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Tag: Police

  • AG’s office investigating private all-girls high school

    AG’s office investigating private all-girls high school

    WENHAM — The state Attorney General’s Office is investigating complaints against the Academy at Penguin Hall, a private all-girls high school in Wenham.

    Assistant Attorney General Hanne Rush on Friday confirmed the existence of an investigation in response to a public records request by The Salem News for any complaints that have been filed against the school.

    In a letter, Rush said the AG’s office is withholding records because they “constitute investigatory materials related to an open investigation that reveal confidential sources,” and that disclosing the information would “cause a chilling effect on individuals to speak freely with law enforcement.”

    Molly Martins, the founder and president of the Academy at Penguin Hall, confirmed that the Attorney General’s office contacted the school and requested records.

    “We have provided the information that they requested and cooperated with their inquiry,” Martins said in an email. She declined to comment further.

    George Balich, the chair of Penguin Hall’s board of trustees, said he was unaware of any complaints against the school. He said officials from the Attorney General’s nonprofit organizations/public charities division visited the school in December after the school was delinquent in filing its annual financial audit.

    Penguin Hall provided the records and the AG’s office renewed the school’s certificate of solicitation, which charitable organizations need in order to solicit contributions, Balich said.

    “I don’t want to guess what’s going on,” he said, “but if someone there (in the Attorney General’s office) thought there was a problem we probably would not have gotten that certificate.”

    The Salem News reported last week the Academy at Penguin Hall, the only all-girls high school on the North Shore, is facing financial problems. The school has run up a deficit of millions of dollars since opening in 2016 and has struggled to pay its bills in recent months.

    In October, the town of Wenham threatened to shut off the school’s water due to unpaid water bills, and the IRS placed a lien on school property over unpaid payroll taxes.

    The Academy at Penguin Hall is an independent all-girls private school with about 120 students in grades 9-12. It operates as a 501©(3) nonprofit corporation and is required to file financial reports with the Attorney General’s nonprofit organizations/public charities division.

    The division “ensures appropriate application of charitable assets, investigates allegations and initiates enforcement actions in cases of breach of fiduciary duty,” according to the AG’s website.

    Penguin Hall had a negative fund balance of $6.5 million, according to the latest publicly available filing. The school has relied on millions of dollars in loans to stay afloat, including more than $2 million from Martins’ husband, Albert Martins, and his company, Martins Construction.

    Penguin Hall paid Martins Construction $960,000 in fiscal 2022. Molly Martins has said the payments were for renovations and other work at the school. Al Martins is also a member of the school’s board of trustees.

    Molly Martins is a former chairwoman of the Wenham Select Board.

    Penguin Hall recently announced a 40% increase in tuition, to $42,800, an attempt to resolve its financial problems, and has reached out to parents for donations.

    School officials have been meeting in small groups with parents about the school’s financial situation and are being “as transparent as possible,” Balich said.

    “Nobody’s hiding anything,” he said. “I’m being as blunt as I can and saying, ‘We need your help.’”

    Staff Writer Paul Leighton can be reached at 978-338-2535, by email at pleighton@salemnews.com, or on Twitter at @heardinbeverly.

    By Paul Leighton | Staff Writer

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  • Support shown for new police station at Salem deliberative session

    Support shown for new police station at Salem deliberative session

    SALEM, N.H. — A proposed $40 million police station that residents will vote on in March received nothing but positive recommendations at Saturday’s deliberative session.

    Salem’s Town Council presented warrant articles for the March 12 election, including the station, on Saturday at Salem High School to an audience of about 100 people.

    Many residents who spoke agreed that the new station was long overdue and should have been approved when this project was brought forward in past years.

    “I wrote a letter 20 years ago to the paper supporting it,” said Betty Gay, a former state representative from Rockingham 8, which encompassed the Salem area until 2022 but which now includes Danville due to redistricting. “This building, I’ve been told, is to cover us for the next 50 years.”

    Police Chief Joel Dolan gave a detailed presentation about the current station, which was originally built in 1966 for 14 staff members.

    Dolan said reports from the engineer and construction team at the time of the construction said the original building, at approximately 3,700 square feet, was too small for the number of staff members at that time.

    Over the years, the size of the structure — and the number of employees — has grown, and is now comprised of approximately 12,000 square feet, for a little more than 100 civilian and sworn-in officers.

    “This is their office space,” Dolan said, referring to the triple-wide trailer that’s used for evidence storage and investigation space. “It’s just too cramped to conduct proper, safe, law enforcement at this time.”

    Dolan also said there are serious issues with mold, poor ventilation for heating and air conditioning throughout the station, and a sally bay that can only accommodate one cruiser at a time, which makes transporting detainees dangerous.

    Another issue with the lack of space is not having anywhere to put victims of crimes who might need a quiet area. Dolan said victims have to be in the same area where officers are doing their work, so that lack of privacy is also a problem.

    The new station is projected to be a two-story, 40,537-square-foot building with ample space to meet the needs of a growing staff. The square footage includes a training area in the back and six bays for storage and a kennel.

    As for payment, Joe Sweeney, the vice chair of the Town Council said the town would take out three, 20-year bonds. The bonds will be approximately $9 million, $15 million and $14 million each.

    Over the 20-year life of the bonds, the estimated property tax increase for a house valued at $500,000 would range from $62.50 to $250 a year.

    The payment does not include the $3 million that has been donated by Tuscan Village owner Joe Faro, who gave the money due to its size and the impact the village has had on the town’s police force.

    The warrant article was moved to the ballot as written. It will ask voters for permission to raise and appropriate $38.6 million for a new station, as well as to authorize the Town Council to apply and accept federal, state and other aid and revenue sources for the project.

    This article requires at least 60% of voters to approve it.

    By Katelyn Sahagian | ksahagian@northofboston.com

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  • Man who showed up to Fort Worth hospital after stabbing died of injuries, police say

    Man who showed up to Fort Worth hospital after stabbing died of injuries, police say

    File photo.

    File photo.

    Getty Images

    One man is dead after he was stabbed and then showed up at John Peter Smith Hospital in Fort Worth Friday evening, according to Fort Worth police.

    Police were called to the hospital after the man, identified by the Tarrant County Medical Examiner’s Office as 36-year-old Armando Garcia, showed up around 5:40 p.m. Friday.

    He died about 40 minutes later from stab wounds, according to the ME’s office. His death has been ruled a homicide.

    Garcia was “the life of the party,” his family wrote in a GoFundMe.

    “Our lives have changed in an instant, our loved one has departed from us due to a senseless murder,” the family wrote in the fundraiser’s description. “Always so goofy, his laugh will surely be missed.”

    Police have not announced any arrests or publicly identified any suspects in the killing.

    Related stories from Fort Worth Star-Telegram

    James Hartley is a breaking news reporter with awards including features, breaking news and deadline writing. A North Texas native, he joined the Fort Worth Star-Telegram in 2019. He has a passion for true stories, understated movies, good tea and scotch that’s out of his budget.

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  • Man who went to Fort Worth hospital after being stabbed died of injuries, police say

    Man who went to Fort Worth hospital after being stabbed died of injuries, police say

    File photo.

    File photo.

    Getty Images

    One man is dead after he was stabbed and went John Peter Smith Hospital in Fort Worth Friday evening, according to Fort Worth police.

    Police were called to the hospital after the man, identified by the Tarrant County Medical Examiner’s Office as 36-year-old Armando Garcia, showed up around 5:40 p.m. Friday.

    He died about 40 minutes later from stab wounds, according to the Tarrant County Medical Examiner’soffice. His death has been ruled a homicide.

    Garcia was “the life of the party,” his family wrote in a GoFundMe.

    “Our lives have changed in an instant, our loved one has departed from us due to a senseless murder,” the family wrote in the fundraiser’s description. “Always so goofy, his laugh will surely be missed.”

    Police have not announced any arrests or publicly identified any suspects in the killing.

    This story was originally published February 18, 2024, 4:56 PM.

    Related stories from Fort Worth Star-Telegram

    James Hartley is a breaking news reporter with awards including features, breaking news and deadline writing. A North Texas native, he joined the Fort Worth Star-Telegram in 2019. He has a passion for true stories, understated movies, good tea and scotch that’s out of his budget.

    James Hartley

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  • Former CBS executive Les Moonves to pay Los Angeles ethics fine for interference in police probe

    Former CBS executive Les Moonves to pay Los Angeles ethics fine for interference in police probe

    LOS ANGELES — Former CBS chief executive and president Les Moonves has agreed to pay a $11,250 fine to settle a complaint accusing him of interfering with a police investigation of a sexual assault case, according to documents released Friday by the Los Angeles City Ethics Commission.

    According to the documents, Moonves acknowledged working closely with then-Capt. Cory Palka of the Los Angeles Police Department in 2017 to obtain information about a sexual assault victim’s confidential police report against him.

    Palka, who had provided private security for Moonves between 2008 and 2014 at the Grammy Awards, which CBS produced, notified network officials about the complaint against the executive in November 2017, the documents show.

    Through Palka, they say, Moonves obtained an unredacted copy of the police report, which also included personal information such as the home address and phone number of the accuser. Moonves also met with Palka for an hour at a restaurant to discuss the complaint and ways to quash it.

    Moonves was accused of three violations of city rules.

    An attorney representing him didn’t immediately respond to an email seeking comment.

    Palka retired in 2021 as a commander after nearly 35 years with the LAPD.

    Los Angeles’ Government Ethics Ordinance governs the conduct of city employees and forbids them from misusing or disclosing confidential information acquired through their work. The commission will meet next week to discuss the settlement.

    Weeks after the #MeToo movement erupted with sex abuse allegations against film mogul Harvey Weinstein in 2017, Phyllis Golden-Gottlieb reported to police in the LAPD’s Hollywood Division that she had been sexually assaulted by Moonves in 1986 and 1988 when they worked together at Lorimar Productions.

    Golden-Gottlieb, who went public with her accusations in 2018, died in 2022.

    The police interference allegations against Moonves came to light in 2022, when New York Attorney General Letitia James announced a settlement in which CBS and Moonves agreed to pay $30.5 million for keeping shareholders in the dark while executives tried to prevent the sexual assault allegations from becoming public.

    Moonves acknowledged having relations with three of his accusers but said they were consensual. He denied attacking anyone, saying in a statement at the time, “Untrue allegations from decades ago are now being made against me.”

    The Los Angeles County district attorney declined to file criminal charges against Moonves in 2018, saying the statute of limitations from Golden-Gottlieb’s allegations had expired.

    The Associated Press

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  • Woman reported missing out of Adams

    Woman reported missing out of Adams

    ADAMS, Mass. (NEWS10) — Adams Police Department announced they are searching for a woman that has been reported missing. Christina Barnes, 28, was last seen on February 15 around 3 p.m.

    Christina Barnes
    (Adams Police Department)

    Police say Barnes was last seen near Melrose Street. She is described as being 5’2″ tall, weighing about 230 pounds with brownish red hair and blue eyes. Barnes reportedly has developmental disabilities.

    She was last known to be wearing a black “Punisher” hoodie, white and black tie-dye leggings and work boots. Anyone with information is asked to contact the Adams Police Department at (413)743-1212.

    Jackson Tollerton

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  • Police use pepper spray on ‘unlawful’ protesters at cultural festival in Charlotte

    Police use pepper spray on ‘unlawful’ protesters at cultural festival in Charlotte

    Charlotte police deployed pepper spray to disperse 200 people at an “unlawful” protest at a cultural festival on private property off Monroe Road on Saturday, Feb. 17, 2024.

    Charlotte police deployed pepper spray to disperse 200 people at an “unlawful” protest at a cultural festival on private property off Monroe Road on Saturday, Feb. 17, 2024.

    WSOC

    Police closed a major Charlotte road on Saturday and deployed pepper spray on a crowd at what officers called an “unlawful” civil rights protest at a cultural festival on private property.

    They did not identify the cultural festival.

    “The pepper spray hit a few protesters as well as a few officers who are being treated on scene,” Charlotte-Mecklenburg Police said just after 3:30 p.m. on X, the social media platform formerly known as Twitter.

    Police said they arrested seven people. Three men were charged with impeding traffic, and a woman was charged with impeding traffic and inciting to riot, according to CMPD.

    At 6:18 p.m., CMPD said the woman arrested in the incident also faces a charge of assault on a government official after she was accused of hitting an officer.

    Police said they seized a firearm from the woman protester.

    Three more protesters also were arrested, and police seized a second firearm, CMPD said Saturday night.

    “Officers had given dispersal orders for nearly an hour prior to deploying the pepper spray,” according to CMPD.

    Police deployed the pepper spray “to get protesters who were blocking the street out of Monroe Road,” CMPD said on Twitter.

    “This protest is on private property and was declared unlawful,” police said.

    Monroe Road remained shut down between McAlway Drive and Alliance Drive as CMPD monitored the protest, police said at 3:17 p.m. on X. “Dispersal orders have been given and any protesters remaining are subject to arrest.”

    Just after 5 p.m., CMPD said the inbound lanes of Monroe Road had reopened.

    “The gathering is still ongoing,” police said on X. “Please continue to avoid the area.”

    Protesters told WSOC that two groups showed up at the scene: One group supported the government of Eritrea, bordered by the Red Sea on the Horn of Africa.

    The other group claimed the president of the country is a brutal dictator, according to the station.

    Monroe Road remained closed at 7 p.m.

    This is a developing story. Check back for updates.

    This story was originally published February 17, 2024, 4:34 PM.

    Related stories from Charlotte Observer

    Joe Marusak has been a reporter for The Charlotte Observer since 1989 covering the people, municipalities and major news events of the region, and was a news bureau editor for the paper. He currently reports on breaking news.
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  • Support shown for new police station at Salem NH deliberative

    Support shown for new police station at Salem NH deliberative

    SALEM, N.H. — A proposed, new $40 million police station that residents will vote on in March received nothing but positives recommendations at Saturday’s deliberative session.

    Salem’s Town Council presented warrant articles for the March 12 election, including the station, on Saturday at Salem High School to an audience of about 100 people.

    Many residents who spoke agreed that the new station was long overdue, and should have been passed when this project was brought forward in past years.

    “I wrote a letter 20 years ago to the paper supporting it,” said Betty Gay, a former state representative from Rockingham 8, which encompassed the Salem area until 2022 but which now includes Danville due to redistricting. “This building, I’ve been told, is to cover us for the next 50 years.”

    Police Chief Joel Dolan gave a detailed presentation about the current station, which was originally built in 1966 for 14 staff members.

    Dolan said reports from the engineer and construction team at the time of the construction said the original building, at approximately 3,700 square feet, was too small for the number of staff members at that time.

    Over the years, the size of the structure — and the number of employees — has grown, and is now comprised of approximately 12,000 square feet, for a little more than 100 civilian and sworn-in officers.

    “This is their office space,” Dolan said, referring to the triple-wide trailer that’s used for evidence storage and investigation space. “It’s just too cramped to conduct proper, safe, law enforcement at this time.”

    Dolan also said there are serious issues with mold, poor ventilation for heating and air conditioning throughout the station, and a sally bay that can only accommodate one cruiser at a time, which makes transporting detainees dangerous.

    Another issue with the lack of space is not having anywhere to put victims of crimes who might need a quiet area. Dolan said victims have to be in the same area where officers are doing their work, so that lack of privacy is also a problem.

    The new station is projected to be a two-story, 40,537-square-foot building with ample space to meet the needs of a growing staff. The square footage includes a training area in the back and six bays for storage and a kennel.

    As for payment, Joe Sweeney, the vice chair of the Town Council said the town would take out three, 20-year bonds. The bonds will be approximately $9 million, $15 million and $14 million each.

    Over the 20-year life of the bonds, the estimated property tax increase for a house valued at $500,000 would range from $62.50 to $250 a year.

    The payment does not include the $3 million that has been donated by Tuscan Village owner Joe Faro, who gave the money due to its size and the impact the village has had on the town’s police force.

    The warrant article was moved to the ballot as written. It will ask voters for permission to raise and appropriate $38.6 million for a new station, as well as to authorize the Town Council to apply and accept federal, state and other aid and revenue sources for the project.

    This article requires at least 60% of voters to approve it.

    By Katelyn Sahagian | ksahagian@northofboston.com

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  • 2 men dead in apparent murder-suicide in northwest Dallas, police say

    2 men dead in apparent murder-suicide in northwest Dallas, police say

    A black and white Dallas police car with lights on sits under the overhang of a large building.

    Police are investigating an apparent murder-suicide that left two people dead in northwest Dallas on Friday afternoon.

    File photo

    Dallas police are investigating an apparent murder-suicide that left two people dead Friday afternoon in the Stemmons Corridor, officials said.

    Officers responded to the 1800 block of West Mockingbird Lane around 2 p.m. They found two men with gunshot wounds. One of the men, 26-year-old Dmarcus Lott, died at the scene, police said.

    A preliminary investigation showed that Lott and 42-year-old Roy Bell had been arguing in the parking lot of a business. Investigators determined that Bell shot Lott and then shot himself.

    Bell died from his injuries at a hospital. Police said the victim and the suspect knew each other.

    The investigation is ongoing, police said, and anyone with information is asked to contact Detective Cody Clark at 214-671-3685 or cody.clark@dallaspolice.gov.

    This story was originally published February 17, 2024, 1:37 PM.

    Related stories from Fort Worth Star-Telegram

    Harriet Ramos covers crime and other breaking news for the Fort Worth Star-Telegram.

    Harriet Ramos

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  • NH first reponders unite for benefit hockey game

    NH first reponders unite for benefit hockey game

    Local New Hampshire first responders will trade their uniforms in for jerseys as they compete in the 16th annual Children’s Hospital at Dartmouth Battle of the Badges on March 10 at the SNHU Arena in Manchester.

    The charity hockey game raises money to provide critical services for children with chronic illnesses or injuries. Funds also help support pediatric patients and their families.

    Ten emergency personnel from police and fire departments in Salem, Hampstead, Londonderry, Derry and Danville are represented on the two teams.

    This will be Hampstead police Officer Bryan Lamontagne’s fourth time playing in the game. He’s joined by Officer Tyler Phair to represent his department.

    For Lamontagne, the game is secondary to the greater purpose of the event.

    It’s a way for him to give back and help children and families going through difficult times.

    “You see the families that need the support and help,” Lamontagne said. “If it takes a little bit of time and effort on my side to help these families and raise some money for them then that is what I am going to do.”

    The players each year are assigned to a special buddy from the hospital. Lamontagne and his wife have built a relationship with their buddy’s family over the last few years and offer a little extra support, whether through social media or texts, wherever they can.

    He has children of his own and hopes his oldest son will see the impact of that relationship and what the game means.

    Phair also felt it was important to be a part of something bigger than the game of hockey, which he’s played his whole life.

    He was injured during last year’s game so this will be his first time playing in it.

    “It’s great to give back to a great cause while also playing the sport we love,” Phair said. “That’s the main reason I became a cop – to help others in need.”

    Both Phair and Lamontagne have raised funds together and already met their goal. Now, they are looking to exceed the goal.

    While local departments on both the fire and police side face off against each other, they are still united for a singular cause. But that doesn’t mean there isn’t friendly rivalry between the two sides – or a chance for friends to switch teams.

    Phair went to high school with fellow benefit player, Hampstead firefighter Zach Sylvester who is on the roster for the opposing team.

    Salem Fire Fleet Mechanic Leo LeBlanc is another first timer like Phair. He is one of three from Salem Fire in the game, joining Firefighters Ashton Rome and Dylan Ferguson.

    He saw Rome’s repeated involvement in the game and wanted to join in. He’s looking forward to being a part of this with multiple members of Salem Fire.

    As a mechanic, LeBlanc spends most of his day at the station repairing and fixing broken apparatuses and doesn’t get as many opportunities to participate in community events.

    “This is my chance to get involved with the community that I don’t get to go out and see all the time,” LeBlanc said.

    While he’s excited to gear up in a sport he plays, LeBlanc knows there’s a bigger picture why they will be there.

    “Everyone is coming together for the same reason and that’s to help these kids,” LeBlanc said. “That’s what it’s all about.”

    Danville Officer Padraig Capsalis, Londonderry Field Training Officer Cameron Verrier, Derry firefighters Cody Lappas and Timary Malley are also skating in the game and raising funds for the children’s hospital.

    By Angelina Berube | aberube@eagletribune.com

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  • Students’ fight-turned-shooting near Denver high school sets neighbors on edge

    Students’ fight-turned-shooting near Denver high school sets neighbors on edge

    A fistfight between two Excel Academy students escalated into a shooting this week, sending people running for cover and setting neighbors around the Denver public high school on edge.

    The fight-turned-shooting happened at around 12:15 p.m. Monday in the 3100 block of West Colorado Avenue, around the corner from Excel Academy, a pathway school that is designed to help students who are behind on credits get back on track for graduation.

    Two students and their families were involved in the fight, Principal Cynthia Navarro wrote in a letter to parents Monday.

    “At no point were our students or staff inside the building ever in danger,” she wrote.

    The shooting comes as Denver Public Schools faces increased public scrutiny over its handling of gun violence among students, particularly in the wake of last year’s shooting at East High School in which a 17-year-old student wounded two school administrators.

    People who live near Excel Academy said during a Denver Police Department neighborhood meeting Wednesday that they’ve raised concerns about the school for years — particularly around nuisance issues like students parking across driveways, littering or drag racing in the streets — and questioned whether school officials were doing enough to protect students and residents.

    On Monday, two young women met in the street to fight while a crowd of about a dozen people watched, according to video of the incident reviewed by The Denver Post. Most appeared to be high-school-aged, but there were at least two adults in the mix, said Cyan Santillana, who witnessed the fight. One of the adults was encouraging the fight, she said.

    After a couple of minutes of fighting, at least one of the people watching drew a gun and fired shots, the video shows. The crowd scattered, with people diving behind cars or into alleys for cover. A single adult man was shot in the incident and survived, Denver police said.

    No arrests had been made by Wednesday and police did not answer questions about the man’s condition or about the shooting.

    Fights in the neighborhood, which abuts Federal Boulevard, are not entirely uncommon, Santillana said, but this was the first time she could remember shots being fired.

    “It’s getting to the point where something definitely needs to be done now,” she said. “There are kids in this neighborhood, there is an elementary school right down the street, and there was this active shooting right in front of the houses.”

    She added that most of the 250 students at Excel Academy don’t cause problems, but that the small group who do “give the school a bad rap.” One student just happened to be walking by when the shooting happened and had to run for cover, Santillana said.

    The shooting took place during the school’s lunch hour, when many students were out of the building enjoying warm weather, said Scott Pribble, spokesman for Denver Public Schools. The fight prompted a 20-minute “secure perimeter” at the school, during which staff and students stayed inside and locked exterior doors, Navarro said in the letter to parents.

    Shelly Bradbury

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  • No bail for Lawrence cold case murder suspect awaiting retrial

    No bail for Lawrence cold case murder suspect awaiting retrial

    LAWRENCE — Following a mistrial in December, a judge on Wednesday denied bail to Lawrence cold case murder suspect Marvin “Skip” McClendon Jr., 76, who is from Bremen, Alabama.

    McClendon is charged with killing Melissa Ann Tremblay, 11, of Salem, N.H., in Lawrence on Sept. 11, 1988.

    The case was cold for more than three decades until prosecutors in April 2022 said DNA found under Tremblay’s fingernails linked McClendon to the girl’s murder.

    Defense attorney Henry Fasoldt sought his client’s release on $50,000 bail with court imposed conditions while McClendon awaits a retrial this fall.

    He said McClendon was a veteran who did not pose a flight risk or danger to the community and that the state’s murder case against him was “weak” and “circumstantial.”

    Fasoldt has said McClendon has not been convicted of a crime and expressed concern his client would be behind bars for 2½ years before he goes on trial again.

    But Superior Court Judge Jeffrey Karp, who presided over the murder trial in December, denied the bail request. He said McClendon could not be properly supervised if he returned to Alabama and that he had didn’t have ties to Massachusetts.

    Fasoldt noted McClendon, a retired Massachusetts Department of Corrections officer, lived in Massachusetts in the past, however.

    But Karp, referring to the trial in December, noted that McClendon has a brother who lives in Athol, Mass., who testified against him as a prosecution witness.

    “There is too much at stake,” Karp said during a hearing Wednesday in Newburyport Superior Court.

    McClendon will remain held at Middleton Jail as a result Karp’s ruling.

    He has a home in Alabama down the road from his sister, Rebecca Greenwood, who is his primary social support, Fasoldt said previously. Greenwood attended the trial in December.

    McClendon suffers from a number of chronic health conditions and requires daily medication including blood thinners, medication for gout, and diuretics. He used a walker in court during the trial.

    His retrial is scheduled for Sept. 30 with jury empanelment first and then testimony to start in mid-October.

    Tremblay was murdered in South Lawrence near the LaSalle Social Club on Andover Street.

    On Sept. 11, 1988, Tremblay’s stabbed and beaten body was found in a South Lawrence railroad yard.

    The girl was known to play in the neighborhood while her mother and her mother’s boyfriend frequented the social club. She was last seen alive by a railroad employee and a pizza delivery driver, authorities said.

    Tremblay’s mother has since died.

    After more than a week of testimony from detectives, crime lab workers, relatives and others, the prosecution rested its case on Friday, Dec. 15.

    Among the prosecution witnesses were retired State Trooper Kenneth Kelleher and Lawrence Police Detective Thomas Murphy, the original murder case detectives from 1988.

    State Police Lt. Peter Sherber, who most recently investigated and went to Alabama to question McClendon and his relatives, also testified.

    Daniel Hatch, who was a 13-year-old homeless boy in 1988, also testified he saw Tremblay sitting on the front steps of the LaSalle Club that day with an area man named Michael Therrien. He said the two later walked across Broadway to the State Street area where they met up with another man.

    On Monday, Dec. 18, Fasoldt called three defense witnesses, all doctors with backgrounds in DNA or forensics.

    McClendon did not testify in his own defense.

    Jurors deliberated for 29 hours but remained deadlocked. A mistrial was declared by Judge Karp on Dec. 27.

    Follow staff reporter Jill Harmacinski on Twitter/X @EagleTribJill.

    By Jill Harmacinski jharmacinski@eagletribune.com

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  • Mayor Karen Bass’ plan for rebuilding the size of the LAPD has fallen short so far

    Mayor Karen Bass’ plan for rebuilding the size of the LAPD has fallen short so far

    When Mayor Karen Bass laid out her budget proposal for the Los Angeles Police Department last year, she had big plans for rebuilding the size of that agency’s workforce.

    The mayor’s budget called for the LAPD to end the 2023-24 budget year with about 9,500 police officers — a target that would require the hiring of nearly 1,000 officers over a 12-month period.

    Now, a new assessment from City Administrative Officer Matt Szabo — the city’s top budget analyst — shows the department is falling well short of its staffing goal. By June 30, the end of the fiscal year, the department is expected to have 8,908 officers, according to Szabo’s projections.

    That would leave the LAPD with its lowest sworn staffing levels in over two decades.

    Szabo’s report, issued Tuesday, is likely to fuel calls for the council to scale back the LAPD’s hiring goal. Even before it was released, some at City Hall had begun arguing that the annual budget calls for hundreds of officer positions that have little to no chance of being filled.

    “I do not think 9,500 is realistic,” Councilmember Hugo Soto-Martínez said Wednesday. “We can’t be in denial about this. It is not realistic. And the reason it’s not realistic is because … people who are entering the workforce do not want to be police officers.”

    Soto-Martínez has long argued for the idea of shifting certain duties out of the LAPD and into agencies with unarmed responders. He asked for the LAPD’s 12-month hiring projections last month, just as the council began the process of cutting an as-yet-unknown number of civilian city positions — part of a larger effort at reining in a budget shortfall.

    Meanwhile, police staffing is continuing its year-to-year slide.

    The LAPD had about 10,000 officers in 2019, the last full year before COVID-19. In June 2020, not long after the murder of George Floyd, the City Council voted to scale back the deployment to about 9,750.

    Bass took office in 2022. By the time her first budget went into effect, the number of officers had fallen to 9,027. In an attempt to reverse those trends, she negotiated a four-year package of pay increases and higher starting salaries.

    That deal, approved in August, is now a major contributor to the city’s budget shortfall, which could reach as much as $400 million in the coming fiscal year.

    De’Marcus Finnell, a spokesperson for Bass, said Wednesday that the salary agreement with the police officers’ union is producing results, helping to spur recruitment and lower attrition.

    “According to conversations with LAPD, retirement rates could’ve been much higher if we hadn’t taken the action we did,” Finnell said in an email.

    Councilmember Nithya Raman, who voted against the salary agreement last year, has been offering a different assessment, calling the police contract financially irresponsible. Raman, now running for reelection with support from the mayor, has repeatedly warned that the police raises will leave the city with insufficient funds for other government programs.

    “I thought that the size of the raise would be so much that it would create significant budget deficits going forward,” she told an audience last month, adding: “So far, the data has proven me correct.”

    Others on the council say they still support the police raises.

    Councilmember Katy Yaroslavsky, in an interview, said attrition has “slowed significantly” at the LAPD since the contract was approved. The contract, she said, is “doing what we needed it to do.”

    Bass, as part of her budget, had been hoping to hire 780 new officers during the current fiscal year. She also had been looking to bring 200 retirees back to the department.

    So far, only 15 retirees have come back, Szabo said.

    The decrease in LAPD staffing is producing at least one benefit — cutting costs in the city budget.

    The city’s financial analysts are currently projecting an $82-million shortfall in the LAPD’s sworn salary account this year. Had the department had been successful in reaching the mayor’s hiring goals, that number would have grown to more than $118 million, Szabo said in his report.

    Meanwhile, some categories of crime continue to fall.

    Homicides have decreased by nearly 6% compared with the prior year, according to LAPD figures covering the period ending Jan. 27. Burglaries decreased by nearly 7% over the same time frame.

    Other types of crime are on the rise. Assaults have gone up by 12% compared to the same period last year, according to LAPD figures. The number of shooting victims is up 29% so far this year.

    David Zahniser

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  • AARDVARK Tactical’s PROJECT7 Launches P7 Saves Initiative, Celebrates First Save

    AARDVARK Tactical’s PROJECT7 Launches P7 Saves Initiative, Celebrates First Save

    PROJECT7 Armor is proud to announce the launch of its new P7 Saves Initiative. This project celebrates the resilience of law enforcement and military personnel who survive critical incidents in the field while wearing PROJECT7 products. The program will highlight the inspiring survival stories of the men and women PROJECT7 was founded to protect.  

    P7 Saves launches with the story of Jordan Robison, a San Bernardino, California, police officer who survived multiple gunshot wounds from a 10mm Glock during a vehicle takedown of an attempted murder suspect in August 2021. Robison was hit seven times, with five rounds hitting outside the coverage of his PROJECT7 Scalable Entry Vest. Robison was struck once in each arm (fracturing both), once in the shoulder, once in the abdomen below his armor, and once in the leg, shattering his femur. Two rounds were stopped by his armor, with one deflecting off his cummerbund creating a grazing wound to his side and the second in the center of his rifle plate directly over his abdominal aorta.  

    After multiple surgeries and intensive physical and occupational therapy, Robison was released from the hospital to continue his road to recovery. Today, Robison is retired from law enforcement and working toward becoming a physician’s assistant. His goal is to work in the same hospital that treated him. 

    Robison’s survival was due in large part to the heroic actions of his team members. This is especially true for Officer Chris Shipley, who treated Robison with his own tourniquet despite also being shot in the leg, and medic Spence Brumbaugh who kept Robison alive during transport, giving the trauma team precious time to save Robison once he arrived at the hospital.

    Reflecting on the experience, Robison said, “If I had to say one thing to the people who trained me, to all the people I’ve worked with over the years, to the people who made my armor, to the doctors who actually saved me — from the bottom of my heart, thank you.”

    AARDVARK CEO and founder of PROJECT7 Jon Becker summed up the experience saying, “Jordan is the first save for PROJECT7. When we set out to build PROJECT7, we knew that, eventually, someone’s life would depend upon our armor. That is why we chose the best possible ballistic partner in Safariland and it’s what inspired us to build the best possible armor system. It is hard to express how grateful we are that Jordan is alive and healthy to experience the rest of his life.”

    Jordan Robison’s story is a real-world example of PROJECT7’s purpose. To celebrate this occasion, PROJECT7 released a short documentary of his story, which can be found at https://aardvarktactical.com/p701/.

    About PROJECT7: 

    PROJECT7 is the culmination of years of research and development geared toward producing the ultimate integrated tactical armor systems. PROJECT7 is sold exclusively to sworn military, law enforcement, and federal agents through our sole-source distribution partner AARDVARK Tactical. 

    Source: AARDVARK Tactical

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  • L.A. Port Police nabs 3 suspects amid string of bronze plaque thefts

    L.A. Port Police nabs 3 suspects amid string of bronze plaque thefts

    After the theft of hundreds of bronze plaques in the last few months across Los Angeles County, investigators say they are making progress in recovering some of the stolen plates that tell the history of the region.

    On Tuesday, police recovered two stolen plaques during a traffic stop, the Los Angeles Port Police announced.

    Since early December, bronze plaques commemorating the history of the ports have been ripped and pried off from several memorials, including the American Merchant Marine Veterans Memorial erected in 1989, law enforcement said in a news release.

    A plaque stolen from Terminal Island in San Pedro honors members of the local Japanese American fishing community who were imprisoned during World War II.

    Both those plaques remain lost.

    After pulling over a vehicle during the traffic stop Tuesday, L.A. Port Police found a cemetery marker stolen from a site in Long Beach and a plaque taken from St. Joseph Catholic Church in Long Beach, Port Police Chief Thomas Gazsi said.

    Police arrested Dionzay Tisby, 42; Brittany Draper, 37; and Deona Jackson, 28 on suspicion of grand theft, authorities announced.

    The arrests are part of an ongoing investigation, and the suspects could face additional charges if police are able to connect them to other thefts.

    “We all took it very seriously,” Gazsi said about the thefts. “We believe they are responsible for additional thefts. I’m appreciative of the lengthy investigation that involved significant field and forensic work from our investigators.”

    Los Angeles City Councilmember Tim McOsker, who represents the district that includes the Harbor area, called the thefts “heartbreaking” and said the community views the whole situation as a “great disrespect to the fishermen, the industries who built the ports.”

    There are plans to replace the plaques if they cannot be recovered, said McOsker, who is talking with port officials to help with the effort.

    Los Angeles Port Police is the lead agency in the investigation, which extends outside their jurisdiction.

    In January, more than 100 bronze plaques were stolen from Lincoln Memorial Park Cemetery in Carson. About a week before, thieves toppled over gravestones and stole metal plaques from Woodlawn Memorial Park in Compton, according to volunteers at the cemeteries and the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department.

    Perhaps the most egregious of the bronze plaque thefts happened in Manhattan Beach, where Los Angeles County returned a piece of land to the family of Willa Bruce, who sought to create a beach resort for a Black community in 1912.

    The city rededicated the site last year with a new plaque that told the history of racism the family faced in Manhattan Beach. In late January, the large bronze plaque was pried off its base, according to the Manhattan Police Department.

    Anyone with information about the thefts can contact Los Angeles Port Police detectives at (310) 732-3500.

    Nathan Solis

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  • Car shot at outside Peabody apartment complex

    Car shot at outside Peabody apartment complex

    PEABODY — Police responded to a shooting at the Terrace Estates apartments near the Northshore Mall Tuesday night.

    Around 10 p.m., officers responded to reports of gunshots in the area of Shore Drive, which runs through the apartment complex located just off Route 128, said Lt. David Bonfanti, the department’s public information officer.

    “The victim called us because she was in that area when her car got shot at, and there were four shots at the car,” Bonfanti said.

    No one was injured. Police have not arrested any suspects at this time, according to Bonfanti.

    Officers received assistance at the scene from the Massachusetts State Police.

    This type of incident is unusual for the area, Bonfanti said. It remains under investigation.

    No further information was immediately available. 

    Contact Caroline Enos at CEnos@northofboston.com.

    By Caroline Enos | Staff Writer

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  • Boy killed and grandmother injured in Gardena hit-and-run accident

    Boy killed and grandmother injured in Gardena hit-and-run accident

    A 5-year-old boy was killed and his grandmother was injured in a hit-and-run crash in Gardena.

    The boy, identified as Patrick Chacon of Gardena, and his grandmother were walking in the crosswalk at Marine and Budlong avenues at 10:30 a.m. Sunday when they were struck by a car. The driver fled the scene, according to police.

    “Upon arrival, officers found two pedestrians on the roadway,” police said in a statement.

    Patrick died at the scene, the Los Angeles County Department of Medical Examiner said. His grandmother was hospitalized.

    Mourners created a memorial at the intersection to commemorate Patrick.

    Earlier in the day, another pedestrian had been killed in Gardena just under two miles away.

    A female driver hit and killed the pedestrian at 4 a.m. at Vermont Avenue and El Segundo Boulevard, according to police. The driver stayed on the scene.

    City News Service contributed to this report.

    Terry Castleman

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  • Federal funds earmarked for cybersecurity

    Federal funds earmarked for cybersecurity

    BOSTON — The Healey administration is making millions of dollars in federal funding available to cities and towns to harden their computer systems against hacks and attacks by cyber criminals.

    The Municipal Local Cybersecurity Grant Program has $7.2 million available cities and towns, regional school districts and other local governments. Applicants can request up to $100,000 in funding, while multiple municipalities may jointly apply for up to $300,000, officials said.

    Another $1.8 million is available through the State Share Cybersecurity Grant Program with local governments able to request up to $100,000 in federal funding.

    Overall, $9.1 million is available for the competitive grants, and applications will be accepted on a rolling basis until March 8, the agency said.

    Gov. Maura Healey said the federal funding will provide state and local agencies “with resources to effectively respond to and recover from a cyber-incident.”

    “Cybersecurity threats continue to increase in sophistication and frequency. In this ever-changing digital world, we must implement smart cybersecurity strategies and adapt our systems to meet the moment,” she said in a statement.

    The federal dollars will be provided through the State and Local Cybersecurity Grant program, which is overseen by the federal Department of Homeland Security’s Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency and the Federal Emergency Management Agency.

    Terrence Reidy, secretary of the state Executive Office of Public Safety and Security, said the state’s embrace of advanced technology “has vastly improved the government’s ability to deliver more effective and efficient services” but has also “exposed our operational systems and sensitive data to significant risk.”

    “I encourage eligible entities to pursue this funding opportunity and strengthen our collective defense against evolving digital threats,” he said in a statement.

    Massachusetts cities and towns are under constant threat from hackers probing for weaknesses in computer systems, intent on stealing money and personal information, and cybersecurity experts say the attacks are getting worse.

    Attacks range from malware, ransomware and email phishing scams, to old-fashioned cons using the internet to trick people.

    Many perpetrators operate from overseas, with ties to rogue nations and criminal gangs, making it hard to catch them.

    The FBI’s Internet Crime Complaint Center logged 800,944 suspected internet crimes last year. Reported losses exceeded $10.2 billion.

    Topping the list of crimes were “phishing” scams, nonpayment/non-delivery scams and internet-based extortion, the agency said.

    There were 7,805 victims of cybercrimes in Massachusetts last year, with losses topping $226 million. Many of those victims were elderly, the FBI said.

    Cities and towns have been facing an uptick in ransomware, which involves hackers encrypting a local government or school’s networks until a ransom is paid.

    A 2023 report by the firm Sophos found that nearly seven in 10 IT leaders at local and state governments said they have faced ransomware attacks in the last year. Most of those attacks started either through unpatched systems or stolen passwords, the report’s authors noted.

    “In every conversation I have with a municipal leader, cybersecurity is a top concern, but they either do not have the dedicated personnel or funding to implement the most impactful best practices,” Jason Snyder, secretary of the Office of Technology Services and Security, said in a statement.

    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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  • Fired NYPD cop charged with manslaughter for DWI crash kills passenger

    Fired NYPD cop charged with manslaughter for DWI crash kills passenger

    An ex-NYPD cop fired last year for pulling his gun during an argument over a parking space has now been busted for vehicular manslaughter on Long Island, authorities said Monday.

    Aaron Cooper, 26, was charged Saturday with manslaughter, vehicular manslaughter and DWI for a blood alcohol level of .018, according to court papers.

    Cooper, who admitted he had been drinking, was speeding in a 2023 Toyota on Rosedale Road near Lawrence Court in Valley Stream when he crossed the double yellow line and hit a curb and pole about 4:30 a.m., police say. His car flipped over from the impact, killing his passenger, Pablo Rivera, 22, of Valley Stream.

    Cooper, who lives in Lindenhurst, was treated for minor injuries at a local hospital. Rivera died at the scene.

    Cooper was arrested in Queens in July 2021 for gun possession, criminal mischief and harassment after allegedly arguing off-duty with a man over a parking spot and pulling his gun. An NYPD source said he was fired last year.



    Rocco Parascandola

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  • Greenfield contractor charged with grand larceny

    Greenfield contractor charged with grand larceny

    BALLSTON, N.Y. (NEWS10) — A Greenfield man was arrested following a scam investigation, according to state police. Michael Marlett, 21, has been charged with third-degree grand larceny.

    On January 25 at 6:30 p.m., police received a complaint from a Saratoga County resident regarding a contracting dispute. The investigation determined that in December of 2023, the victim had agreed to hire the owner and operator of ATQ Contracting LLC, identified as Marlett, to complete a remodeling project at a home in Ballston.

    Police say the victim gave Marlett a deposit of $10,000 ahead of the work. Marlett allegedly failed to start the project by an agreed upon date and did not return the deposit, resulting in the theft of the money.

    Marlett was taken into custody in Clifton Park and transported to SP Saratoga for processing. He was arraigned at the Malta Town Court before being released on his own recognizance.



    Jackson Tollerton

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