Hey, there! Log in / Register

Courtroom erupts as four sentenced to life in prison for murder

Two men were arrested during a near riot in Suffolk Superior Court today as four other men were sentenced for the death of Terrance Jacobs in Dorchester in 2007, the Suffolk County District Attorney's office reports:

Spectators in the gallery began to mutter, shout, and storm from the room as the clerk of the court read off the men's sentences. Within seconds, that activity escalated into shouted expletives, pushes, and punches, with court officers and Boston Police ordering all parties from the courtroom. Additional court officers and Boston Police responded to assist in clearing the room and quelling the disturbance, which by then had spilled into the lobby. They made two arrests, suffering minor injuries in the process.

Brandon Pight, 17, of Dorchester, was charged with assault and battery, assault and battery with a dangerous weapon – a shod foot – and disturbing the peace. He was ordered held in lieu of $8,500 cash bail at his arraignment in Boston Municipal Court. Reinald Ortiz, 26, of Hyde Park, was charged with disturbing the peace.

Paul Goode, 27, Pedro Ortiz, 30, and Terrance Pabon, 20, all of Dorchester, and Markeese Mitchell, 19, of Brockton, were sentenced to life in prison, but could be eligible for parole in 15 years.


Ad:


Like the job UHub is doing? Consider a contribution. Thanks!

Kid seriously injured when hit by police wagon in Dorchester

An 11-year-old boy who darted into traffic at Blue Hill and Talbot avenues was hit by a police wagon around 2:30 p.m. today and suffered serious leg, abdominal and head injuries.


Ad:


Like the job UHub is doing? Consider a contribution. Thanks!

Roslindale to find out what you'd get if you mated West Roxbury's Sugar bakery with the Rox Diner

Wicked Local West Roxbury reports the owners of Sugar and the Rox Diner (nee Auntie Bee's) are teaming up to open a bakery/restaurant where A. Boschetto used to be on Washington Street.


Ad:


Like the job UHub is doing? Consider a contribution. Thanks!

Kurosawa would have appreciated Boston Licensing Board hearings

The Boston Licensing Board today heard such differing accounts of what happened one January night at the Rumor nightclub that board Chairman Daniel Pokaski wondered at one point if both parties were talking about the same incident.

Incidents at two other Boston establishments will also force the board to consider what the hell actually happened.

A Rhode Island woman testified she was at Rumor, 100 Warrenton St., with one other friend when a group of other women and then men began attacking her for no reason - and that by the time they were done, she was on the floor, unconscious, with a bruised eye and a drink being poured on her head. Then, club workers refused to call police, she said, adding she has had seizures since the incident.

The club said she was there with a large group of women who were getting so out of control they were asked to leave - and threatened to sue the club because one of them lost her cell phone. No fight happened that night, and that's why club officials said they taped over video of the floor that night.

Boston Police Det. Kenneth Dorch, who investigated the incident, sided with the woman, telling the board "I have no reason at all not to believe her." Club manager Tom Montgomery said a passing Boston police officer was flagged down by the woman and refused to intercede because the club had done nothing wrong. That officer did not appear at today's hearing and Montgomery said that it was pointless to ask for his attendance because officers rarely make such appearances.

Pokaski said he found it hard to believe the woman would be so vindictive as to make up a story and then travel all the way up from Rhode Island to testify before the board. The board will decide on Thursday what, if anything, to do. In March, the board ordered Rumor to shut for two days for serving alcohol to minors.

Also this morning, a man who calls himself a regular at Underbar, also on Warrenton Street, told the board he was punched in the face by a bouncer. The club's head of security told the board he was the one who escorted the guy out of the club for touching and groping women who didn't want to be touched or groped on the club stage, that he never hit the guy, that he'd never seen him before.

The board also heard wildly conflicting stories about an under-21 woman caught with three bottles of beer outside Cityside in Cleveland Circle on March 31.

A Boston police officer said she told him she got the beers inside and that she claimed her ID was still in the bar - but that when club workers escorted them to where she'd been sitting, there was no purse and no ID. A restaurant manager, however, said the woman must've gotten the beers elsewhere, because they were Keystones, which his establishment doesn't serve. The police officer responded that at least two of the beers were Miller Lites, which the manager conceded one can buy at Cityside.

Board member Michael Connolly said that regardless of what happened, Cityside had a responsibility to keep the area out front clear of people with open containers of alcohol. The manager said that the night in question was the night before spring break and it was hard to control the crowds wandering over from other establishments, such as Mary Ann's.


Ad:


Like the job UHub is doing? Consider a contribution. Thanks!

Police don't really care what your grandfather did during the War

Boston Police report a Beverly woman tried a different approach to getting out of field sobriety tests and an OUI arrest in the Fenway Monday night:

... Officers then attempted to explain to the suspect how the sobriety tests should be performed but she ignored their instructions and exclaimed, "My grandfather Monahan dropped the (expletive) bomb on Iwo Jima!" Officers continued to try to explain the tests to the suspect but she again exclaimed, "Grandfather (expletive) bombed Iwo Jima!" ...


Ad:


Like the job UHub is doing? Consider a contribution. Thanks!

There's probably a moral in the story of how a Southie man got caught for allegedly pilfering charity boxes at a Needham temple

Wicked Local Needham reports a South Boston man was arrested after he allegedly took the train to Needham specifically to rob places - such as Temple Beth Israel.

Police found Michael Bagley at a Dumpster; he allegedly told police he was there because the bag he used to collect coins from "tzedakah" (charity) boxes in the Temple Beth Israel Hebrew school had ripped.


Ad:


Like the job UHub is doing? Consider a contribution. Thanks!

Question: How many MBTA workers

does it take to diagnose a problem with the faregates at North Station?

Answer: No fewer than seven.

As I came into North Station subway this morning about 8:35, the faregates were really screwed up. There were very long lines waiting to get through, even though all but two of the gates were open. Even though none of the gates I could see read "Smart Cards Only" (which is an absurd concept in and of itself, given the number op people coming from the commuter rail), the gates were still randomly rejecting tickets and passes.

Finaly got to a working gate, which accepted my pass and gave it back to me. As I was waiting (over 30 seconds) for the gates to open, I noticed a group of at least seven T workers watching what was going on, with a CSA trying to explain to them what the problem was.


Ad:


Like the job UHub is doing? Consider a contribution. Thanks!

Double murder at Uphams Corner restaurant claims another victim: The restaurant

The owners of Ka-Carlos, scene of a brutal fight last August that ended with two murders, have shut the place down and are in the middle of selling off its assets.

Carlos and Joseph DePina have sold the building and its equipment and are trying to find a buyer for its liquor license - which could go for $100,000 or more - to pay off their bills, their attorney, William Rehry, told the Boston Licensing Board this morning. Rehry asked the board for three months to find a buyer; the board decides whether to grant the request at a hearing on Thursday. Rehry said the owners tried to simply sell the entire restaurant, but that there were no buyers.

Board Chairman Daniel Pokaski said he and other boards never take any pleasure in seeing a business closed, but that, "quite frankly, I'm happy to see [Ka-Carlos] closed with all the problems we've seen over the years."

Shortly after 1 a.m. on Aug. 2, 2009, Manuel Monteiro, 47, a chef at the restaurant, died from a shot fired from outside in a running battle that police say began inside the restaurant - and which Monteiro tried to break up. Jovany Eason, 20, was gunned down on a nearby street. A third shooting victim survived.

Emmanuel Pina and Sandro Tavares were indicted for the two murders in October. A third man, Timothy Santos, was indicted on charges of armed assault with intent to murder. They have yet to come to trial


Ad:


Like the job UHub is doing? Consider a contribution. Thanks!

Court: Survivors have to live with decisions made by people who don't want to spend much on a will

William Bruinsma lived quietly, never married, eventually moved into a subsidized housing project for the elderly. Nobody knew he'd built up an estate worth $1.7 million.

And that includes the lawyer who drafted a simple two-page will for him that gave half his property to his sister and a friend of his and the other half to the American Cancer Society and the American Heart Society. The Supreme Judicial Court ruled today that roughly $460,000 of his estate has to pay state and federal taxes because Bruinsma's will makes no provisions for creations of "charitable remainder annuity trusts" that would dramatically reduce the taxes.

The court said it was troubled Bruinsma's beneficiaries waited more than 10 years to file their request to "reform" his will and said they have to live with his decision to cheap out on the will to avoid getting kicked out of his subsidized apartment.

Although the decedent's charitable intent is demonstrated by his bequest of the remainder of his estate to the charitable beneficiaries, there is no expression in his will or elsewhere that he was concerned about the possible tax consequences associated with any of his bequests. Rather, based on the affidavits submitted, it appears that he was quite inclined to keep his estate planning simple and, thus, inexpensive, so that he could keep his own legal fees to a minimum. He also may not have wanted to disclose the value of his assets in order to retain his subsidized housing.

Complete ruling.


Ad:


Like the job UHub is doing? Consider a contribution. Thanks!

Four convicted for teen's murder in 2007

A Suffolk Superior Court jury today convicted four men for stabbing and beating Terrance Jacobs, 16, to death on May 22, 2007, the Suffolk County District Attorney's office reports.

Paul Goode, 27, Pedro Ortiz, 30, and Terrance Pabon, 20, all of Dorchester, and Markeese Mitchell, 19, of Brockton, will be sentenced tomorrow to mandatory life sentences. However, because they were convicted of second-degree murder, they will be eligible for parole in 15 years.

According to prosecutors, some the four made arrangements with Jacobs to have what he thought would be a one-on-one fight. But when he showed up at Blue Hill Avenue and Wilcock Street, the four, aided by some friends, threw him to the ground and began kicking him, prosecutors say. One of Jacobs's friend fired a gun into the air, scattering some of the attackers and letting Jacobs get up to run. But the four regrouped, chased after him and began kicking, beating and stabbing him, prosecutors say - he wound up with 20 stab wounds.


Ad:


Like the job UHub is doing? Consider a contribution. Thanks!

Pages