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Campaign eyes Mass. redistricting, minority voting

Monday, March 28, 2011

Campaign eyes Mass. redistricting, minority voting
By Associated Press  |   Monday, March 28, 2011  |  http://www.bostonherald.com  |  Local Politics

BOSTON — A coalition of advocates has launched a campaign to strengthen the voting power of Massachusetts’ Latinos, blacks and Asian Americans during redistricting efforts.

The "Drawing Democracy Project" will urge residents to attend statewide hearing dates on redistricting and put pressure on state officials as they redraw voting district lines.

Common Cause, MassVote and Oiste (oh-EE’-steh) — a group that trains Latinos to run for office — are part of the campaign.

Minority advocates have complained that previous redistricting plans packed minority groups together and weakened their voting potential.

The project comes after census data showed significant population increases among blacks, Latinos and Asian-Americans in Massachusetts.

A 24-member panel is redrawing the state’s congressional districts to reflect the loss of one seat in the U.S. House due to population shifts.

Article URL: http://www.bostonherald.com/news/politics/view.bg?articleid=1326623
READ MORE - Campaign eyes Mass. redistricting, minority voting

Important Public Information Phone Numbers

GTNA PUBLIC INFORMATION PHONE LIST
 Important Phone Numbers

DEPARTMENT/SUBJECT PHONE 
All Numbers Prefix (617)

Car Tow Lot 635-3900
Airplane Noise Complaints 561-3333 (Massport)
Animal Control 635-5349
Rodent Control 635-5352
Assessing 635-4264/4287
Code Enforcement 635-4896
Community Centers 635-4920
Consumer Complaint (City) 635-3834
Consumer Complaint (State) 727-8400
Elderly Affairs Commission 635-4366
Elections 635-4634
Electricity Issues 1-800-592-2000
Report Gas Leak 617-469-2300
Homebuyer Information 635-4663
Home Improvement Program 635-0600 (Loans & Grants)
ISD Building Issues 961-3268
ISD Housing & Sanitary 635-5322
Jobs and Community Services 918-5200
Landlord & Tenant Mediation 635-4200
Licensing 635-4165/4170
Mayor's Office/24-Hour Service 635-4500
MBTA Complaints 222-5215
MBTA Information 222-3200
Minority Business Enterprise 635-4084
Neighborhood Services 635-3485
Parks and Recreation 635-4505
Police Area B-2 343-4270
Police Head Quarters 343-4200
Registry of Motor Vehicles 351-4500
School Department 635-9000
Snow Removal 635-7560
State House 727-2121
Street Cleaning 635-7555
Street Lighting 635-7500
Street Repair 635-4963
Transportation 635-4680
Trash Pick-Up, Public Works 635-4941, 635-7555, 635-7573
Water and Sewer 989-7000
Zoning Board of Appeals 635-4775

Information provided by:
Garrison-Trotter Neighborhood Association
P.O. Box 191938, Roxbury 02119
READ MORE - Important Public Information Phone Numbers

Darryl Williams’ legacy of love lives on

Darryl Williams’ legacy of love lives on

By Joe Fitzgerald  |   Monday, March 28, 2011  |  http://www.bostonherald.com  |  Columnists

He was one of this city’s noblest sons, rising above the bitterness that could have further paralyzed him during the 31 years he lived as a quadriplegic after a sniper randomly shot him from a rooftop in Charlestown.

Darryl Williams was a 15-year-old wide receiver that September afternoon in 1979, playing for Jamaica Plain High School. After making a spectacular catch to end the first half, he stood on the sidelines, awaiting the third quarter.

“Coach (Tom) Richardson had just told me how thrilled he was with the way I was playing,” he once recalled. “I felt like I owned the world . . . and then everything went dark.”

When doctors told him of the devastating nature of his injury, “I cried mightily,” he later admitted.

But with the passage of time came a remarkable acceptance.

“I began to see a bigger picture,” he said. “After meeting so many able-bodied people who appeared miserable, I came to look at my injury as a badge of courage from God, as if He must have thought I could deal with this better than they could.”

He became a gifted motivational speaker, employing a very special prop. Twelve years after the shooting, his neurologist had removed the bullet from his neck, hoping it might give him a bit more range of motion.

“He asked if I wanted to see it,” Darryl recalled. “As I looked at this twisted piece of metal, I realized it didn’t get there by itself; it had to be put there by a warped mind. So it wasn’t just the bullet that hurt me; it was also the attitude that fired the bullet.”

To see him make that point to a spellbound audience of tough young kids was to believe, as he did, that even tragic things happen for a reason.

That’s what he told a gathering at Franklin Field during a time of heightened tensions as bloodshed gripped the city.

“It bothers me we’re still trying to get rid of violence all these years after a bullet put me into this chair,” he said. “Ignorance aimed a weapon in my direction and hatred pulled the trigger. The bullet that hurt me is useless now; it can’t hurt anyone else.

“But the ignorance and hatred that shot it into me are alive and well, waiting for you, just like they were waiting for me when I was your age.

“I’m here because I have a love in my heart for all of you, and a hope that you will become my arms, my legs, in carrying the message I bring: ‘Please, let there be peace, and let it begin with me.’ ”

Darryl Williams was 46 when he died a year ago today, and he’s missed more than ever.

Article URL: http://www.bostonherald.com/news/columnists/view.bg?articleid=1326508
READ MORE - Darryl Williams’ legacy of love lives on

Hundreds celebrate as Jackson joins City Council 35-year-old cites safe streets, jobs, schools as priorities

Hundreds celebrate as Jackson joins City Council
35-year-old cites safe streets, jobs, schools as priorities
Jackson thanked his mother, Rosa, for her support growing up. (John Tlumacki/Globe Staff)
By Matt Carroll
Globe Staff / March 27, 2011

Tito H. Jackson was sworn in as a city councilor yesterday before a raucous crowd of several hundred supporters in an event that was part campaign rally and part community celebration — with a dose of official business thrown in.

The festive occasion reflected the optimism and enthusiasm residents of District 7 see in the new councilor and also relief at closing a tumultuous chapter on former City Councilor Chuck Turner, who entered a federal prison on Friday following his bribery conviction.

The event, at Hibernian Hall in Roxbury, was packed to overflowing with supporters from the district, from across the city, and beyond. People munched fried chicken and corn bread, cheered singers, and applauded dancers. But most of all, they cheered the 35-year-old lifelong resident of Grove Hall, who was sworn in before the full City Council and took his seat to cheers of “Tito! Tito!’’

FULL STORY HERE
http://www.boston.com/news/politics/articles/2011/03/27/hundreds_celebrate_as_jackson_joins_city_council/
READ MORE - Hundreds celebrate as Jackson joins City Council 35-year-old cites safe streets, jobs, schools as priorities

In Roxbury, new Jacksonian era

In Roxbury, new Jacksonian era
By Peter Gelzinis  |   Sunday, March 27, 2011  |  http://www.bostonherald.com  |  Columnists
Photo by Ted Fitzgerald

For the past couple of years, Roxbury’s political landscape has been dominated by Dianne Wilkerson’s sullen sphinx on one side and Chuck Turner’s snarling goatee on the other.

Yesterday, it basked in the warmth of Tito Jackson’s smile.

Exactly 24 hours after Chuck Turner began his three-year federal prison sentence in West Virginia, his exuberant 35-year-old successor to the District 7 seat was sworn in.

“I want to tear down walls and build bridges,” Jackson told me, a half-hour before Mayor Tom Menino and 11 city councilors came to Dudley Square to administer the oath of office to their new colleague.

“I want people to know that Roxbury is the center of Boston,” Jackson said. “As goes Roxbury, so goes the city of Boston. I want them to know that economic development and jobs need to — and will be — flowing into this community.

“This is a community that has gone through so much politically, has gone through so much economically, but it is indeed still standing,” he said. “It’s a community of survivors.”

Yesterday, that community of survivors ecstatically embraced the adopted son of the late community activist Herb Jackson and his wife, Rosa, as its newest, and perhaps its brightest hope.

Indeed, the atmosphere inside Roxbury’s refurbished Hibernian Hall felt more like a huge family reunion or a wedding, rather than the christening of a new political voice.

But the significance of the moment wasn’t lost on Mayor Menino or the City Council.

Given the political tsunami that has washed over District 7, Steve Murphy, the council president, felt it was important to convene a special council meeting in Dudley Square “for the express purpose of swearing in Tito.”

“He’s got so much energy and optimism,” Murphy said, “I think we’re all looking forward to working with him.”

East Boston’s Sal LaMattina agreed: “This is a very good day for the city. Tito’s got so much energy and optimism. He’s someone who adds a lot to the public discussion.”

So what happened in Dudley Square yesterday was a kind of mini state-of-the-city moment, complete with the mayor and the councilors filing down the middle of this famous banquet hall with all the necessary downtown pomp and circumstance.

“What we’re doing today,” Tito Jackson said, “ is rebuilding, we’re connecting, we’re collaborating, we’re partnering for that new Roxbury, that new District 7, which I think will impact a new city of Boston. I want to make sure that this community and the whole city of Boston is connected.

“A kid from Roxbury should be able to go to any other part of the city,” Jackson said, “and a kid from any other part of the city should be able to come to Roxbury.”

Amen.

Article URL: http://www.bostonherald.com/news/columnists/view.bg?articleid=1326362
READ MORE - In Roxbury, new Jacksonian era

New U.S. $1 coin honors Wampanoag

New U.S. $1 coin honors Wampanoag
By George Brennan / Cape Cod Times  |   Saturday, March 26, 2011  |  http://www.bostonherald.com  |  Local Coverage
Photo by Cape Cod Times/Steve Heaslip

PLYMOUTH — Kerri Boardley-Helme was holding 7-month-old Ezra and clutching the hand of 5-year-old Pharoah as they stood in line to grab a piece of Wampanoag history on Friday.

"It’s important for them to be here today to support their people," said Boardley-Helme, a member of the Mashpee Wampanoag tribe.

At a ceremony held at Plimoth Plantation, with hundreds of people packed inside a meeting room and dozens more outside peering in through the windows, the U.S. Mint unveiled the 2011 Native American $1 coin — a shiny, gold-colored piece that symbolizes the 1621 Wampanoag Treaty...

Read the rest of the story here .
http://www.capecodonline.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20110326/NEWS/103260335/-1/NEWS01
Article URL: http://www.bostonherald.com/news/regional/view.bg?articleid=1326213
READ MORE - New U.S. $1 coin honors Wampanoag

Statie hits brakes on carjacking try

Statie hits brakes on carjacking try

By James Hinton  |   Monday, March 28, 2011  |  http://www.bostonherald.com  |  Local Coverage

A state trooper’s timely intervention saved a livery driver and led to two arrests after he foiled a violent carjacking in Roxbury early yesterday morning.

The 57-year-old driver picked up the two suspects outside a bar in Brighton and was taking them to South Boston when one man jumped in the front seat and began choking him, cops said. The second suspect then climbed into the front seat and joined in the assault, the driver told police.

The driver was able to fight off his attackers, put the car in park, grab the keys and bail out.

Trooper Timothy Burns noticed the commotion at the intersection of Melnea Cass Boulevard and Washington Street. He ordered the two passengers to the ground and placed them under arrest.

Alexander Decosta, 20, of South Boston and Christopher Stutzman, 23, of Dorchester were charged with carjacking, assault and battery and disorderly conduct. Both are due in Roxbury District Court today.

Article URL: http://www.bostonherald.com/news/regional/view.bg?articleid=1326526
READ MORE - Statie hits brakes on carjacking try

Sat. 4/2 Brothers For Boston March & Facing Love IV

On April 4th, 1968 They Killed the Dreamer who dared to Dream.....
On April 2nd, 2011 Brothers For Roxbury and Facing Love IV Continue The Dream...


READ MORE - Sat. 4/2 Brothers For Boston March & Facing Love IV

Ray Flynn’s house ransacked by robbers

Friday, March 25, 2011

Ray Flynn’s house ransacked by robbers

By Dave Wedge  |   Friday, March 25, 2011  |  http://www.bostonherald.com  |  Local Coverage

Former Mayor Raymond Flynn’s South Boston home was robbed yesterday while he and his wife were at the funeral of former House Speaker Tom Finneran’s mother.

The thieves forced open a door and ransacked the house, swiping expensive jewelry, personal items and priceless keepsakes, including a cross given to the former mayor by Pope John Paul II and letters from Presidents Reagan and Clinton, Mother Theresa and Nelson Mandela.

Police said the theft happened around 8:45 a.m. and that the thieves may have used a tool to “pop open” a locked door on the front of the family’s home on Flint Place. In addition to the jewelry and personal items, the thieves made off with a laptop, GPS and iPod, police said.

“It’s really terrible. It’s really an invasion of your privacy,” Flynn’s wife, Catherine said. “It’s awful to think someone comes into your home and does this.”

Flynn, 71, was unavailable for comment but told the State House News: “Just about everything, everything of value we ever had from the past 50 years is gone.”

Article URL: http://www.bostonherald.com/news/regional/view.bg?articleid=1326084
READ MORE - Ray Flynn’s house ransacked by robbers

Ayanna Pressley on CNN with Steve Perry

Ayanna Pressley on CNN with Steve Perry



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Dorchester teen slain in broad daylight

Dorchester teen slain in broad daylight
By Christine McConville and Colneth Smiley Jr.

Friday, March 25, 2011

Dorchester teenager Kris McKinney was gunned down yesterday in broad daylight just around the corner from his family’s home, according to Hub investigators who have launched a manhunt for the cold-blooded killers.

“He is well-known to police,” Boston police spokeswoman Elaine Driscoll said last night about McKinney. “Detectives are still trying to determine facts and circumstances.”

Stunned neighbors said McKinney, 18, was standing with a group of other young men, including his brother, at the corner of Whitman Street and Norfolk Avenue shortly after 3 p.m. when a car approached them.


McKinney was blasted twice, first in the head and then in the leg, as he tried to flee up Whitman Street, bystanders said.

He was rushed to Boston Medical Center, where he was pronounced dead.

“I just lost my son,” an anguished woman screamed at police when she came upon the crime scene at about 5 p.m.

As horrified friends and neighbors looked on, the woman, whom the Herald was unable to identify, grabbed onto a nearby mailbox to steady herself and repeated, “I just lost my son . . . He’s gone.”

Neighbors said McKinney had just been released from a youth lockup only a few days ago.

But they also portrayed him as a kindhearted neighbor who befriended little kids and shoveled neighbors’ walks after snowstorms.

“Yeah, he’s been in trouble,” one man said, “but he’s just a kid.”

Rattled residents said they regard Whitman Street — a dead-end block off bustling Norfolk Street, hard by Codman Square — as a haven from surrounding hot spots of crime.

“There’s a crime watch over here, so (the shooting) is uncommon,” a Whitman Street resident told the Herald.

But yesterday afternoon, while the neighborhood kids came home from school and the adults returned from work, Boston police and their dogs searched the area for stray bullets and clues.
READ MORE - Dorchester teen slain in broad daylight

Danroy Henry’s mother ‘thrilled’ about dropped charges

Danroy Henry’s mother ‘thrilled’ about dropped charges
By Ira Kantor  |   Friday, March 25, 2011  |  http://www.bostonherald.com  |  Local Coverage

Photo by Stuart Cahill

The mother of a Pace University football player from Easton shot and killed by police outside a New York state bar welcomed the news yesterday that a judge has dropped criminal charges against four of her son’s teammates caught in the chaos of the Oct. 17 shooting.

“Clearly, we’re thrilled. We knew all along these young men were innocent and their full desire was to save our son’s life,” said Angella Henry, mother of Danroy “DJ” Henry Jr., who added that the “victory for the young men is just a step forward for us to both accountability and penalty in getting justice for our son.”

Attorney Bonita Zelman, who represents Joseph Garcia of Floral Park, N.Y., Joseph Romanick of Slidell, La., Yves Delpeche of Brooklyn, N.Y., and Daniel Parker of Lauderhill, Fla., is now planning to sue the county of Westchester, the town of Mount Pleasant and the village of Pleasantville, all of which had officers at the scene.

Zelman said he is seeking “seven figures for each of these victims,” alleging brutality, false arrest, violation of civil, constitutional and human rights, and malicious prosecution. Zelman claims video and photographic evidence proves police brut-ality as the players tried to save Henry.

“The only people out of control by way of this evidence are the police,” Zelman said. “We’re going to make a loud outcry to acts of brutality made against them. . . . Before I’m done, every cop that laid a hand on these innocent students will be brought to justice.”

Each of the players was charged with criminal mischief, disorderly conduct, resisting arrest or obstruction. A grand jury last month declined to indict the officer who shot Henry.

Spokeswoman for Westchester county Donna Greene and the town of Mount Plesant declined to comment. A message left with the village of Pleasantville was not returned.

Michael Hagan, president of the Westchester police union, called the claims “rid-iculous” and said the lawsuit was a “shameless attempt to have the taxpayers . . . reward them for their illegal activity.”

Westchester District Attor- ney Janet DiFiore said the charges were dismissed “in the interest of justice.”

Michael Sussman, an attorney representing Henry’s parents, who plan to file a lawsuit next month, said the charges should never have been brought. “They tried to save DJ’s life,” Sussman said.

“I think (the charges) were brought as some kind of contrivance to begin with.”

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

Article URL: http://www.bostonherald.com/news/regional/view.bg?articleid=1325931
READ MORE - Danroy Henry’s mother ‘thrilled’ about dropped charges

Turner grooms successor, targets foes Heads to prison after e-mail flurry

Turner grooms successor, targets foes
Heads to prison after e-mail flurry
Chuck Turner headed to a speaking event yesterday at Northeastern University.
(Yoon S. Byun/Globe Staff)
By Andrew Ryan
Globe Staff / March 25, 2011

Chuck Turner sent a trove of e-mails in the 36 days he served on the Boston City Council after his felony conviction: He groomed his successor, Tito Jackson; sparred with critics; and fanned resentment against councilors who voted to expel him.

He also reveled in constant affirmation from his followers, and he refused an offer to lobby prosecutors for leniency, saying that would amount to “collaborating with the enemy.’’

“From a consciousness-raising standpoint, the best thing would be for them to put me in jail,’’ Turner explained in an e-mail to his staff Nov. 8.

That day has come for the 70-year-old, who is required to report to the Bureau of Prisons today and begin serving a three-year term at a Hazelton federal penitentiary in Morgantown, W.Va.

FULL STORY HERE
http://www.boston.com/news/local/massachusetts/articles/2011/03/25/ex_councilor_chuck_turner_grooms_successor_targets_foes/?page=full
READ MORE - Turner grooms successor, targets foes Heads to prison after e-mail flurry

Chuck Turner goes out roaring

Chuck Turner goes out roaring
By Colneth Smiley Jr.  |   Friday, March 25, 2011  |  http://www.bostonherald.com  |  Local Politics
Photo by Herald File

On the eve of his departure for a three-year prison sentence, Chuck Turner last night gave a barn-burning speech — billed as “Framing the Innocent” — to an overflow crowd of rapturous supporters at Northeastern University.

“If we’re allowing the prosecutors to target those who are speaking up and trying to bring justice and we’re allowing them to tear them down, then obviously we’re not going to be able to achieve our other objectives in terms of equity,” he said. “We can’t allow the system to be controlled by rogues who are operating in the interests of the oligarchy rather than the interests of the people of the country.”

The longtime city councilor was convicted last fall of accepting a bribe from an FBI informant.

His address — interrupted repeatedly by applause — drew 130 supporters inside and dozens outside the lecture-style classroom, and Turner exited to a crowd chanting “Chuck! Chuck!”

Turner told the waiting backers to visit supportchuck turner.com, and urged his former constituents to become his pen pals.

“I’m going to be sent to Hazleton Penetentiary, a minimum-security camp in front of the maximum-security prison,” in Bruceton Mills, W.Va., Turner said.

“I put my address in the (Bay State) Banner so people can write to me.”

The ex-councilor promised to write back.

“I intend to keep writing, particularly about things that are going on in Boston,” he said.

“I think sharing my perspectives with everyone will be helpful in terms of the community keeping together.”

Article URL: http://www.bostonherald.com/news/politics/view.bg?articleid=1325942
READ MORE - Chuck Turner goes out roaring

A stitch to pass the time

A stitch to pass the time

By James Hinton  |   Friday, March 25, 2011  |  http://www.bostonherald.com  |  Local Politics

A crocheting expert yesterday said convicted City Councilor Chuck Turner may well benefit from the arts and crafts program offered at the low-security satellite camp at the federal Hazelton penitentiary.

“I have had several customers that have learned to knit and crochet while incarcerated and they’re really pretty skilled at it,” said Annissa Essaibi-George, owner of Stitch House in Dorchester. “I know for lots of my customers it’s a way of distracting yourself from any personal challenges you may be facing.”

Essaibi-George noted the age-old art offers mental-health benefits that have made it an increasingly popular pastime for law-abiding citizens and cons alike.

“Lots of people do take crocheting and knitting as a relaxing technique, because it is a way of releasing tension and anxiety,” she said. “They definitely take it up as a hobby for therapeutic purposes.”

Turner will have three years to master the art — and the populist politician may come to value the egalitarian culture of crocheters.

“In knitting circles our only initial bond is our craft, so under regular circumstances I might not have too much in common with a convicted criminal, but crafts help bring people together,” Essaibi-George said. “It’s a nice opportunity for people to come together and meet on a mutual playing field.”

Article URL: http://www.bostonherald.com/news/politics/view.bg?articleid=1325934
READ MORE - A stitch to pass the time

Locked up, but not shutting up

Locked up, but not shutting up
By Peter Gelzinis  |   Friday, March 25, 2011  |  http://www.bostonherald.com  |  Columnists

As expected, Chuck Turner did not go gently into that miserable night of prison.

Personally, I like that.

There’s something endearing about Chuck going off to jail in West Virginia with his fists clenched, screaming about how he was “set up” by the morally bankrupt FBI before a crowd of supporters at Northeastern University last night.

It’s just too bad Chuck didn’t scream about all this three years ago, when Ron Wilburn slipped a wad of cash in his palm.

That’s when Chuck, the community activist, the grassroots pol, the old social radical should have gone to the press and yelled, “They’re trying to frame me!” That’s when we might have believed him.

But he didn’t. Instead, Chuck took the dough.

Those who love him foolishly continue to argue against visual evidence of cash being tucked into Chuck’s fist, in what he would infamously call “a preacher’s handshake.”

“What if it was only 20 bucks instead of a thousand?” one true believer argued yesterday. Sadly, you can’t seem to convince them a bribe is a bribe is a bribe. The amount is not the point.

It’s the breach of trust, the grabbing of the cash.

Make no mistake about it, Chuck Turner is right when he talks about the moral bankruptcy of the FBI. Their history in Boston is indeed deplorable.

The federal government has already shelled out well more than $100 million in damages to people who were framed and/or murdered by FBI informants.

Sadly for Chuck, he’s not one of these victims.

Some people, including Joe Salvati, Louis Greco and Peter Limone, got framed by the FBI. While others, such as Chuck Turner, got hooked.

There’s a difference, a big difference.

Chuck Turner, like a great big fish, took the bait that was dangled in front of him.

It is baffling because Turner was never known as a “player.” He never seemed to be about money or the trappings of political power. And yet, he cuffed that wad of cash from Ron Wilburn like an old pro.

At the end of a long conversation yesterday, one of Chuck’s close friends admitted that he “might have made a mistake in judgment.”

He then rightly asked, “Does he deserve three years in prison for that?”

The answer is no. Chuck is going to jail for three years because he didn’t apologize. He’s going to jail for three years because he didn’t cop a plea, or beg for mercy, or stop saying bad things about former U.S. Attorney Michael Sullivan.

In truth, he’s also going to jail for three years because we don’t really know how many other “preacher’s handshakes” he pocketed over the years.

Article URL: http://www.bostonherald.com/news/columnists/view.bg?articleid=1325930
READ MORE - Locked up, but not shutting up

Chuck Turner in store for crochet & chili dogs Prison knot so tough for cell-ebrity

Chuck Turner in store for crochet & chili dogs
Prison knot so tough for cell-ebrity
By Laurel J. Sweet and Dave Wedge | Friday, March 25, 2011 | http://www.bostonherald.com | Local Politics

Photo by Christopher Evans
Deposed politician Chuck Turner today will trade his view of Fort Hill for the Appalachian Mountains as he reports for a three-year hitch at Club Fed — 577 miles from the City Council office he sacrificed for a $1,000 kickback.

The 70-year-old Harvard University alum will likely be admitted to a minimum-security, dormitory-style camp at the Hazelton big house in Bruceton Mills, W.Va. — a facility nestled in the hills of Preston County, where he will be able to partake of crochet classes, drawing, painting and what an inmate orientation handbook calls “paper arts.” The camp has no locking cells, offers periodic Town Hall meetings for airing gripes and serves up fare including oatmeal, fruit, chili dogs, Tater Tots, lasagna and chicken fajitas, according to the Bureau of Federal Prisons.

Fellow New England politicians who belong to the elite ex-con fraternity yesterday had encouraging words for the Roxbury rabble-rouser.

“It’s just one day at a time,” said former state Sen. Joseph Timilty, 72, who served four months at a federal prison in Pennsylvania for mortgage fraud in the 1990s. “In order to get through that thing, you have to be disciplined.”

“Find the humor in it,” advised former Providence Mayor Vincent “Buddy” Cianci, 69, who logged four years at FCI Fort Dix in New Jersey on corruption charges. “There’s humor in everything.”

Turner, who represented District 7 for 11 years, was convicted last fall of accepting a bribe to push a nightclub liquor license for a Hub businessman secretly taping him for the FBI.

At Hazelton, according to the inmate orientation handbook, the ex-councilor will be allowed to sport the hairstyle of his preference (bald), and his beard and goatee can stay. He may not walk around with his underpants showing. The knit caps will have to stay home — only slammer-approved headgear allowed.

Inmates at the camp are customarily assigned to sling hash, landscape or perform general maintenance.

“It’s not a country club,” said Cianci of his own experience. “It’s not like those in charge were cruise directors in their previous lives. There are rules. If you mess up, you’ll find yourself in trouble.”

Turner will not, of course, be the only Bay State solon behind bars tomorrow.

Former state Sen. Dianne Wilkerson, 55, is two weeks into her own three-year bribery stint at the minimum-security camp at FCI Danbury in Connecticut.

“The fortunate part about her situation is she’s close to home,” said son Cornell Mills, an also-ran to succeed Turner in City Hall. “West Virginia is like another country.”

Mills plans to visit Wilkerson for the first time this weekend. He said she finds Danbury to be “very low-key” and is “looking forward to doing some teaching.”

Danbury is also where Patrice Tierney, 60, wife of U.S. Rep. John Tierney (D-Salem), on March 15 completed a monthlong stint for aiding and abetting the filing of false tax returns by her fugitive brother. The prison was previously the home-away-from-home of Boston Mayor James Michael Curley (mail fraud) and “Queen of Mean” hotel tycoon Leona Helmsley (tax evasion).

As for Turner, when he reports to Hazelton today, he will be screened for any medical, psychological or security issues, said Bureau of Federal Prisons spokesman Chris Burke.

“Chuck will be all right,” Timilty said. “I was treated fairly. You don’t get any special treatment and you don’t seek any special treatment.”

Article URL: http://www.bostonherald.com/news/politics/view.bg?articleid=1325917
READ MORE - Chuck Turner in store for crochet & chili dogs Prison knot so tough for cell-ebrity

Chuck Turner's last stand

Thursday, March 24, 2011

Chuck Turner's last stand
READ MORE - Chuck Turner's last stand

PACT initiative for tackling gang violence could be new 'Boston Miracle'

PACT initiative for tackling gang violence could be new 'Boston Miracle'

Posted by Cara Bayles March 24, 2011 11:57 AM
By Cara Bayles, Town Correspondent

Boston Police Superintendent Paul Joyce has gone on a talking tour around Dorchester, Mattapan and Roxbury, the neighborhoods he says are the heart of Boston's violence hot spots, where 90 percent of the city's shootings take place.

On Wednesday night, he visited the Greater Four Corners Action Coalition, a group created in response to drug violence in the early 90s, to give his update on the Partnerships Advancing Communities Together program, better known as PACT, which is up for its eight-month review. Joyce said it was his 155 community meeting since July 1, 2010.

PACT combines the efforts of police, street workers, the courts, and education and job programs to target 240 Boston gang members, who are considered responsible for the majority of the city's violence. The program represents a collaborative technique reminiscent of the "Boston Miracle" of the late 1990s, when a partnership between community groups, clergy and police helped to significantly reduce gang violence.

FULL STORY HERE
http://www.boston.com/yourtown/news/dorchester/2011/03/pact_initiative_for_tackling_g.html
READ MORE - PACT initiative for tackling gang violence could be new 'Boston Miracle'

Man shot on Dorchester Street

Man shot on Dorchester Street

Police conferred at the shooting scene this afternoon.
By Globe Staff

FULL STORY HERE


READ MORE - Man shot on Dorchester Street

DiMasi asks to bar witness in corruption case

DiMasi asks to bar witness in corruption case

By Associated Press  |   Thursday, March 24, 2011  |  http://www.bostonherald.com  |  Local Politics

Former Massachusetts House Speaker Salvatore DiMasi and two co-defendants are asking a federal judge to bar testimony at their upcoming corruption trial from a man who pleaded guilty in their alleged bid-rigging scheme.

DiMasi, Joseph McDonough and Richard Vitale are charged with scheming to rig lucrative state contracts for the software company Cognos in exchange for payments, with DiMasi allegedly pocketing $57,000.

Earlier this month, another co-defendant, Joseph Lally, pleaded guilty and agreed to testify against DiMasi and the others.

Lawyers for DiMasi, McDonough and Vitale have asked Judge Mark Wolf to bar Lally from testifying. They argue that the promise from prosecutors to recommend a lower sentence and to not force Lally to forfeit his family home gives him incentive to "curry favor" by tailoring his testimony to help prosecutors.

Article URL: http://www.bostonherald.com/news/politics/view.bg?articleid=1325851
READ MORE - DiMasi asks to bar witness in corruption case

Chuck Turner is going to jail, but it's the Feds who should be hanging their heads in shame

Chuck Turner is going to jail, but it's the Feds who should be hanging their heads in shame
Power play


By KYLE SMEALLIE AND HARVEY SILVERGLATE  |  March 23, 2011


Chuck Turner reports to prison Friday. If his sentence sticks, that's where the 70-year-old former Boston city councilor will spend the next three years.

Turner was convicted of attempted extortion, for accepting a bribe from a paid FBI informant, and also of giving false statements to federal officials, for lying about it to investigators. But there is much more to the case. Stepping back, it becomes clear that Turner was targeted by the FBI because he refused to play ball and build the government's case against another Massachusetts politician, former state senator Dianne Wilkerson. This is all about federal power — the power to destroy any who won't cooperate with the government's agenda.

At the beginning, this investigation was about the lucrative business of alcohol; in particular, how the city of Boston doles out coveted liquor licenses. By all indications, Wilkerson was on the take. She accepted multiple cash hand-offs (totaling $23,500) and appeared to initiate legislative action in return.

But in this mess, where does Turner fit?

US Attorney Carmen M. Ortiz asserted that investigators "began with Wilkerson and followed the trail to Turner," the Boston Globe reported. But this was a trail blazed by the FBI itself. The connection, FBI agents testified, was a June 2007 e-mail Wilkerson sent to multiple city councilors, including Turner, concerning liquor-license distribution. Without explicitly stating so, her e-mail suggests that the licensing board improperly delayed approval of certain African-American applicants.

The next day, Turner responded to Wilkerson and several other city councilors: "I will send you a proposed hearing order to see if it appropriately frames the issues." Turner wanted to hold a hearing. This is what Turner did all the time. Yet this was evidence enough for the FBI to pay an informant some $29,000 and send him to Turner's Roxbury office to "feel him out."

Of course, the now-infamous video, taken August 3, 2007, in Turner's district office, doesn't lie. Turner took something, and it appears to be cash. The feds say it was $1000; Turner testified that he had no idea of the amount. It's important to note, however, that in a departure from standard procedure, the FBI agents did not search the informant, Ronald Wilburn, after the exchange to be certain that he handed all of the cash to Turner.

The amount given to Turner becomes important because local campaign-finance regulations allow candidates to accept cash contributions up to $50, provided it is duly recorded and reported. If the cash given to Turner was $50 or less, his only violation would have been only a minor fundraising-reporting omission.


GAINING LEVERAGE

Turner's counterattack — that he and Wilkerson were targeted because they are black — was unproductive and unverifiable, an allegation that Ortiz quieted easily. Far more difficult to refute is the more likely motivation: the federal government wanted to gain leverage on Turner, so they could pressure him into cooperating with their plans.

Consider, for instance, the absurd notion that Turner was extorting Wilburn. This may seem like hair-splitting legalese, but it speaks to why the case should never have been brought in the first place. Under existing law, bribery of state officials — payments initiated by the citizen — is not a distinct federal crime. Extortion, however, is. But extortion requires some kind of threat — the public official demanding, for example, payment to refrain from harming the citizen's interests. By all indications, Wilburn didn't fear retaliation if he didn't pay up.

At any rate, Turner would not have made an effective extortionist. His hallmark was holding hearings, not necessarily getting results. There is a role for such officials in public life, of course. As Supreme Court Justice Louis Brandeis once said, sunlight is the best disinfectant, and Turner specialized in casting sunlight.

Prosecutors, oddly, conceded that Turner had little to sell. "There is substantial doubt," they asserted in a memorandum requesting a heavy prison sentence, "about Turner's effectiveness as a public servant." A strange assertion, for if he could not get approvals from the licensing board, why would any businessman succumb to his supposed extortion demands? This is more than a mere detail, for it weighs heavily toward a conclusion that Turner saw the Wilburn payment as an ordinary campaign contribution, rather than a payoff.

One might think that the news media would pick up on this. But from the moment the feds leaked the grainy photos of the handoff, the reporting angle (with a few exceptions, such as WBUR's David Boeri) was all but set: the press saw red meat. Reporters perhaps lost sight of the fact that, in their role as watchdog over government conduct, the actions of the feds deserved as much, if not more, scrutiny than the likely very minor improprieties of a city pol. If voters don't like Turner, or if they smell a whiff of dishonesty, they can express their displeasure at the ballot box. But if those same citizens dislike what federal prosecutors and FBI agents are doing in the people's name and on their dime, they have little practical recourse.

Which makes all the more revolting the fact that prosecutors, in their memorandum requesting 33 to 41 months in prison for Turner, used the politician's own overheated statements against him — in essence asking the court to punish him for his free speech. By asserting that the investigation was racially motivated, Turner's words "have been corrosive to respect for important public institutions and the rule of law," prosecutors argued to Judge Douglas Woodlock.


THROWING BOULDERS

Coming from the Massachusetts US Attorney's Office, in connection with a case launched by the Boston FBI office, the feds's air of piety was nothing short of stomach-churning. Just last month, a federal appeals court saw fit to deny compensation to the family of an innocent man gunned down as a result of the Boston FBI's office working with the mobster Whitey Bulger. And federal prosecutor Jeffrey Auerhahn, found by another judge to have hidden evidence that could have shown that a man convicted of murder was innocent, continues to serve in the US Attorney's Office.

Even if prosecutors were throwing boulders from their glass house, the onus was ultimately on Woodlock to see through this ruse. In this regard, he utterly failed, seeing fit to hand down a shockingly harsh three-year sentence — only a few months shorter than that of Wilkerson, a repeat offender. Woodlock took specific issue with Turner's testimony, finding it implausible that the 70-year-old couldn't remember meeting the FBI's informant.

But Woodlock, a former corruption prosecutor turned judge, perhaps unsurprisingly didn't see the bigger picture. He didn't see the possibility — indeed, the likelihood — that the feds led Turner into a scenario that appeared far more pernicious than the reality. He didn't see that a local politician was targeted by federal prosecutors for not helping them build their case against Wilkerson.

In the quest for Turner's scalp, neither federal law-enforcement authorities, nor the supposedly independent federal judiciary and news media, properly played the roles assigned to them in our constitutional system — which continues to suffer mightily under the weight of stings and set-ups that too often mask, rather than reveal, the truth.

Kyle Smeallie can be reached at kyle@harveysilverglate.com. Harvey Silverglate can be reached at harvey@harveysilverglate.com.
READ MORE - Chuck Turner is going to jail, but it's the Feds who should be hanging their heads in shame

Brothers For Boston - MARCH SAT. APRIL 2nd GROVE HALL - DUDLEY


Where are the men in our community?

BROTHERS for BOSTON
MARCH
1pm SAT. APRIL 2nd 2011
WEAR BLACK

Gather 1 pm grove hall - STOP & SHOP PARKING LOT
MARCH 1:30 PM FROM GROVE HALL TO DUDLEY SQ.
ARRIVE 2 pm HIBERNIAN HALL - Facing Love IV
Brothers for Boston will attend the Facing Love IV
community forum on Black/Latino relationships & family.

Organized by Brothers For Boston
ALL ARE WELCOME!!!
WEAR BLACK

Men, Women, youth, elders, Black, Latino, Cape Verdean,
Roxbury, Dorchester, Mattapan, Jamaica Plain, South End
TAKE A STAND!
education, crime, violence, drugs, guns, gangs, housing, family




READ MORE - Brothers For Boston - MARCH SAT. APRIL 2nd GROVE HALL - DUDLEY

Victim's mother confronts defendant in Harvard dorm murder case

Victim's mother confronts defendant in Harvard dorm murder case

Justin Cosby
Posted by Martin Finucane March 24, 2011 01:38 PM
By John R. Ellement, Globe Staff

WOBURN – For the first time since her only son was shot inside a Harvard University dorm, Denise Cosby today spoke directly to one of the men allegedly responsible for ending the life of her youngest child.

Denise Cosby was the mother of Justin D. Cosby, a Cambridge man who authorities have said was a drug dealer with customers on the Cambridge campus of the world-famous college.
“Today I sit here and look into the face of what is supposed to be a man,’’ Cosby said in a stern voice. “You are a fool.’’

Cosby directed her cold anger and sharp words towards Jason Aquino, one of three New York City men who came to Cambridge on May 18, 2009, intent on robbing Justin Cosby of marijuana and cash.

Instead, Cosby was shot while all four men were inside the J entry of Harvard’s Kirkland House residential building.

FULL STORY HERE
http://www.boston.com/news/local/breaking_news/2011/03/victims_mother.html?p1=Local_Links
READ MORE - Victim's mother confronts defendant in Harvard dorm murder case

Mistrial declared in ex-WRKO jock’s child rape case

Mistrial declared in ex-WRKO jock’s child rape case

By Jessica Heslam  |   Thursday, March 24, 2011  |  http://www.bostonherald.com  |  Media & Marketing

A New York City judge declared a mistrial today in the child rape trial against ex-WRKO radio host Reese Hopkins because the jury remained deadlocked, according to a spokeswoman for the Manhattan district attorney.

The jury had been deliberating since Tuesday. Judge Daniel Conviser declared the mistrial and a bail hearing has been set for this afternoon.

Hopkins, who has been held on $100,000 cash or $300,000 bond, had faced up to 25 years in prison if convicted.

Prosecutors say Hopkins molested a pair of 11 year old girls — and forcibly raped one of them — in his Manhattan apartment in 2004. Hopkins could be set free today at his bail hearing.

Hopkins, who has insisted he’s innocent, has been behind bars awaiting trial since his October 2008 arrest, which came days after WRKO-AM (680) sacked the mid-morning host during a round of budget cuts.

Hopkins has maintained his innocence. He is charged with two counts of rape in the first degree, two counts of sexual abuse in the second degree and two counts of endangering the welfare of a child.

Article URL: http://www.bostonherald.com/business/media/view.bg?articleid=1325817
READ MORE - Mistrial declared in ex-WRKO jock’s child rape case

Charges dropped against football players in Danroy Henry case

Charges dropped against football players in Danroy Henry case
By Associated Press  |   Thursday, March 24, 2011  |  http://www.bostonherald.com  |  Local Coverage

VALHALLA, N.Y. - A judge has dropped all charges against four New York college football players who were arrested after a teammate was killed by a police officer.

The action was taken Thursday by a town judge in New York. The players’ lawyer said a lawsuit is planned.

The four Pace University students were arrested Oct. 17 in the chaos that followed the shooting of 20-year-old Danroy Henry, of Easton, Mass., outside a bar in Thornwood, N.Y.

Last month, a grand jury declined to indict the officer who shot Henry. Two weeks ago, prosecutors moved to dismiss various charges of disorderly conduct, obstruction and criminal mischief against the teammates.

The players expressed relief. One of them, Joseph Romanick, of Slidell, La., noted that nothing can bring back their friend.

Article URL: http://www.bostonherald.com/news/regional/view.bg?articleid=1325727
READ MORE - Charges dropped against football players in Danroy Henry case

Whites still fleeing cities in Mass. Crime fears, schools are probable factors

Whites still fleeing cities in Mass.
Crime fears, schools are probable factors
By Peter Schworm and Matt Carroll
Globe Staff / March 24, 2011

Whites are abandoning Massachusetts cities at a rapid clip, continuing well-worn paths to the suburbs or out of state, according to new demographic data from the US census.

In Lawrence, the white population plummeted by more than one-third over the past decade, while Chelsea’s dropped 34 percent. Springfield lost some 17,000 white residents, Brockton and Worcester dropped more than 14,000, while Lynn lost 12,600.

Overall, 43 of 45 large communities examined by the Globe saw declines in white population, with only suburban Peabody and Franklin countering the trend. Fourteen — including Everett, Lowell, Malden, and Watertown — dropped by double digits.

FULL STORY HERE
http://www.boston.com/news/local/massachusetts/articles/2011/03/24/whites_abandoning_massachusetts_cities_at_rapid_rate/
READ MORE - Whites still fleeing cities in Mass. Crime fears, schools are probable factors

Boston Police Department brass ignored 2001 audit of OT No probe after 400 apparent violations

Boston Police Department brass ignored 2001 audit of OT
No probe after 400 apparent violations

By O’Ryan Johnson  |   Thursday, March 24, 2011  |  http://www.bostonherald.com  |  Local Coverage

Boston police brass caught detectives submitting hundreds of questionable courtroom overtime slips 10 years ago — but failed to crack down on the apparent infractions, raising concerns about the department’s current probe of possible rampant OT abuse.

A 2001-2002 Boston Police Department internal affairs audit uncovered almost 400 apparent rules violations on courtroom overtime slips submitted by detectives in the homicide and drug control units, according to a transcript of a 2006 federal civil trial obtained by the Herald.

The results of that audit, as well as the department’s failure to take action, emerged in previously unreported testimony in a civil-rights lawsuit filed by a former Boston police captain over allegations he was fired for uncovering the apparent overtime abuses.

The BPD is currently probing allegations of rampant abuse of courtroom overtime pay. Under their contract, officers automatically earn four hours of pay for a court appearance outside their shift even if it requires less than an hour of their time. Three police officers have been placed on administrative duty, and one is on paid leave.

Police Commissioner Edward Davis, who took over the department in December 2006 — five months after the earlier audit came to light — said his current probe won’t be compromised.

“I intend to provide the community with a police agency that utilizes its financial support efficiently,” Davis said in a statement. “The community can remain confident in our efforts to ensure an effective and well-managed police organization as we move forward serving the City of Boston.”

During the trial of a civil rights suit — filed by former police Captain William Broderick — the then head of the BPD’s internal affairs unit testified that his audit uncovered a wide range of department infractions. Among them:

• Slips for court overtime submitted for weekends and holidays;

• Multiple officers making unnecessary courtroom appearances for the same case;

• And detectives signing their own overtime slips.

The internal affairs head acknowledged these practices had become commonplace in the department, according to the transcript.

“They may be violations, or technical violations, of the rules, but (there were) things that had been allowed,” the superintendent said. “And officers had gotten into certain habits . . . (and) were doing things, but they were doing things with their supervisors’ OK, and the supervisors were doing things with their supervisors’ OK,” the internal affairs head said.

The superintendent also admitted he never launched a corruption probe of the OT infractions as he had earlier vowed.

The trial jury found in Broderick’s favor and awarded him $2.8 million.

“They didn’t do anything about (courtroom overtime abuse),” Broderick’s lawyer, Rosemary Scapicchio, told the Herald. “The only thing they did was fire the guy for exposing it. I find it ironic that all these years later they’re now saying it’s a problem. It isn’t a new problem, its been around for a very long time.”

Article URL: http://www.bostonherald.com/news/regional/view.bg?articleid=1325637
READ MORE - Boston Police Department brass ignored 2001 audit of OT No probe after 400 apparent violations

Hub legal peers ‘in shock’ over top attorney’s arrest

Hub legal peers ‘in shock’ over top attorney’s arrest
By Laurel J. Sweet  |   Thursday, March 24, 2011  |  http://www.bostonherald.com  |  Local Coverage
Photo by Matthew West

Boston’s legal A-listers, floored by yesterday’s arrest of high-profile attorney Robert A. George on federal charges of laundering $225,000 in drug money, were quick to speak out in his defense — and stunned by the idea that a glib, skilled and much-admired colleague could land where many of his notorious clients are: behind bars.

“He’s a really good lawyer and a real good guy,” said Jeffrey Denner, George’s former colleague. “We’re all in shock at these allegations.”

Attorney Thomas Drechsler called George “a fine lawyer. He’s entitled to his day in court. I hope everyone remembers that.”

Rosemary Scapicchio, who rushed to George’s side to represent him, called the unfolding drama “surreal” and “outrageous.”

George, 56 — whose clients have included former New England Mafia godfather Francis “Cadillac Frank” Salemme and Christopher McCowen, the Cape Cod trash collector convicted of the 2002 murder of Big Apple fashion scribe Christa Worthington — was arrested early yesterday morning at his $1.5 million manse in Westwood by Drug Enforcement Administration agents.

Prosecutors claim they have George cold on tape, allegedly telling one witness he had an associate in Dover who assisted him “with cleaning money,” according to a DEA affidavit.

“Anyone of us, whether it’s attorneys or court personnel or the media, know that Bob is a real warrior,” said George’s longtime friend, attorney Kevin Reddington, who’ll fill out the defense team. “He’s maintaining his innocence 100 percent and looks forward to proving it in court.”

Handcuffed, in a casual blue jersey and jeans, George appeared briefly hours later in U.S. District Court, but did not enter a plea to the criminal complaint accusing him of being in cahoots since February 2009 with two unidentified informants — one of whom he previously defended against larceny charges.

Magistrate Judge Robert B. Collings released George on a $50,000 unsecured bond. Bar Counsel Constance V. Vecchione said George does not face an interim suspension of his law license, but will be advised to obtain informed consent from clients that they’re aware of his criminal case.

Dave Wedge contributed to this report.

Article URL: http://www.bostonherald.com/news/regional/view.bg?articleid=1325652
READ MORE - Hub legal peers ‘in shock’ over top attorney’s arrest

Top Boston defense attorney charged with money laundering

Top Boston defense attorney charged with money laundering
By Laurel J. Sweet  |   Wednesday, March 23, 2011  |  http://www.bostonherald.com  |  Local Coverage
Photo by Matthew West

One of Boston’s best known defense attorneys, Robert A. George, has been charged with laundering more than $225,000 in drug money in a sting that used two informants and an undercover drug agent, U.S. Attorney Carmen M. Ortiz announced today.

George, 56, of Westwood, whose A-list criminal clients have included mobster Francis “Cadillac Frank” Salemme and Christopher McCowen, the Cape Cod trash collector convicted of murdering fashion writer Christa Worthington, faces up to 20 years in prison if convicted of the scheme prosecutors allege began in 2009 and involved a federal informant paid a $2,500 finder’s fee for referring a client to him.

George was released after his arraignment today on a $50,000 unsecured bond but must surrender his passport and submit to a drug test, Magistrate Judge Robert Collings ordered today in U.S. District Court in Boston.

George, who rolled his eyes and appeared to mouth something to the press pack at the hearing, was arrested at his home this morning by DEA agents.

In a 13-page affidavit, prosecutors allege an undercover DEA agent and two “cooperating witnesses” set up deals with George to launder cash — $100,000 in one case — beginning in March of 2009 and lasting more than a year. George used a connection from Dover who ran a business in Dedham to handle the cash exchange, prosecutors allege.

The alleged money-laundering deals were videotaped and audio taped, federal officials state.

“Defense counsel play a critical role in the criminal justice system, protecting important constitutional rights upon which we all depend,” Ortiz said. “But when an attorney assists in the criminal concealment and laundering of drug money — as is alleged in this case — it impedes the administration of justice and is an affront to all ethical and law-abiding members of the bar.”

Steven Derr, special agent in charge of the Drug Enforcement Administration’s New England Field Division, said, “If convicted, Mr. George is no better than those who distribute illegal drugs.”

George could not be immediately reached.

Brockton attorney Kevin Reddington, a longtime friend and colleague, will be representing George in the laundering case. Reddington said he spoke with George’s wife shortly after the attorney was arrested at his house and spoke with George this morning.

“Anyone of us, whether it’s attorneys or court personnel or the media know that Bob is a real warrior. He’s a guy that has a very good reputation as an aggressive trial lawyer. He’s respected on both sides of the table in the courtroom,” Reddington told the Herald today. “He’s maintaining his innocence 100 percent and looks forward to proving it in court.”

Dave Wedge and Joe Dwinell contributed.

Article URL: http://www.bostonherald.com/news/regional/view.bg?articleid=1325478
READ MORE - Top Boston defense attorney charged with money laundering

Guard accused of having sex with inmates - 2005

Wednesday, March 23, 2011

Guard accused of having sex with inmates
By Norman Miller / Daily News Staff
Tuesday, March 29, 2005
FRAMINGHAM -- A prison guard accused of having sex with two female inmates at a minimum security institute in Framingham now faces charges, jail time and fines for the incidents.

Moises Ballista, 28, of Springfield was indicted on six counts of having sexual relations with an inmate, said Middlesex district attorney's office spokeswoman Melissa Sherman yesterday.

The incidents are alleged to have occurred on various dates in 2003 and 2004 at the South Middlesex Correctional Center, a pre-release minimum security institute located next to MCI-Framingham.

Department of Correction spokeswoman Diane Wiffin said the incident is under investigation.

"We take the allegations very seriously," said Wiffin. "It's an abuse of the power and authority invested in us as law enforcement officials."

Ballista has been "detached," or suspended, with pay since the allegations came to light in May, 2004, Wiffin said.

Sherman said the DOC discovered the "inappropriate sexual relations" with the two inmates and began an internal investigation.

The Middlesex district attorney's office was informed of the incidents in September 2004. After an investigation, Ballista was indicted on Friday, Sherman said.

The names and the ages of the victims were not released. It is not known if the women are still incarcerated.

It is a crime in Massachusetts for a prison guard to have sex with inmates.

Ballista faces up to five years in state prison for each count if he is convicted and/or a $10,000 fine.

Wiffin said she could not say how long Ballista has worked as a correction officer, or at what other facilities he has worked, citing personnel privacy.

Ballista could not be reached for comment yesterday.

The DOC, Wiffin said, investigates all such incidents completely.

"This is serious misconduct, and we take it seriously," she said.

Ballista is scheduled to be arraigned in Middlesex Superior Court in Cambridge on April 11.

http://www.metrowestdailynews.com
READ MORE - Guard accused of having sex with inmates - 2005

Trial opens for former correction officer

Trial opens for former correction officer
By Milton J. Valencia
Globe Staff / March 23, 2011


Moises Ballista, a former correction officer at the South Middlesex Correctional Center in Framingham, routinely had sexual relations with female inmates at the minimum-security, prerelease center for women. He acknowledged the actions in federal court yesterday.

Five years ago, he was sentenced to nine months in a county jail for violating state laws prohibiting relations between inmates and correctional officers, even when the sex is consensual.

But now a federal jury — made up of 10 women — will decide whether Ballista and his supervisors at the state Department of Correction violated the civil rights of one of the inmates, a case that could end in a damage award. The ruling could also put the same responsibility on state supervisors as on Ballista.

The woman, Christina Chao, 31, alleges that Ballista, capitalizing on his role as an officer, used his power to pressure her into between 50 and 100 sexual acts when she was an inmate eight years ago. She also asserts state officials failed to intervene, despite a history of similar accusations against Ballista.

FOR THE FULL STORY
http://www.boston.com/news/local/massachusetts/articles/2011/03/23/trial_opens_for_former_correction_officer/
READ MORE - Trial opens for former correction officer

New NAACP seeing more gay, diverse chapter leaders as group seeks to increase membership

New NAACP seeing more gay, diverse chapter leaders as group seeks to increase membership

By Associated Press, Wednesday, March 23, 6:52 AM

WORCESTER, Mass. — The NAACP’s newly revived Worcester chapter elected a 28-year-old openly gay black man as its president this month. In New Jersey, a branch of the organization outside Atlantic City chose a Honduran immigrant to lead it last year. And in Mississippi, the Jackson State University chapter recently turned to a 30-something white man.

Founded more than a century ago to promote black equality, the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People is seeing remarkable diversity in its leadership ranks — the result of an aggressive effort over the past four or five years to boost NAACP membership and broaden the civil rights organization’s agenda to confront prejudice in its many forms.

“This is the new NAACP,” said Clark University political science professor Ravi Perry, the new chapter president in Worcester. “This is a human rights organization, and we have an obligation to fight discrimination at all levels.”

NAACP branches have been recruiting gays, immigrants and young people who grew up in a world far removed from the landmark 1954 Brown vs. Board of Education ruling that outlawed school segregation. Now, leadership positions that were once held only by blacks are being filled by members of other racial or ethnic groups.

The group does not keep track of numbers, but in recent years NAACP chapters in New Jersey, Connecticut and Georgia have elected Hispanics as president. A white man was picked to lead the chapter in Aiken, S.C. And two years ago, NAACP members in Hamtramck, Mich., a Detroit suburb, selected a Bangladeshi American to revive their long-dormant chapter.

“Some people mentioned that it wouldn’t be possible for me to be president,” said Victor Diaz, 32, a Dominican American who ran against an incumbent and was elected president of the Waterbury, Conn., branch in November. “But when I ran, I won 3 to 1.”

The push for diversity troubles some members of the NAACP’s old guard, who worry that problems in the black community may get short shrift. But some social scientists say the new diversity is merely a return to the group’s roots as a biracial organization.

In 1964, the NAACP’s membership peaked at 625,000 paid members. By the middle of the past decade, that had dropped to just under 300,000. Now it has reversed course and climbed to more than 525,000, in large part because of an increase in young members, group officials say. The NAACP said it does not keep track of the organization’s racial and ethnic breakdown.

Stefanie Brown, the NAACP’s 30-year-old national field director, said the under-25 crowd is the organization’s fastest-growing age group. In fact, the NAACP has slots on its 60-plus member board of directors reserved for people under 25. In addition, Brown said, young professionals under 40 are taking leadership roles — something that hadn’t happened until recently.

Some in the group say the diversity push weakens the NAACP’s identity. Jamarhl Crawford, editor of the Blackstonian, a Boston website that covers the city’s black population, said he fears it could “water down” the focus on problems in the black community.

“I think there’s going to be some loss there in terms of actual activism, actual protest” on behalf of blacks, said Crawford, a 40-year-old member of the NAACP’s Boston branch.

The diversity push was started a few years ago under then-NAACP chairman Julian Bond. Later, Benjamin Todd Jealous, who in 2008 became the group’s youngest leader at age 35, ramped up the effort and also urged the organization to take up gay rights.

“At our core, we want to end discrimination and have equality for all people,” Brown said.

In a reflection of how it has broadened its agenda, the NAACP came out against California’s Proposition 8, the ballot measure banning gay marriage. Last year, it spoke out against Arizona’s anti-immigration law. It also strongly supported the federal DREAM Act, a proposal to give illegal immigrant students a pathway to citizenship through college or military service.

Perry, the openly gay chapter president, said: “I’m just one example of younger individuals who find a home in the NAACP for issues that they might represent.”

Patricia Sullivan, a history professor at the University of South Carolina and author of “Lift Every Voice: The NAACP and the Making of the Civil Rights Movement,” called the new push for diversity thrilling and said: “It’s really reflecting what the NAACP has represented historically and what its vision has been.”

Founded in 1909 partly in response to race riots in Springfield, Ill., NAACP begin as a coalition of black and Jewish activists with whites serving in leadership position in many chapters, and it was only later that it became a predominantly black organization. Sullivan also noted that the NAACP spoke out against the internment of Japanese Americans during World War II.

Tatcho Mindiola, director of the Center for Mexican American Studies at the University of Houston, said that while some Hispanics were NAACP members during the civil right years, their election to leadership roles is a new phenomenon. Mindiola said the NAACP has won over some Hispanics because of recent positions it has taken on issues important to Latinos.

“The group has shown it is fighting for civil rights for all minorities,” said David Alcantara, 52, president of the Pleasantville-Mainland chapter in New Jersey. “And it’s time that all minorities support the NAACP.”

Copyright 2011 The Associated Press.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/new_naacp_seeing_more_gay_diverse_chapter_leaders_as_group_seeks_to_increase_membership/2011/03/23/ABFL8gHB_story.html
READ MORE - New NAACP seeing more gay, diverse chapter leaders as group seeks to increase membership

Galvin admits error as Boston gains in Census

Tuesday, March 22, 2011

Galvin admits error as Boston gains in Census
By Hillary Chabot  |   Tuesday, March 22, 2011  |  http://www.bostonherald.com  |  Local Coverage
Photo by Ted Fitzgerald (File)

Contrary to figures originally released by Secretary of State William Galvin’s office this morning, the City of Boston actually gained population in the most recent U.S. Census count.

Boston went from 589,141 residents in the 2000 Census to 617,594.

Galvin’s office confirmed the error today and suspended the release of any further numbers until a 2 p.m. press conference. “I very much regret the confusion this has caused,” Galvin said.

Boston officials tell the Herald they knew the figures were bogus.

“We knew right away the numbers were wrong,” said Susan Ellsbree, spokeswoman for the Boston Redevelopment Authority. “We have always been confident that our population has continued to grow.”

Massachusetts is one of 10 states that will lose congressional seats, while 12 states mainly in the South and West will add congressional seats.

The Bay State’s population increased from 6,349,097 to 6,547,629 since 2000 — an increase of 3.1 percent, according to the Census.

The national population rose from 281,421,206 to 308,745,538 or 9.7 percent over the last 10 years.

The U.S. Census Bureau said it would appoint a member of Congress for every 710,767 people, up from one congressman for 646,950 people in 2000.

Article URL: http://www.bostonherald.com/news/regional/view.bg?articleid=1325222
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