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Man stabbed to death in South End

Man stabbed to death in South End By James Hinton  |   Sunday, July 31, 2011  |  http://www.bostonherald.com |  Local Coverage A man believed to be in his 20s was stabbed to death in the South End early yesterday morning. At 4:41 a.m., officers responded to the area of 25 Trotter Court for a person on the ground. On arrival, officers found the victim suffering from several stab wounds. He was tended to by EMS paramedics, who pronounced him dead at the scene. Police did not release the man’s identity. “It’s still an active investigation,” said Officer Eddy Chrispin. “No suspects are in custody, but we’re looking for members of the public to contact us directly or call our tip line.” Anyone with information is asked to call the Homicide Unit at (617) 343-4470 or deliver an anonymous tip via CrimeStoppers Tip Line at 1(800) 494-TIPS or by texting the word ‘TIP’ to CRIME (27463). Article URL: http://www.bostonherald.com/news/regional/view.bg?articleid=1355469  

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Galpal charged in fatal stab claims self-defense

Galpal charged in fatal stab claims self-defenseBy Natalie Sherman  |   Tuesday, March 1, 2011  |  http://www.bostonherald.com  |  Local Coverage Photo by Donald Rockhead A 23-year-old man was stabbed to death by accident when he ran into a knife his girlfriend had grabbed in self-defense, she is contending. Police found Lancelot Reid stabbed to death shortly after 10 a.m. Friday, after rushing to an apartment in the Franklin Field Housing Development after a 911 call. Girlfriend Cherry Clinton, 29, allegedly admitted to the stabbing at the scene, but said she grabbed the knife in self-defense because Reid had assaulted her earlier in the day, according to the Suffolk District Attorney’s Office. But prosecutors said there’s little chance the blade plunged accidentally into Reid’s chest. A knife could not make it through several layers of clothing and into a heart without force being used, Assistant District Attorney Ian Polumbaum said at Clinton’s arraignment yesterday — her 29th birthday — in Dorchester District Court. A not guilty plea to the murder charge was entered on Clinton’s behalf. Neighbors told the Herald last week that they regularly heard the couple fighting. At least five people have died from domestic violence so far this year, Toni Troop, a spokeswoman for the victim’s advocacy program Jane Doe Inc., told the Herald last week. Of those, two of the alleged perpetrators are women who said they were acting in self-defense, Troop said. Clinton’s lawyer, John Cunha, did not respond to requests for comment yesterday. Judge Kenneth Desmond ordered Clinton held without bail. She is due back in court March 31. Article URL: http://www.bostonherald.com/news/regional/view.bg?articleid=1320125

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20 YEAR HOMICIDE REPORT – ALL NEW UPDATED!!!

BLACKSTONIAN EXCLUSIVE!!! The Blackstonian proudly presents the All-New Updated version of the20 YEAR HOMICIDE REPORT!!The information is now sortable and visually charted to enhance the brilliant research conducted by Darrin Howell Office of District 7 City Council In Boston, MA between 1989 and 2008 there were 1,465 homicides. The 20 Year Homicide Report presents and compares homicide numbers by Month & Year, Victim Age, Police District, Arrest Information and Court Information. This survey was developed by The Office of Chuck Turner District 7 City Councilor and researched and compiled by Darrin Howell, Director of Constituent Services. Not all information is availabile for all years. The web site you are looking at was created by Jacob Leidolf to visualize the findings of the report. It is hosted courtesy of Blackstonian.com. CLICK HERE TO VIEW20 YEAR HOMICIDE REPORThttp://www.blackstonian.com/20yearhomicidereport/

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City’s ’10 tally: 72 homicides, most unsolved

City’s ’10 tally: 72 homicides, most unsolved By Maria CramerGlobe Staff / December 31, 2010 Boston had 72 homicides in 2010With just one day to go before the end of the year, only 27 of the 72 killings reported, about 38 percent, had been solved as of yesterday. FULL STORY HEREhttp://www.boston.com/news/local/massachusetts/articles/2010/12/31/bostons_2010_tally_72_homicides_most_unsolved/?p1=News_links

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Murder arrest eases pain of victim’s family

Murder arrest eases pain of victim’s family Ann Whitley holds pic of her son, Thomas.By Colneth Smiley Jr.  |   Saturday, December 4, 2010  |  http://www.bostonherald.com  |  Local Coverage Relatives of a Roxbury murder victim yesterday expressed anger but relief at the capture of the suspect allegedly responsible for stabbing the 30-year-old dad of four last month. “Justice is definitely being served,” Ann Whitley said after attending the Thursday arraignment of Tajuan Holloman, 39, of Dorchester for the murder of her son, Thomas Whitley. “He took a life so he should serve life.” Relatives said Whitley was well known in the neighborhood as a worker for the family’s restaurant, Ray’s Soul Food, which is now closed. But he was best known for being a loving father to his children, ages 2, 3, 5 and 10. “There’s four children that’s gonna grow up angry and hard because they don’t have their father,” Whitley’s aunt Shondell Davis said. “Thomas was really funny and really involved in his kids’ lives, always trying to provide for them.” Holloman is being held without bail. “I want the capture of this suspect to mean something,” said Dorothy Whitley, 27, one of the victim’s four siblings. “Hopefully, people who kill will realize that they will be found.” Witnesses at the scene told the family that Whitley’s last words Nov. 6 were “take care of my kids.” Proceeds from the Thomas Whitley Memorial Fund at Citizens Bank will go toward his children. Article URL: http://www.bostonherald.com/news/regional/view.bg?articleid=1300701

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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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Boston Ten Point's Season of Peace?!?

Blackstonian EditorialJamarhl Crawford Publisher/Editor The Boston Ten Point Coalition under the leadership of Rev. Jeffrey Brown has for the past several years promoted a “Season of Peace” through flyers and ads on MBTA buses.  This begs the question: Exactly what is the Season of Peace. Questions are many, answers are few. As a researcher I found it troubling that besides the flyers and bus ads, i can’t get any information on exactly what this Season of Peace is. There is no information on what Peace is or how to achieve it, very little or misleading contact information, the flyer directs you to the 10 point website http://bostontenpoint.org and one year’s flyer had the 10 Point’s office number on it 617-524-4331 but after several calls with no response and after discovering that unless you call between 9am – 5pm you will get an answering machine with not so much as a separate box for the Season of Peace. If I was a youth who was on my way to committ a murderous act and all of a sudden a MBTA bus goes by with the Season of Peace ad on it and I was moved, what would be my next step. The ad gives no information, no instruction on how to achieve peace and a call to the office will most likely go unanswered.  The Rev. Jeffrey Brown has for years promoted this campaign and talked about it in conjunction with neighborhood walks through Boston’s “hot spots”. As a resident of Humboldt Avenue, known as H-Block, and after speaking with many of my friends from other Hot Spots across the city, no one has seen the Reverend or the Season of Peace campaign, except on TV when Brown is conducting Press Conferences or on the MBTA ads. Other than that no one seems to know what the Season of Peace is all about or what work Rev. Brown is doing. On Thanksgiving Day, Thursday November 25th, Rev. Brown held a press conference announcing this years “Season of Peace” in front of the Warren St. Quick Stop convenience store which was the site of a daylight AK-47 shooting which resulted in the death of Mother of four, Tahitia Milton and the shooting of the store’s owner on Oct. 23rd. Why would Rev. Brown choose this store, over a month later to hold a press conference announcing the latest annual incarnation of the Ten Point campaign? Has Rev. Brown reached out to the families of the victims of that tragedy? Is Rev. Brown somehow involved in the community response to this instance of senseless violence? The Blackstonian encourages all of its readers to conduct your own research and draw your own conclusions. What is the Season of Peace? Below you will see what the Ten Point Coalition has on its website regarding the Season of Peace. from:  http://www.bostontenpoint.org/seasonofpeace.htmlSeason of Peace Season of Peace campaigns are designed to promote anti-violence. This project was launched to send a consistent message of peace to youth who were involved in the violence. The efforts of community members, churches, community organizations, police, probation, transportation department, schools, and youth detention facilities helped decrease violence across the city. The media campaign used symbols and slogans youth use in daily conversations to communicate that violence is not the answer to deal with conflict.The second part of the Season of Peace is the neighborhood walks component which galvanizes our partners to walk through troubled areas of the city to engage youth and families.

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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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Cops: Gang war sparked JP shootout 3 dead shatters calm at pizzeria

Cops: Gang war sparked JP shootout3 dead shatters calm at pizzeriaBy Richard Weir  |   Tuesday, November 23, 2010  |  http://www.bostonherald.com  |  Local Coverage Photo by Angela RowlingsAn apparent grudge match between warring gang members left three men dead, police and friends said yesterday as a usually tranquil Jamaica Plain neighborhood reeled in the wake of the pizza-parlor blood bath. “We have not seen this kind of violence around here for a long time. I have not seen it ever in the center part of JP,” said state Rep. Liz Malia, a 40-year Jamaica Plain resident, as she sat at a table yesterday inside the popular Same Old Place pizza shop — scene of Sunday’s deadly rampage. The outbreak of violence in the family-friendly Centre Street area spurred vows of a quick response by law enforcement. “That type of incident is unusual in a typically quiet neighborhood. However, incidents like that are not acceptable on any street in the city,” said BPD spokeswoman Elaine Driscoll, adding that any “individuals who associate with these three should anticipate a significant amount of aggressive enforcement coming their way.” Gangs have long warred in the Jackson and Egleston Square areas of Jamaica Plain, but the neighborhood’s gentrified downtown has been immune from shootouts. That changed around 7:30 p.m. Sunday, when members of rivaling blocks stumbled across each other at the scruffy, 37-year-old pizzeria, police said. One slug left a spider’s web of cracks in a mirrored wall, another bullet pierced a wall separating the dining area from the kitchen and a third shattered the restaurant’s window. That bullet — or shrapnel — grazed the wife of Boston labor lawyer Alan Shapiro, who happened to be walking nearby with two other women. She’s fine,” said Shapiro, adding his wife — whose name is being withheld by the Herald at the request of her family — was grazed but treated and released from Faulkner Hospital. Pizza shop owner Fred Ciampa, who was not working, said his staff told him they did not know the three men involved in the fight before. “Nothing like this has ever happened before,” he said. “We’re like an institution here. Everybody knows us.” Boston police released few details yesterday on what triggered the outburst, other than that all three male victims had arrest records and were involved in gangs. “The altercation began inside and made its way outside,” Driscoll said. “One individual pulled out a knife. The other individual pulled out a gun and was able to shoot the two other individuals.” The 20-year-old who wielded the knife, identified by his friends and a police source as Johnnel “Bo” Cruz Nova of Jamaica Plain, managed to fatally stab his 20-year-old foe before that man fatally shot him and mortally wounded his 28-year-old friend. Eric Vila, 21, a tattoo artist, said he bumped into Cruz Nova as the two friends ordered pizza at Same Old Place moments before the shootings. They talked about expanding the tattoo of a .38 snub-nosed revolver on his friend’s right arm. “He told me, ‘I’m trying to do my whole arm. I want to put ‘Money, respect, power, with a whole bunch of gunsmoke. Can you do that?’ I told him no problem. See me tomorrow. … I said, ‘You be careful,’ ” recalled Vila, who left the pizzeria to go to a 7-Eleven, only to get a phone call minutes later that his pal had been shot. Article URL: http://www.bostonherald.com/news/regional/view.bg?articleid=1298288

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