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Shot to death in Dorchester

The homicide unit is at 47 Winston Rd., where a body was found this morning.

The victim is Dorchester's 27th murder victim this year (map).

Fri, 12/09/2011 - 09:30
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What does commuter rail have against fantasy football?

A rail-ridin' fantasy-football fan reports via e-mail that the WiFi on his commuter-rail line this morning blocked him from accessing any information about his pastime:

You can now no longer log on to any sports news site that deals with fantasy football information. ESPN? Sporting News? Sports Illustrated? ESPN? No problem going to their home pages. You just can't access any of their articles dealing with fantasy sports. Instead, you get the following message:

Web Protection
Reason:
The Web site http://games.espn.go.com/frontpage/ has been blocked by your organization's content filtering policies.

Web pages that offer online games and related information such as cheats, codes, demos, emulators, online contests or role-playing games, gaming clans, game manufacturer sites, fantasy or virtual sports leagues,and other gaming sites with out chances of profit. Gaming consoles, such as Microsoft Xbox® and Sony PlayStation®, are included in this category.

He fumes:

Now I can understand that the MBTA may want to shut off access to certain sites (like gaming sites using emulators) that are bandwith hogs, but why oh why are they blocking articles based on subject matter?


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Citizen complaint of the day: EMTs shouldn't have to run half a block because parked cars block their ambulance

Narrow Kilmarnock

A disgusted citizen reports on an incident on Queensbury Street in the Fenway yesterday:

Today an ambulance was stuck because a 55 bus was turned off, and the parked cars on the other side prevented the ambulance from passing. The EMTs started running the remaining half-block to their call while the bus driver pulled his bus away from the stop to give the ambulance room to maneuver. Do three measly parking spots earn #Boston so much money that these kinds of risks are necessary?


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Roxbury man charged with strangling woman to death in Mattapan apartment

Eldrick Broom, 27, was arrested yesterday on charges he sexually assaulted and then murdered Rosanna Camilo, a Dominican resident who had moved to Boston to obtain medical care for her young son.

Broom is scheduled for arraignment today in Dorchester District Court on charges he strangled Camilo in her 50 Fairlawn Ave. apartment on Nov. 21, the Suffolk County District Attorney's office reports. The DA's office says Broom gained access to her apartment building through an associate who had formerly lived there.

Four days after the murder, Broom was arrested in Brookline on charges of open and gross lewdness after a woman reported him urinating against a wall near the Devotion School.

Camilo, daughter of a prominent Dominican broadcaster, left three children. Her youngest son, in the apartment at the time of the murder, was found physically unharmed.

Innocent, etc.


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Only two arrested overnight at Occupy Boston

No eviction of ideas.Dewey Square tonight. Photo copyright Richard Beaubien

Arrests made around 3 a.m. when two people refused to leave tent they had pitched in the middle of Atlantic Avenue. Otherwise, police let Occupiers dance the night away.

Experimental realtime coverage from last night below. It may take a moment or two for the feed to show up:


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Lap dance bites Combat Zone club in the ass

The Boston Licensing Board today ordered the Glass Slipper to shut down for two days as penance for the horizontal lap dance a police detective found a dancer giving a customer early on Oct. 27.

The club, one of two strip clubs left in the Combat Zone, gets to pick when it wants to shut down.

At a hearing on Tuesday, a club manager said he was as surprised as anyone to discover the customer was lying on a couch pawing the dancer as she ground on top of him, in direct violation of a city ordinances against customer/dancer contact in general and butt grabbing in particular. The customer paid $300 for the performance in one of the club's third-floor private-party rooms; the dancer lost her job over the extra work.


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Licensing board agrees with club it couldn't have done anything to stop patron from shooting up the street outside

The Boston Licensing Board decided today to let Venu on Warrenton Street continue to stay open until 2 a.m., rather than penalize it for a Nov. 18 incident in which police say a clubgoer left at closing, spotted three rival gang members, got a gun and started shooting, hitting two of them and two bystanders.

At a hearing on Tuesday, club officials said the man did not come into the club with a gun and caused no trouble in the club that night. They also noted they turned over video and photos that helped police identify the suspect, Samuel Higginbottom, 23, of Dorchester. Following the Nov. 18 shootings, some city officials called on the club to voluntarily shut down until the licensing-board hearing; the club said no.

The hearing was called to determine whether the board would roll the club's hours back because of both the quadruple shooting and a series of other incidents over the past two years, many at closing, which have tied up police officers from across the city.


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Only longhairs named Sam allowed to pound coyotes

Wicked Local Brookline declares "vigilante justice" not the answer to coyotes fearful Corey Hill residents say keep them trapped in their homes.

Where's Sam when you need him?


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Menino sets midnight deadline for Unoccupy Boston

The Globe reports. If Menino's vow of "further action" means eviction, BPD might wait until after then before moving in, like it did last time.

UPDATE: Occupiers have begun moving some tents and equipment offsite. Robin, an Occupy Boston organizer, tweets: "We are moving valuables offsite, not decamping. Last time the BPD destroyed all of our belongings." Chris Faraone reports: "Food at OccupyBoston getting donated back to places. One load going to Pine Street Inn."


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A sob-story guy gets three years in prison, agrees to leave state after his release

A Dorchester man who admitted conning people out of money last fall through a convincing sob story was sentenced to three years in state prison yesterday, the Suffolk County District Attorney's office reports.

As part of a plea agreement in which he was branded "a common and notorious thief" on 25 counts of larceny and "uttering" (writing bogus checks), Williams also agreed to leave Massachusetts within 60 days of his release from prison - and to stay out until at least Dec. 7, 2021 - the District Attorney's office reports, adding Williams already has a 30-page criminal record featuring 35 convictions for larceny-related offenses.

The DA's office says the suit-wearing Williams, also known as Ray Diamond, Rudy Diamond and Ruby Diamond, would typically approach people with a sob story about needing to get his car out of the shop. At least a dozen people handed over money, in some cases losing up to $1,000, the DA's office says:

Frequently wearing a suit and claiming to be from out of town, Williams would present victims with check to deposit, either asking for all of the face value in cash or offering the victim a small percentage to keep for himself. Each of the checks either had a forged signature or was itself a forgery. All of them later bounced.

In one incident, after presenting the victim with a forged $1,500 check to deposit, Williams took the man's driver's license as bogus "collateral" until the next day, when the victim would give him $1,500 in cash. That victim became suspicious and notified police. Williams never appeared for their scheduled rendezvous.

Boston Police and Suffolk prosecutors assigned to the case linked the various incidents not only through Williams' appearance and consistent modus operandi, but also through a telephone number he gave to nine of his victims: Williams had set up an outgoing voice mail identifying it as the number for Diamond Engineering, which linked up to the "Ray Diamond" and "Rudy Diamond" aliases he used in his cons and bogus checks made out to Diamond Engineering that two of his victims accepted and deposited.

In a statement, DA Dan Conley said the Williams case showed why people should always be suspicious of sob stories from strangers:

There's a saying that you can't cheat an honest man, but we've seen many people with only the best intentions fall victims to scams like this. Most of the victims in this case felt suspicious at one point or another, and I'd advise everyone to follow their instincts in a similar situation.


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