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2 Springfield officers acquitted of brutality

2 Springfield officers acquitted of brutality By Associated Press  |   Tuesday, November 30, 2010  |  http://www.bostonherald.com  |  Local Coverage SPRINGFIELD — Two Springfield police officers have been acquitted by a federal jury of brutality charges. The jury on Monday cleared the officers of eight counts each, including using excessive force, false arrest, and depriving the person who brought the suit of his civil rights. In a separate verdict, the jury found the city was not liable for the officers’ conduct. The lawsuit was brought by Tomas Caraballo of Holyoke. He alleged in the suit that patrolmen Ahmad Shariff and Erwin Greene assaulted him at a New Year’s Eve party at a Springfield home in 2006 after he objected to their treatment of another guest. A lawyer for the officers tells The Republican they were pleased with the verdict especially since many of the witnesses were friends of Caraballo. ___ Information from: The Springfield Republican, http://www.masslive.com/news/ Article URL: http://www.bostonherald.com/news/regional/view.bg?articleid=1299847

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200 pounds of cocaine seized in Revere

200 pounds of cocaine seized in Revere By Laura Crimaldi  |   Tuesday, November 30, 2010  |  http://www.bostonherald.com  |  Local Coverage Two men from Mexico and the Domincan Republic are set to be arraigned today in Chelsea District Court after authorities last night seized nearly 200 pounds of cocaine from a trailer in Revere, prosecutors said. Gilberto Cruz Padilla, 24, and Rafael Jesus Montero, 22, are each charged with one count of trafficking 200 grams or more of cocaine, said Jake Wark, a spokesman for Suffolk County District Attorney Daniel F. Conley. Padilla last lived in Tijuana, Mexico and Montero last lived in the Dominican Republic, Wark said. No further information was immediately available about their residency status. U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents were also involved in the arrests, Wark said. Wark said the charge is the most serious that alleged cocaine traffickers can face even though 200 grams represents a fraction of what authorities recovered. Cops seized the drugs on Railroad Street just before 8 p.m. Developing.. Article URL: http://www.bostonherald.com/news/regional/view.bg?articleid=1299841

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City murder count hits 70 for year

City murder count hits 70 for year By Herald staff  |   Tuesday, November 30, 2010  |  http://www.bostonherald.com  |  Local Coverage A 36-year-old man was shot to death in Dorchester last night, inching the city’s murder total to nearly a 10-year high. The man was gunned down about 5:40 p.m. on Crowell Street, where neighbors said they heard between five and seven gunshots. The man was struck by at least one bullet and taken to Boston Medical Center, where he was pronounced dead. His death brings the city’s homicide total to 70. The 10-year high was 75 murders, which was reached in 2005. Anyone with information about last night’s shooting is urged to call Crimestoppers at 800-494-8477, or text message the word “tip” to CRIME (27463). Article URL: http://www.bostonherald.com/news/regional/view.bg?articleid=1299765

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Final victim of pizzeria massacre laid to rest

Final victim of pizzeria massacre laid to restBy Natalie Sherman  |   Tuesday, November 30, 2010  |  http://www.bostonherald.com  |  Local Coverage Funeral services for Ariel Dume, one of the victims from last weeks shooting at the Same Old Place pizza restaurant in Jamaica Plain.Photo by Ted Fitzgerald The last of three men killed in a knife and gun fight at a Jamaica Plain pizzeria was buried yesterday morning, after a funeral at Sacred Heart Church in Roslindale. The gathering yesterday morning for Ariel Dume, 20, of Roxbury drew about 70 people and was “subdued,” said The Rev. John Mendicoa, who delivered the homily “They were very quiet, even in the funeral home,” Mendicoa said, referring to the wake held at Brady Fallon Funeral Home the night before, “The family itself — you could see the pain, especially his mother, Betty.” Dume’s uncle spoke during the service to say the family loved him and that he was now in a better place, according to Mendicoa. “He had to interrupt himself several times because he started to cry,” Mendicoa said. Police say Dume shot and killed Winzisky Soto, 27, and Johnnel “Bo” Cruz, 20, both of Jamaica Plain, after Cruz stabbed him during a gang confrontation Nov. 21 at the Same Old Place, a popular Centre Street pizza shop. The bullets wreaked havoc in the pizzeria, piercing walls, shattering a window, and grazing a woman who happened to be walking nearby. Mendicoa said Sunday’s noon mass at Sacred Heart Church—where Soto’s family also gathered to mourn their loss—will be held in memory of all three men. “It was a very tragic thing,” Mendicoa said. “If the young people don’t carry guns, these things don’t happen. But if you carry guns, you’re going to use them, that is the problem.” Article URL: http://www.bostonherald.com/news/regional/view.bg?articleid=1299767

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Police: T driver attacked after rebuking woman changing clothes

Police: T driver attacked after rebuking woman changing clothesBy Richard Weir  |   Tuesday, November 30, 2010  |  http://www.bostonherald.com  |  Local Coverage Natacha Andre.Photo by Herald file A 36-year-old homeless woman was ordered held on $5,000 bail yesterday after police said she attacked an MBTA bus driver in Mattapan, spitting in her face and smacking her with a metal pipe after the operator told her she couldn’t change her clothes on the bus. Natacha Andre, 36, is charged with assault and battery and wrongful interference with the operation of an MBTA vehicle following Sunday’s 12:30 p.m. tirade that sent the driver to a hospital to be treated for bruises and a sprained left arm, according to a police report. It is the second time in as many weeks that violence erupting on the T has led to arrests and injuries. On Nov. 19, Carlos Espinoza, 28, of Brighton was charged with assault and battery with a dangerous weapon — a 1.7 liter tequila bottle — following a fight on a Green Line trolley on Commonwealth Avenue. Police said after assaulting and threatening two men and a woman, all from Waltham, Espinoza then smashed the bottle over one of the men’s faces, slicing his lip. Sunday’s mayhem broke out when Andre boarded the Route 31 bus without paying and, after being ordered by the driver to come up front and fork over her fare, returned to the back of the bus and repeatedly rang the bell, police said. The driver then noticed Andre removing her clothes and “told her that she could not change her clothes on the bus,” the report said. Once off the bus, Andre allegedly brandished a “long metal pipe” and struck the side of the bus before smacking the driver through an open window, hitting her left arm, the report said. Article URL: http://www.bostonherald.com/news/regional/view.bg?articleid=1299740

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Two from eatery killing laid to rest

Two from eatery killing laid to restBy Marie Szaniszlo  |   Sunday, November 28, 2010  |  http://www.bostonherald.com  |  Local Coverage GRIEF: Distraught family and friends leave Sacred Heart Church in Roslindale after a funeral Mass for Winzisky Soto.Photo by Jim Michaud The wife and two young daughters of one of three men killed last Sunday in a shootout and knife fight at a Jamaica Plain pizzeria bid a tearful farewell to him yesterday. “Thank you for being a great dad to my girls,” Carolina Quinchia Soto said, standing before dozens of mourners at Sacred Heart Church in Roslindale with her daughters, Jazebel and Isabella. “You left me the most precious gift. You left me my girls. For that, I love you.” “I love you,” the girls said, repeating after her. Then their mother kissed 27-year-old Winzisky Soto’s coffin goodbye. Soto and Johnnel “Bo” Cruz, 20, both of Jamaica Plain, and Ariel Dume, 20, of Roxbury were killed about 7:30 p.m. Nov. 21 during an alleged confrontation between rival gang members at the Same Old Place, a popular Centre Street pizza shop. Cruz allegedly stabbed Dume, who then shot him and Soto. One bullet cracked a mirrored wall inside the pizzeria, another pierced a wall separating the dining area from the kitchen, and a third shattered the restaurant’s window. That bullet grazed a woman who happened to be walking nearby with two other women. The killings prompted Suffolk District Attorney Daniel F. Conley and other civic leaders to call for peace. Yesterday, funeral Masses were celebrated for Soto and Cruz. “We pray that Winzisky is in heaven, that the Lord will use him as an agent for peace and that people will work for peace in his memory,” the Rev. Charles Bourque said at Sacred Heart Church. Hardened gangbangers wept and took off their baseball caps as they ushered Soto’s body into the church. Afterward, a hearse with American and Dominican flags took his body to Mount Hope Cemetery. Dume’s funeral will be at 10 a.m. tomorrow at Sacred Heart Church in Roslindale. Article URL: http://www.bostonherald.com/news/regional/view.bg?articleid=1299309

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Fugitive Apprehension Team profiles

Fugitive Apprehension Team profilesBy O’Ryan Johnson  |   Friday, November 26, 2010  |  http://www.bostonherald.com  |  Local Coverage ‘WE RELY ON THEM’: Fugitive Apprehension Team members officer Steve Ridge, left, and team leader Sgt. Detective Brian Albert, right, have taken down some of Boston’s most notorious and dangerous fugitives.Photo by Mark Garfinkel EDDIE HERNANDEZ Officer Eddie Hernandez learned Spanish from his grandmother. He says he likes to blend into the background when the team enters a Spanish-speaking home, listening quietly in case anyone inside thinks they can get something past the cops. The lifelong Dorchester resident said getting up early to work for his father, a contractor, gave him a strong work ethic that is tested during round-the-clock stakeouts. STEVE RIDGE Boston police Officer Steve Ridge developed the ability to spot a liar while working as a U.S. Customs Agent at Logan International Airport. He said he learned how to detect who was carrying drugs or smuggled goods by recognizing the mannerisms of deception, skills he declined to share. He said the knack comes in handy when confronting friends and loved ones of violent felons who may try to conceal a fugitive’s whereabouts. But he said it’s ruined crime TV for him — the skills used by Hollywood cops who pretend to spot liars are a little laughable. BRIAN ALBERT Two decades ago, Sgt. Detective Brian Albert led Marines from behind a Humvee-mounted .50 caliber machine gun during Operation Desert Storm. After the Marine Corps, he worked as a Suffolk sheriff’s deputy guarding prisoners, a job that taught him how to search a room and a person, as well as how to talk to people from different backgrounds. Now a Boston cop and head of the Fugitive Apprehension Team, he carries a much lighter .40 caliber Glock. After being tapped while a member of the BPD gang unit to organize the fugitive squad, Albert handpicked his team members. He said he chose cops with people skills, since most of the job involves talking people into opening doors and telling them where the bad guys are. Article URL: http://www.bostonherald.com/news/regional/view.bg?articleid=1298946

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Elite cops track Boston’s most wanted fugitives Bad boys, whatcha gonna do?

Elite cops track Boston’s most wanted fugitivesBad boys, whatcha gonna do?By O’Ryan Johnson  |   Friday, November 26, 2010  |  http://www.bostonherald.com  |  Local Coverage Sgt. Detective Brian Albert, right, leads the Fugitive Apprehension Team, which has taken down some of Boston’s most notorious and dangerous fugitives.Photo by Mark Garfinkel These Hub cops have tracked down and slapped cuffs on the city’s most notorious fugitives, including the Craigslist Killer and Edward Corliss, the man accused of killing Jamaica Plain clerk Surendra Dangol. Their latest collars? The two men charged in the Mattapan massacre. “I would like criminals to know if you commit a crime, the police are going to be looking for you,” said Sgt. Detective Brian Albert. “It doesn’t matter if you go out of the city, out of the state or out of the country. You’re better off turning yourself in to face the music.” Albert commands the Fugitive Apprehension Team, a 12-member joint squad of Boston cops and U.S. Marshals that has been to at least 14 states, as well as Trinidad and Canada, in pursuit of wanted men and women, using some of the most advanced technology available to capture suspects on the run for murder, rapes and shootings in Boston. The team was formed in 2007, handpicked by Albert largely from BPD’s gang unit. During the round-the-clock hunt for the suspects in the Sept. 28 Mattapan murders, cops zeroed in on Kimani Washington’s Manchester, N.H., hideout. The team got the floor plan to the apartment building, cleared out the units beside Washington’s and had local SWAT teams with eyes on the apartment before they hit the door. They declined to discuss the arrest of murder suspect Dwayne Moore, saying it remains a grand jury investigation, but they described the kind of rigorous preparation they use in each case to keep cops safe and put crooks behind bars. After a tip pointed to a possible Roxbury hideout earlier this week, officer Steve Ridge keyed in the license plates of cars around the building. “We know who owns the house, how much they pay in taxes, how they vote — Democrat. We know the square footage. We should have the whole layout of the place before we go in,” Ridge said, eyeing his laptop screen. That house turned out to be a dead end. That’s not always the case. Last March, a tight huddle of plainclothes cops stood in a Dorchester parking lot at dawn, passing around photos of Schuyler Oppenheimer, 19, a convicted drug dealer — each showing a different hairstyle. Oppenheimer was wanted for a shooting in Cambridge. Team members pulled up to the home — already under surveillance by U.S. Marshals John Bianci and Joseph Norton — and formed up to go in while other officers took up well-rehearsed positions around the house. Boston police officer Eddie Hernandez and transit police Detective Charles Collins moved to the back. A woman reluctantly let a group of officers in the front door. Moments later, there was a commotion at the back, and a disheveled Oppenheimer was escorted out by Hernandez and Collins. It is one of hundreds of arrests the team has made this year. Boston police Commissioner Edward Davis credits them with helping to drive down overall crime numbers — though murders are up sharply for the year — by quickly nabbing “impact” players. “They’re so effective and so fast at finding people,” Davis said. “The great thing about the fugitive unit is that they have connections outside the criminal justice world that help them do their job, They’ve had really good luck with running down people in other countries. We rely on them.” Article URL: http://www.bostonherald.com/news/regional/view.bg?articleid=1298947

News

‘We need a season of peace’

‘We need a season of peace’By Laurel J. Sweet  |   Friday, November 26, 2010  |  http://www.bostonherald.com  |  Local Coverage The Rev. Jefferey Brown, of the TenPoint Coalition, speaks to the press on Thanksgiving in front of the Quick Stop market, the scene of an October murder. He announced a campaign called ‘Season of Peace.’Photo by Mark Garfinkel Standing in unity before the shuttered superette where a Roxbury mother buying groceries was cut down last month by an AK-47-wielding maniac, local ministers, police and prosecutors yesterday called on Hub thugs to brush the chips off their shoulders and lay down their guns this holiday season. “We need peace,” said the Rev. Jeffrey Brown, executive director of the Boston TenPoint Coalition. “We are tired of the random violence. We are tired of grandmothers getting shot. We are tired of children getting shot. We are tired.” It is the fourth consecutive year city officials have appealed to common decency to silence the gunfire, but with the homicide toll at 69 and five weeks left in the year, “if ever we needed a season of peace, this is it,” Suffolk District Attorney Daniel Conley said. Murders have skyrocketed by a staggering 60 percent since this time last year, when the city recorded 45 homicides, according to Boston police. The last few months of the decade have been marred by mass carnage, including the senseless slayings of shopkeepers and Richel Nova, the Domino’s pizza deliveryman hacked to death allegedly by youths in an empty Hyde Park house for the change in his pockets and the hot meal in his hands. Citing “an attitude of indifference,” Brown said the rising death toll isn’t just about gangs and drugs, “but issues of anger, of rage.” Tahitia “Tye” Milton, 39, was headed for the door of the Quick Stop convenience store on Warren Street in Roxbury on Oct. 23 when a still-at-large madman gunned her down and sprayed the neighborhood market with bullets from an assault rifle. The owner was also hit, but survived. This year’s Season of Peace theme, Turn Your Back Against Violence, will be featured on cards and billboards gracing the sides of MBTA buses and subway cars and distributed to small businesses. “The message is, we need a break,” transit police Chief Paul MacMillan said. “We need a season of peace.” Article URL: http://www.bostonherald.com/news/regional/view.bg?articleid=1298942

News, Youth

Massacre described in detail

Massacre described in detailBy Laurel J. Sweet  |   Wednesday, November 24, 2010  |  http://www.bostonherald.com  |  Local Coverage ‘EMBRACE EACH OTHER’: The Rev. William Dickerson, center, prays with friends and family of the 4 people gunned down in the Mattapan massacre, including Patricia Washum-Bennett, mother of Levaughn Washum-Garrison, and her husband, James BennePhoto by Mark Garfinkel The massacre that rocked the city this fall was a cold-blooded execution over a drug robbery, prosecutors said yesterday, detailing for the first time the chilling sequence of events that left a toddler and three other bodies strewn in a Mattapan street. “We promised not to rest until all the facts were known. With these charges, we’re significantly closer to that goal. But whatever satisfaction we may take in that knowledge pales in comparison to the pain etched on so many faces in Dorchester District Court,” Suffolk District Attorney Daniel Conley said in a statement after 33-year-old Dwayne Moore was ordered held without bail by Judge James Coffey. The unemployed Moore — who did not show his face in court — is charged with four counts of murder for the shooting deaths of his former roommate Simba Martin, 21, Martin’s girlfriend, Eyanna Louise Flonory, 21, her 2-year-old son, Amanihoteph Smith, and Levaughn Washum-Garrison, 22, shortly after 1:15 a.m. Sept. 28. Public defender John Amabile entered not guilty pleas on Moore’s behalf. On the fateful night, Moore and a con he befriended in state prison, Kimani Washington, went to Martin’s home armed “for the purpose of robbing him,” prosecutor Edmond Zabin said. Moore, he said, had shared the place over the summer and “knew the apartment intimately and that drugs and cash could be found there.” Moore tried to bring Martin outside when Marcus Hurd, 32, drove up and Martin came out to meet him. Then, Zabin said, the defendants forced both victims inside at gunpoint and stripped them naked in the apartment — where they found Washum-Garrison, Flonory and her son. After robbing the home of a safe, cash and drugs, Moore and Washington marched the five victims up to Woolson Street, where all of them were shot multiple times, Zabin said. Hurd survived but remains in critical condition. Washington has been held on $1 million bail since his October arraignment on gun and drug charges. Moore was tracked down by cops after a grand jury witness testified to seeing a gun in his hand during the robbery. He was arrested Monday night at the Morton Street apartment — opposite the District B-3 police station — where he’d been living since the shootings. After his arrest, Moore cowered in the corner of a police interview room and whimpered to detectives, “I can’t do this, I can’t go back to jail. You’re going to have to kill me,” according to court documents. Moore is classified in court records as a “career criminal” with arrests dating to 1991 for armed robbery, armed carjacking and assault and battery. He was convicted in 1996 of stabbing and plunging a knife through the neck of 17-year-old Keema Braxton of Milton on Aug. 11, 1995, to settle an argument outside a Mattapan party. Moore was charged with first-degree murder, but convicted by a jury of manslaughter. He served out his 15-year sentence and according to the Department of Correction, was released from prison April 13 — just five months before the murders. Yesterday in Dorchester District Court, family and friends of the massacre victims wore buttons and T-shirts honoring their dead. “Let them, Lord God, be able to embrace each other and celebrate the lives they left behind,” said the Rev. William Dickerson as he gathered the families around him in the courthouse lobby for a Thanksgiving prayer. Article URL: http://www.bostonherald.com/news/regional/view.bg?articleid=1298534

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