loring and Westford streets, outside the home of one of Fabian’s friends. Lowell Police reports state responding officers discovered Fabian on the ground, in an alleyway near 89 Loring St. He had a wound to the right side of his chest and the left rear side of his back, according to police. The Lowell resident was rushed to Lowell General Hospital’s Main Campus, where he was pronounced dead approximately 40 minutes later.

    Chan, who was 19 at the time, was apprehended by police the following night.

    The night of the shooting, Fabian had been involved in a dispute with multiple people, including his ex-girlfriend, Samantha Chum, of Lowell, as well as Chan. Fabian was dating another female at the time of the conflict, and that female had become the target of Chum’s ire, according to Mastrangelo.

    “Samantha and her friends began sort of bullying this girl online, torturing her, calling her different names … sort of derogatory names about her,” Mastrangelo said during the conference.

    The female Fabian was dating contacted Fabian and asked him if he could get Chum and the other people allegedly harassing her to leave her alone.

    “That sort of sparks among many group chats … quite a bit of inflammatory and enraged arguments over the course of the evening,” Mastrangelo said.

    A police report states there were “numerous threatening messages” sent by Chum to Fabian via text “to the effect ‘You or (Fabian’s girlfriend) is gonna die, which one is it gonna be.’”

    Police reports state Chum later told police she had texted with Fabian between 8 p.m. and 10:30 p.m. Police said Fabian was shot “by approximately 10:28 pm.”

    Chum told police that she texted people the night of the shooting — including sisters Izzy (identified in police reports as Chan’s girlfriend) and Mirenda Lach, and Jesse “Dia” Segal Wright — informing them of her issues with Fabian. Police added, however, that Chum denied “all knowledge of sending anyone to hurt Nathaniel and denied asking or suggesting anyone to do anything of the sort.”

    Police said they additionally spoke to Fabian’s girlfriend — whose name is redacted from reports — who told them just before Fabian was shot he had sent her screenshots of threatening messages people were sending him.

    The messages were from Chan, Chum, Wright and Brian Lach, of Lowell, who was 21 at the time. Police identified Brian Lach as the brother of Izzy and Mirenda Lach. The messages included demands that Fabian come outside his friend’s home in the 300 block of Westford Street, which belonged to Ivan Correa.

    Police said Wright admitted to them that she drove Chan and Brian Lach to the area of Westford Street, but claimed she “thought they were going there to fight Nathaniel.”

    Wright allegedly dropped Chan and Brian Lach off by Leroy and Grove streets, while she circled the block. According to police, Wright said she heard gunshots prior to picking Chan and Brian Lach up by Westford Street and Dover Park.

    According to police reports, when investigators showed Wright a photo of Chan during questioning, she positively identified him and quoted him as allegedly saying, “I got him, I got him,” when he got back into the car.

    Police said Brian Lach told them during questioning that he was aware Chum and Fabian’s girlfriend were having a feud, and he claimed that Fabian had threatened to shoot his house. Brian Lach also told police, according to a report, that he thought he was going to fistfight Nathaniel. However, police said Brian Lach alleged that Chan showed him a handgun before the shooting occurred.

    Brian Lach told police that Chan was walking a few feet ahead of him as they approached two men, who turned out to be Fabian and Correa. Brian Lach alleged hearing Chan say, “he might have something — take off,” at which point he saw Chan raise the handgun and fire. Brian Lach said he heard several gunshots as he fled.

    Wright picked them up with the vehicle a short time later.

    “Brian asked Timmy where the gun was because he didn’t want it in the car,” police said in the report. “Timmy said he got rid of it.”

    While talking about the case in the past, Chan’s attorney, Jeffrey Sweeney, said self-defense played a role in the shooting. Sweeney explained after the shooting occurred, Correa is seen in surveillance footage going back up to his apartment. Sweeney said police later searched Correa’s apartment, where they discovered a firearm.

    Police reports state that when Chan first spoke to authorities, he admitted he and Brian Lach went to meet up to fight Fabian, but “Nathaniel showed up with something he thought was a rifle wrapped in a blanket.” When Chan was asked by police if he actually saw a rifle, Chan said, “no but he was carrying it like one,” police reports state.

    No charges have been brought against any of the others involved in the case, much to the dismay of members of Fabian’s family.

    “It’s not right that they destroyed all our lives and they get to live theirs with no worries,” Alecia Brangan, Fabian’s aunt, has previously said. “They’re all going on with their lives, their careers and we can’t do anything about it.”

    In addition to murder, Chan is charged with carrying a firearm without a license, possession of ammunition without a firearm identification card, discharging a firearm within 500 feet of a building, and carrying a loaded firearm without a license.

    Jury impanelment is expected to be completed within two days, with jury instructions and opening statements scheduled to begin either April 30 or May 1. The case is expected to wrap up late in the week of May 6.

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