Boston Police Department

News, Youth

BPD probes arrest video DA, police agree to assign prosecutor to case

BPD probes arrest videoDA, police agree to assign prosecutor to caseBy O’Ryan Johnson  |   Thursday, October 28, 2010  |  http://www.bostonherald.com  |  Local Coverage INVESTIGATION: Boston police have vowed to probe the arrest of a 16-year-old suspect at Roxbury Community College last week that was captured on video and placed on YouTube. The teen had run away from a youth facility.Photo by Youtube Boston police brass are vowing a full investigation into a YouTube video that shows a police officer punching a 16-year-old suspect in the back of the legs and apparently kneeing him as officers struggle to cuff him. Boston police Commissioner Edward Davis said the department’s internal affairs department is planning to view that video, speak with witnesses and get surveillance video from Roxbury Community College where the arrest occurred Friday. TODAY’S UPDATE: The Suffolk District Attorney’s office and city police agreed this afternoon to assign a prosecutor to review the arrest. “Its important for everyone involved that there be independent eyes reviewing what occurred here,” Suffolk District Attorney Daniel Conley said. “I spoke with (Boston Police) Commissioner (Edward) Davis, who has already initiated what he promises will be a complete and thorough internal investigation.” Boston police spokeswoman Elaine Driscoll said yesterday no one has filed a complaint regarding the force used in the arrest. She said the department had already initiated an investigation into the incident after three officers were hospitalized Friday for injuries sustained cuffing the suspect. The video begins as police have the suspect, who was wanted on warrants and for running away from a youth facility, on the ground. There is a struggle to cuff him, and the video appears to show a plainclothes officer raising his hand and repeatedly striking the suspect in the back of the leg. He then repositions himself and drives a knee into the suspect, appearing to strike him in the hip or upper thigh. The suspect then appears to kick a police officer off of him. It is unclear who produced the video or whether it was edited. In the police report, officers acknowledge the use of punches and the knee strike and state the suspect was brought to the ground after freeing himself from one officer and using a pair of handcuffs as a weapon against police. “Suspect … yelled repeatedly, “YA’LL GOTTA TAKE ME IN BLOOD (expletive)”!” the report states. “Officers struck suspect multiple times with closed fists and used knee strikes as trained in the police academy in an attempt to control and bring suspect under control.” Davis said officers are allowed to use appropriate force to make an arrest. He said the officers involved in the arrest continue to work as the department investigates. Article URL: http://www.bostonherald.com/news/regional/view.bg?articleid=1292056

News, Youth

Cop union president Thomas Nee blasts councilor Mike Ross over video criticism

Cop union president Thomas Nee blasts councilor Mike Ross over video criticismBy O’Ryan Johnson  |   Thursday, October 28, 2010  |  http://www.bostonherald.com  |  Local Coverage Photo by Youtube Boston police union boss Thomas Nee called City Council President Mike Ross a “fraud” today over hiscomments that police use of force captured in a YouTube video was “offensive.” Ross also called the officers training into question, which didn’t sit well with Nee. “There were officers holding this man down on his belly, pressing him to the floor. It appears to me the use of force by one particular officer was unmeasured,” Ross said. “If that is the protocol, that should not be the protocol. There has got to be a better way of doing that … It’s offensive to see. It’s offensive for our citizens to watch and its not the way our police should be performing.” Nee struck back today saying Ross was making political hay out of a policing situation he knows nothing about and passing judgment on an investigation that has only just begun. “He’s is a fraud that lives a charmed life sitting in a soft chair watching police work on the six o’clock news,” Nee said. “The sheer arrogance of an ambitious elected official to cast aspersions and take an opportunity in an event like this, is not only irresponsible, its outrageous.” Nee said he hopes Ross will apologize after the case is over. The video, placed on YouTube Tuesday, shows the arrest Oct. 22 at Roxbury Community College of a 16-year-old escapee from a Department of Youth Services lock up. In it officers appear to strike the suspect in order to cuff him. Nee said while Ross would not comment on an FBI surveillance video that shows City Councilor Chuck Turner allegedly accepting a bribe he immediately issued a statement regarding the YouTube video. “He reserves judgment where an elected official is concerned, but he rushes to judgment in a situation that he doesn’t know anything about,” Nee said. “He should reserve his judgment on my members until the facts are revealed. We don’t get to play law enforcement critic on television. We have to deal with it in the real world.” The Suffolk District Attorney’s office and city police agreed this afternoon to assign a prosecutor to review the arrest. “Its important for everyone involved that there be independent eyes reviewing what occurred here,” Suffolk District Attorney Daniel Conley said. “I spoke with (Boston Police) Commissioner (Edward) Davis, who has already initiated what he promises will be a complete and thorough internal investigation.” Article URL: http://www.bostonherald.com/news/regional/view.bg?articleid=1292275

News

Court upholds sentence for son of Boston police officer and Union head convicted of plotting Columbine-style massacre

Court upholds sentence for son of Boston police officer convicted of plotting Columbine-style massacre By adamg – 10/27/10 – 11:27 am http://www.universalhub.com/2010/court-upholds-sentence-son-boston-police-officer-c The Supreme Judicial Court ruled today that Joseph Nee was fairly convicted on a charge he conspired with other students at Marshfield High School to massacre students and teachers they didn’t like. Nee was convicted in 2008 and served nine months in state prison. In his appeal, Nee, son of Boston patrolmens union President Thomas Nee, argued the verdict should be overturned because he had renounced his part in the plot by telling a Marshfield police officer about it before it could be carried out. In a unanimous ruling, the state’s highest court said that even if it agreed Nee had a right to argue “renunciation” – something Massachusetts law does not seem to allow – it still would have found him guilty: For the defendant to be entitled to the affirmative defense of renunciation, he must first have acknowledged that he conspired to commit a crime. This the defendant did not do. At the meeting at the Marshfield police station the defendant did not inform the police of his own participation in the conspiracy to “shoot up” the school. Nor is there evidence that he informed [the other students in the plot], or anyone else that he was abandoning the conspiracy. Rather, when the defendant spoke to the police about the plan, he placed exclusive blame on Kerns. He cannot be found to have “renounced” an enterprise in which he denied participation. For the complete rulinghttp://www.universalhub.com/2010/commonwealth-vs-joseph-nee COMMONWEALTH vs. Joseph NEEBy adamg – 10/27/10 – 11:06 amNOTICE: The slip opinions and orders posted on this Web site are subject to formal revision and are superseded by the advance sheets and bound volumes of the Official Reports. This preliminary material will be removed from the Web site once the advance sheets of the Official Reports are published. If you find a typographical error or other formal error, please notify the Reporter of Decisions, Supreme Judicial Court, John Adams Courthouse, 1 Pemberton Square, Suite 2500, Boston, MA 02108-1750; (617) 557-1030; SJCReporter@sjc.state.ma.us COMMONWEALTH vs. Joseph NEE. SJC-10634. September 7, 2010. – October 27, 2010. Conspiracy. Evidence, Conspiracy. INDICTMENT found and returned in the Superior Court Department on October 22, 2004. The case was heard by Charles M. Grabau, J. The Supreme Judicial Court granted an application for direct appellate review. Frances L. Robinson (Thomas Drechsler with her) for the defendant. Karen H. O’Sullivan, Assistant District Attorney, for the Commonwealth. Present: Marshall, C.J., Ireland, Spina, Cowin, Cordy, Botsford, & Gants, JJ. MARSHALL, C.J. In February, 2008, after a jury-waived trial in the Superior Court, the defendant was convicted of conspiracy to commit murder in connection with a Columbine-style plot [FN1] to kill students and school personnel at a public high school in the Commonwealth. [FN2] See G.L. c. 274, § 7. He was sentenced to two and one-half years in a house of correction, nine months to be served with the balance suspended, and two years of probation commencing on his release. The defendant appealed, and we granted his application for direct appellate review. [FN3] The defendant argues that we must reverse the conviction because (1) the evidence at trial was insufficient to establish that he had the requisite intent to commit conspiracy; (2) the judge erred in refusing to recognize and apply the renunciation defense; [FN4] and (3) refusing to apply the renunciation defense in this case would violate the defendant’s due process rights where it was not clear whether the defense was available when the defendant committed the acts for which he was convicted. We affirm. 1. Facts. We summarize the evidence presented at trial in the light most favorable to the Commonwealth, considering the evidence at the close of the Commonwealth’s case. See Commonwealth v. Kelley, 370 Mass. 147, 150 (1976). [FN5] On September 16, 2004, the defendant, Daniel Farley, and Joseph Sullivan, then all students at Marshfield High School (school), attended a meeting with five Marshfield police officers at the Marshfield police station. The meeting had been arranged at the defendant’s request by Officer Helen Gray, a Marshfield police officer assigned to duty as the school’s “resource officer.” [FN6] Over the course of a few hours the defendant and his companions informed the police officers that since the previous winter another student, Tobin Kerns, had developed an elaborate plot to “blow up the school.” The defendant, in particular, described the plot in detail. None of the three friends indicated that they were involved in the plot, or implicated each other in the plot. Marshfield police officers subsequently arrested Kerns and obtained a warrant to search his home, where they discovered, among other things, a list of supplies and weaponry in a notebook, and evidence of computer searches pertaining to weapons, pipe bombs, and other explosives. See Commonwealth v. Kerns, 449 Mass. 641, 646 (2007). The defendant did not testify at trial. Farley and Sullivan testified pursuant to grants of immunity. [FN7] They testified that during the winter of 2003 and spring of 2004, they would “hang out” with Kerns and the defendant “[a]lmost every day.” In the winter of 2003, the defendant told Farley of a plan to “shoot up” the school and asked whether Farley was interested in joining him. On a subsequent occasion when Kerns was also present, the defendant asked Kerns whether Kerns would be interested in joining the defendant in “shooting up the school.” Kerns and the defendant together discussed the plan with Sullivan and asked him whether he would be interested in participating. The plan that Kerns and the defendant proposed involved a multifaceted assault on the school to take place the following school year on or near the anniversary of the murders at Columbine High School. Kerns and the defendant, along with Farley, Sullivan, and perhaps one other student, were to shoot and kill targeted students, teachers, and other staff at the school using an assortment of automatic and semiautomatic weapons.

News

Defense rests in Chuck Turner corruption trial

Defense rests in Chuck Turner corruption trialBy Laurel J. Sweet  |   Wednesday, October 27, 2010  |  http://www.bostonherald.com  |  Local Politics Jurors will tomorrow begin deliberating the fate of City Councilor Charles ‘Chuck’ Turner, seen here outside U.S. District court in Boston yesterday, where he is being tried on bribery charges.Photo by Mark Garfinkel Jurors will tomorrow begin deliberating the fate of Charles “Chuck” Turner, whose defense abruptly rested this morning after — over the objection of his attorneys — the city councilor took the witness stand for a second straight day. The brief and sometimes bizarre proceeding concluded with a Turner supporter being removed from the packed federal courtroom by security for standing up and silently mimicking applause. Close arguments will also be presented tomorrow. Outside U.S. District Court in Boston, Turner’s defense lawyer Barry Wilson said, “He should be proud of himself for what he’s done here.” Wilson also railed against federal authorities for trying to take the popular Roxbury pol down on charges he took a $1,000 bribe to help a Boston businessman turned FBI informant obtain a liquor license for a proposed nightclub. “All they tried to do was besmirch a man’s reputation,” Wilson said. “It’s a little hard to not want to get up there (on the witness stand) and not say what you believe.” Though cross-examined for only an hour by assistant U.S. Attorney John T. McNeil, an oft-rambling Turner, 70, was repeatedly rapped today by Judge Douglas P. Woodlock for seemingly evading answering the prosecutor’s questions and for using the hot seat as a soapbox. “I’m just trying to do my job,” Turner frequently said, while artfully peppering his answers with inflammatory phrases such as “sting operation” and “sprung your trap” to characterize his plight. He is accused of attempted extortion and making false statements to the FBI. Turner called the alleged cold-cash handoff by Wilburn “a minister’s handshake” and said he never looked down at what he was being given. He told McNeil, however, he would have thought it “strange” if he had seen money in his hand. Turner acknowledged blogging at one point that President Obama and Vice President Biden may have been part of a conspiracy to unseat him, telling McNeil, “It’s one line of thought. I don’t know if it’s true. It’s worth thinking about.” He also admitted accusing FBI agents who questioned him about informant Ronald Wilburn in August 2007, more than a year before Turner’s arrest, of working for racists and telling them, “If you take out all the corrupt politicians, you take out 90 percent.” At one point, Turner insisted a color photograph McNeil showed him of Wilburn was black and white. Wilson passed on Woodlock’s offer to step in when McNeil was finished. Later, Wilson told reporters, “The jury’s had an opportunity to learn who Mr. Turner is. Mr. Turner did what he felt he had to do. “What people should question is what was going on here. There was no understanding, no agreement, that Mr. Turner was going to do anything beyond his job. That’s what the facts showed before Mr. Turner even addressed the jury.” Former state Sen. Dianne Wilkerson, who Wilburn also took down with bribe money she was infamously photographed stuffing in her bra at a Beacon Hill restaurant, is awaiting sentencing. Article URL: http://www.bostonherald.com/news/politics/view.bg?articleid=1291879

News, Youth

Boston police to review use of force in arrest

Boston police to review use of force in arrest October 27, 2010 http://www.boston.com/news/local/massachusetts/articles/2010/10/27/boston_police_to_review_use_of_force_in_arrest/ BOSTON –Boston Police Commissioner Edward Davis has ordered an internal review to determine whether officers used excessive force to arrest a teenage boy at Roxbury Community College. Davis said Wednesday he ordered the review after video footage of the arrest was posted on YouTube, showing at least one officer punching the 16-year-old and repeatedly using a knee to hit him as he lay face down on the floor, subdued by at least five police officers. The teen is heard screaming and asking the officer why he was hitting him in the back. The internal affairs review will investigate if the force used was reasonable and necessary. Police said the boy was arrested Friday for escaping from a juvenile detention facility and on outstanding warrants. FOR THE VIDEO OF THIS INCIDENT GO TO

News

On stand, Chuck Turner has ‘no memory’ of bribe

On stand, Chuck Turner has ‘no memory’ of bribeBy Richard Weir  |   Wednesday, October 27, 2010  |  http://www.bostonherald.com  |  Local Politics MORE HARM THAN GOOD? Chuck Turner took the stand in his own defense yesterday, denying he accepted a bribe from FBI informant Ronald Wilburn. Legal experts agree he may have been better off not testifying.Photo by Mark Garfinkel Chuck Turner’s decision yesterday to take the witness stand in his corruption trial — only to suffer complete memory loss regarding an alleged bribe in 2007 — was a bold but risky gambit that could sabotage his case, legal experts told the Herald. “In my opinion, it was a damaging move,” said defense attorney and former prosecutor William Kickham. “There is nothing to explain why he would not remember such a memorable event.” Longtime defense lawyer William Gens said Turner would have been more shrewd simply attacking the prosecution’s case, rather than asking jurors to find him believable. “Once you put your client on the stand, you take the presumption of innocence and the burden of proof and throw it out the window because the jury is now thinking … who has the better case,” he said. “If I was his counsel, I would not be too pleased.” Turner was the first witness called in his defense after the prosecution rested. He is on trial in federal court for allegedly taking a $1,000 bribe from Ronald Wilburn in exchange for helping the Roxbury nightclub operator try to score a coveted liquor license for a planned superclub. Wilburn, a reluctant government witness paid nearly $30,000 by FBI agents for his role in the same sting that brought down state Sen. Dianne Wilkerson, testified last week how he secretly videotaped slipping Turner the wad of cash in the councilor’s district office Aug. 3, 2007. Asked by one of his lawyers, John Pavlos, if he took the bribe, Turner said, “Not at all,” adding, “Why would somebody give me that kind of money? It would make such a strange occurrence. It would create a memory.” Under a withering cross-examination by Assistant U.S. Attorney John McNeil, an unflappable Turner repeated over and over that he had no memory of sitting down with Wilburn. “You’ve seen the videotape three times. Are you denying today meeting Mr. Wilburn on Aug. 3, 2007?” McNeil asked. “I have no memory of meeting with him,” Turner said, prompting McNeil to fire back, “Do you have a special blank for Ron Wilburn?” “No,” Turner said. McNeil then grilled Turner about what appears to be the large bills being slipped into his palm. “But something changed hands, Mr. Turner,” McNeil said. “It looks like that. I don’t know. I couldn’t see it,” Turner replied. “I don’t remember what happened that day.” Article URL: http://www.bostonherald.com/news/politics/view.bg?articleid=1291797

News

Unflappable Turner takes the stand

Unflappable Turner takes the standBy Richard Weir  |   Tuesday, October 26, 2010  |  http://www.bostonherald.com  |  Local Politics Photo by Mark Garfinkel It was Chuck Turner’s turn on the stand today and the 70-year-old councilor swore he has no memory of an alleged $1,000 bribe being slipped into his hand by a businessman working for the FBI. Turner, dressed in a suit and purple tie, was unflappable as he denied any culpability in the Aug. 3, 2007, exchange — even under a withering attack from prosecutor John McNeil. McNeil peppered Turner with one question after another about the alleged money transfer between the Roxbury pol and entrepreneur-turned-informant Ronald Wilburn. “Do you have a special blank for Ron Wilburn?” McNeil asked. “No,” Turner said. Asked about being slipped the money — as prosecutors maintain took place and was captured on a hidden camera — Turner said, “I don’t know.” “But something changed hands, Mr. Turner,” McNeil shot back. “It’s looks like that, but I don’t know. I couldn’t see it,” Turner said. When asked about the reported cash bribe by his own attorney John Pavlos, Turner said it left him puzzled and still does. “Why would somebody give me that kind of money?” Turner said. “It would make such a strange occurrence. It would create a memory. “I saw it on the tape,” Turner later said. “It seems like there’s something there … I have no memory of it. The tape was not clear.” Turner is due back on the stand in the morning in U.S. District Court in Boston. Yesterday outside court Wilburn said jurors “will crucify (Turner’s) ass.” When told of Wilburn’s assertions yesterday, Turner said he would leave it up to jurors to decide if he is telling the truth. Article URL: http://www.bostonherald.com/news/politics/view.bg?articleid=1291698

News

Boston Police Commissioner Ed Davis: deviants will ‘pay a price’ Hub murder rate soar

Boston Police Commissioner Ed Davis: deviants will ‘pay a price’Hub murder rate soars CRIME SCENE: A makeshift memorial in the form of graffiti covers the convenience store on Warren Street where a mother of four was gunned down Saturday. By O’Ryan Johnson  |   Wednesday, October 27, 2010  |  http://www.bostonherald.com  |  Local Coverage Photo by Mark GarfinkelAs the city’s grim murder toll climbs, Boston cops are zeroing in on gangbangers to issue one-on-one and group warnings that there will be consequences for gun violence, Boston Police Commissioner Edward Davis said yesterday. “Individuals who do this are going to pay a price,” Davis said. “There has been an uptick in violence and it’s concerning, to say the least. We have been working hard to target those individuals.” Davis said members of the Youth Violence Strike Force, known as the gang squad, have been going face-to-face with the city’s impact players after seven shootings — including three murders — rocked the city last weekend. The homicide toll this year is 59, compared to 41 at the same time last year. The last time there were 59 murdered by this date was 2007, when the city recorded a total of 66 homicides. In 2005, when the city reached a 10-year high with 75 homicides, Boston had notched 58 murders by the end of October. Yesterday, Ethel Berry- visited the Dorchester intersection where the city’s most recent homicide victim, her son Jermaine Berry, 30, was shot and killed Monday. “He was a good dad,” she said of Berry, who was the father of two boys. “He was a good person, too.” Ethel Berry identified her son’s body Monday night after cops came to her door. Detectives slid Crimestoppers pamphlets under the windshield wipers of cars along the street as she spoke feet from where her son was killed. Jermaine Berry had a lengthy arrest record, according to filings at Dorchester District Court. He had seven cases that included a 1997 arrest for assault and battery on a police officer, a 2003 assault and battery charge and a 2006 charge for carrying a firearm without a license. The dispositions of the cases were not available yesterday. Police said Berry was shot about 8 p.m. at Geneva Avenue and Waldeck Street. He was taken to Boston Medical Center, where he was later pronounced dead. A man shot early Saturday morning succumbed to his injuries yesterday, police said. He was not identified. Police said that shooting happened about 1:49 a.m. near Breezeway bar on Blue Hill Avenue. The victim was taken to Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, where he died yesterday. Tahitia Milton, 39, of Roxbury was identified by police as the victim in a Saturday afternoon bloodbath in a Warren Street convenience store. Milton and a man were sprayed by bullets from an assault rifle. A woman who answered the door at Milton’s home yesterday declined comment. Article URL: http://www.bostonherald.com/news/regional/view.bg?articleid=1291802

News

Mom: Shooting ‘one of the most horrific things I have ever seen’

Mom: Shooting ‘one of the most horrific things I have ever seen’By Peter Gelzinis  |   Wednesday, October 27, 2010  |  http://www.bostonherald.com  |  ColumnistsIt has become this city’s latest shrine to savagery. Until last Saturday afternoon, it was a convenience store on Warren Street in Roxbury. Now it’s been hijacked by vigil candles and condolences scrawled in spray paint. Everything from “R.I.P. Mom!” to “Love Neva Dies, Only People Die,” now cover both the front of the store and the surrounding sidewalk. Tahitia Milton, a 39-year-old mother of four, walked to the Quick Stop to pick up a few things Saturday afternoon, only to be cut down by a killer wielding a true weapon of war, an assault rifle. “It was one of the most horrific things I have ever seen,” said one veteran investigator. Every bit as horrific as the sight of three adults and one toddler laying dead in the middle of a Mattapan street. “It’s sad to say, but it’s almost as if people around here have gotten used to the gunshots and seeing people die in the street.” Like Tahitia Milton, the woman who volunteered that observation was also was a mother, who has made the same trip to the Quick Stop many times. “By the time I got down there on Saturday,” she recalled, “they were lifting that gentleman, who I guess was behind the counter in the Quick Stop, out of a car and putting him in the ambulance. It was awful. But lots of people kind of looked at the whole thing as if it was just another episode of ‘Law & Order.’ .” She drives her two children to and from school every day. She does not allow them out of the house unless she knows her kids are under the watchful eyes of a coach or a teacher. “They ask me all the time, ‘Mommy, how come we can’t do this or that like other kids?’ I don’t know what to say to them, except that things are different for us. How am I supposed to tell them what happened to that woman just down the street?” Bouquets of flowers were tucked into the grates that transformed the Quick Stop into a shuttered tomb. Asked how people cope with a neighbor — a mother being slaughtered as she carried a bag of groceries out of a store — the woman simply shook her head. “That lady was somebody’s daughter, somebody’s mother, somebody’s sister,” she sighed. “Sure, there were people who must have seen it all happen. The sun was out. That police substation was two doors away. But it’s easier to go numb than to go to the police. The way things are going now around here, people just don’t think the police can protect them from the kind of stuff that happened in that store. “So, you just try to get on the best way you can,” she said. “You live your life looking over your shoulder. It’s no way to live. But we don’t seem to have a choice. Each shooting seems worse than the one before.” Article URL: http://www.bostonherald.com/news/columnists/view.bg?articleid=1291801

Scroll to Top