Suffolk County DA & BPD Release 2015 Homicide Report
Report on homicides committed, solved, and adjudicated in the City of Boston
Report on homicides committed, solved, and adjudicated in the City of Boston
Forum topic: What happens after an officer involved shooting?
A Boston Herald article by Richard Weir entitled “Campaign offices clustered” notes how the offices of the 12 Candidates in the mayors race cluster in certain neihgborhoods while totally missing others. “The dozen mayoral hopefuls have skipped over entire sections of the city when setting up shop, raising eyebrows among political activists there who feel their neighborhoods have been neglected.” We have made a map of all the candidate offices and you can see some are pretty stacked up: View 2013 Boston Mayoral Race – Campaign Offices in a larger map Felix G. Arroyo: South End – (Headquarters) 801A Tremont St. Jamaica Plain – 3353 Washington St. Jamaica Plain, Hyde Square – 370 Centre St. Hyde Park – 55 Fairmount Ave. East Boston – 33 Maverick Square John F. Barros: Dorchester, Uphams Corner – 580 Columbia Rd. Charles L. Clemons Jr.: Roxbury, Dudley Square – 1127 Harrison Ave. Daniel F. Conley: Jamaica Plain – (Headquarters) 14 Hyde Park Ave West Roxbury – 1783 Centre St. South Boston – 753 East Broadway (2nd floor) John R. Connolly: Roslindale – (Headquarters) 156-162 Belgrade Ave. Charlestown – 295 Main St. Mattapan – 90 River St. Rob Consalvo Hyde Park – (Headquarters) 678 Truman Parkway Mattapan – 1665 Blue Hill Ave. East Boston – 982 Bennington St. Charlotte Golar Richie: Dorchester, Ashmont – (Headquarters) 1953 Dorchester Ave. Hyde Park – 73 Fairmount Ave. Dorchester – 393 Columbia Rd. Roxbury – 157 Dudley Street Jamaica Plain – 315 Centre St. Mission Hill – 1536 Tremont St. East Boston – 18 Meridian St. Michael P. Ross: South Boston – 9 West Broadway Martin J. Walsh: Dorchester – (Headquarters) 100 Hallet St. Allston/Brighton – 576 Washington St. East Boston – 973 Saratoga St. Hyde Park – 614 Hyde Park Ave. Jamaica Plain – 668 Centre St. Mattapan – 1539 Blue Hill Ave. South Boston – 653 E Broadway Ave. Bill Walczak: Dorchester, Fields Corner – 1370 Dorchester Ave. David James Wyatt: No formal campaign headquarters. Candidate operates out of his Roxbury home. Charles C. Yancey: Roxbury – 2201 Washington St. Sources: Herald Article Herald List
“THIS GUY IS RUNNING FOR CITY COUNCIL?!?!” The answer is YES.
What we are asserting is the simple question: What about us?
Due to his downright disrespect of our fine community he has been labeled as a desperado and dubbed “Dirty Dan” if you see this fugitive from common sense remember he is NOT WANTED.
If residents need an outlet for their anger, they’d find a natural fit in campaigning against Suffolk County District Attorney Dan Conley, who is running at the head of the mayoral pack.
As Suffolk County DA Dan Conley has been making the rounds for his Mayoral campaign he has been touting a plan to make changes in the state’s gun laws.
The Blackstonian has obtained the complete version of the 26 point proposal from DA Dan Conley which you can examine below.
Suffolk DA urges drug-money dispersal Associated Press / July 11, 2011 Suffolk District Attorney Daniel Conley is asking nonprofit organizations to apply for a program that takes money seized from drug dealers and reinvests it in groups that help young people avoid drugs, gangs, and other risky activity. Award recipients are selected each year by an independent panel of county residents appointed by Conley. The program will award a total of $50,000 this year. State law allows up to 10 percent of money from the auctions of drug dealers’ property and confiscated funds to be returned to the community. Conley’s program has awarded hundreds of thousands of dollars in seized drug money to dozens of youth groups, community centers, and social service agencies. The deadline for applications is Aug. 19. FULL STORY HERE http://www.boston.com/news/local/massachusetts/articles/2011/07/11/suffolk_da_urges_drug_money_dispersal/
Officers who shot suspect cleared By Travis Andersen Globe Staff / June 25, 2011 A Boston police officer and a state trooper who shot an armed man on a Dorchester street in April last year have been cleared of any wrongdoing, after it was determined that they acted in self-defense and that the victim turned his gun on himself, authorities said yesterday. In a letter yesterday to the heads of State and Boston police, Suffolk District Attorney Daniel F. Conley, whose office investigates all violent deaths in the county including fatal shootings involving police, wrote that responding authorities were justified in shooting the victim, Manuel DaVeiga, 19, who died. “A comprehensive and objective examination of all the evidence in this case revealed that Mr. DaVeiga opened fire on [responding officers and troopers] and, in the ensuing exchange of gunfire, took his own life,’’ Conley wrote. FULL STORY HERE: http://www.boston.com/news/local/massachusetts/articles/2011/06/25/police_cleared_in_shooting_of_suspect_in_dorchester/?p1=News_links