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Police ID, seek suspect in September murder in Dorchester

ClarkBoston Police report they are looking for Kendrick Clark for the Sept. 22 shooting murder of Shawn Flores on Abbot Street.

Clark, 37, is described as 37, black, 5'5" with black hair, 215 lbs. and a heavy build.

He's on the lam, so police are asking for help. Know where he is? Contact the homicide unit at 617-343-4470 or the anonymous tip line by calling 800-494-TIPS or by texting the word TIP to CRIME (27463).

2011 murders in Dorchester.


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Yancey: How dare city build new offices for school officials but condemn students to substandard high schools

Dorotea Manuela explains why she wants a high school in Mattapan.

City Councilor Charles Yancey (Dorchester, Mattapan) has a new tactic in his long-running battle to get a high school built in Mattapan: Blasting the city's plan - which he voted for - to spend $115 million moving BPS headquarters from Court Street downtown to the old Ferdinand building in Dudley Square, when nearly 4,000 high-school students attend classes in "substandard" buildings originally built for elementary students or as warehouses.

At a hearing tonight, Yancey asked for the city to borrow $110 million to build a high school on a college-like 15-acre campus on the grounds of the former Boston State Hospital. Students and their parents have waited long enough for a modern high school like the ones that have sprung up in surrounding suburbs, he said.

Yancey gained support from councilors Felix Arroyo (at large) and Tito Jackson (Roxbury).

But Councilor Mark Ciommo (Allston/Brighton) said he couldn't support building a new high school when existing schools - including Brighton High in his district - already have their own pressing issues. Ciommo said he is worried the costs of a new high school would take away from the capital budget for all the other schools in the district and that it just wouldn't be prudent to add a new high school when projections show BPS continuing to lose students.

Deputy School Superintendent Michael Goar, while taking no position on Yancey's proposal for a brand new building, said BPS is getting ready to pour significant amounts of money into renovation projects at the Quincy and Dearborn 6-12 schools.

Not a single School Committee member attended the hearing - similar to a recent council hearing on raising the dropout age from 16 to 18. School Superintendent Carol Johnson did not attend because she was attending to the birth of a grandchild.

Even as he repeatedly raised the headquarters relocation, Yancey also continued to base much of his argument on a 1996 blue-ribbon report that called for two new high schools in Boston. He said students and parents have waited and watched as the city spent hundreds of millions on the Democratic National Convention, a new police headquarters, a convention center, a new Suffolk County jail, new police districts and the Big Dig and yet they get nothing while the city prepares to spend money "creating those comfortable office spaces for the School Department."

Goar, however, said Yancey needs to realize that it's not like BPS just pushes students into closets, that it renovates buildings before it moves students in. Ciommo noted the city has plans for savings and new revenue to pay for the Ferdinand project - consolidating other city agencies in Court Street and moving the Fire Department headquarters to an existing city building in Newmarket Square and selling off the BFD building - which would not be available for a new high school.

Yancey retorted it's all a matter of priorities and that after 28 years on the council, he knows how to raise funds creatively to pay for a new school. "I know if there was a priority, we can make it happen," just like the mayor figured out how to pay for a convention center, he said. He said enrollment is declining at the elementary level, not the high school level.

Yancey pointed to the Boston Arts Academy in the Fenway, New Mission High School in Roxbury and the Greater Egleston Community High School as examples of "substandard" buildings Boston should be ashamed of - in contrast to a state-of-the-art building next to the Audubon Society nature preserve and near the state lab in Jamaica Plain, which he said could provide valuable new forms of learning.

Dorotea Manuela of Dorchester, who volunteers at New Mission, said she gets depressed every time she enters the "disgusting" building, which has no gym or library or cafeteria. Mattapan deserves a new state-of-the-art school both for the students and to help it overcome negative stereotypes perpetuated by the media about Mattapan, Dorchester and Roxbury.

"It is time that not just Boston and Massachusetts but the rest of the country know that we have gems in our community," she said. "We have beautiful, gifted children. ... How disrespectful and how disgusting it is to expect children to come to the dilapidated buildings that exist right now and expect them not to be depressed."

One Roslindale resident, however, said she was bothered by Yancey's continuing reliance on a study released in 1996 - and noted that Roslindale doesn't have a high school, either.

Patrice Bennett, who now lives in Mattapan, said a Mattapan high school would provide a new center around which the community could rally - she said she and other residents would actively work on school projects because "this is our city and we care about it."


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Job you probably don't want: Overnight clerk at an Egleston Square gas station

A clerk at the Egleston Square Citgo station got the station in trouble when he refused to hand a customer back his credit card and driver's license - at first, even after arriving police officers told him to.

The owner of the Washington Street station, Michael Levy, was before the Boston Licensing Board today to answer charges of failing to return a credit card to a customer and failing to cooperate with police because of the July 10 incident. The board has oversight because the station has a common victualer's license to sell food items.

The hearing ended with a shouting match between Levy's lawyer, Michael Murphy, and Boston Police Sgt. Sean Smith over the question of whether the clerk recently quit because he couldn't take the pressure anymore or because he was fired.

Smith blamed the problem on a lack of training: He said that when he arrived on scene after two other officers had been unable to get the clerk to hand the cards back, he learned over the course of a 20-minute conversation that the man was a recent immigrant and new to the job and didn't realize he should have called police at the first sign of trouble - and given the man the cards back, rather than trying to hold them for a station manager.

He praised the clerk's work ethic and willingness to put in overnight hours at the busy station and said that, as a first-generation American himself, he understood the man's difficulties. He added the man agreed to handle things differently in the future. "Once he got that message through, he was fine," Smith said.

Levy and his manager, however, said they are constantly training their workers to call police if something seems wrong. In this case, they said, the worker seemed to panic a bit. The customer tried to pay for cigarettes three times with a debit card, but he couldn't get the PIN right. Then he dashed outside and came back with a credit card, but the name didn't match that on the driver's license he showed as ID. Meanwhile, a number of other customers in line behind the guy began getting impatient and started telling the clerk to just give the guy the cigarettes, they said. It was actually the customer, not the clerk, who called police.

The man left the job this past weekend, the reason for which sparked the shouting: Levy said the man simply up and quit because he could no longer take the pressure of the job - even after the station agreed to get him off the early-morning shift. Smith, however, said Levy had told him in the hallway he had fired the man.

The raised voices came after a somewhat testy, if lower-toned, debate between Murphy and board Chairwoman Nicole Murati Ferrer on what sort of punishment, if any, the station should face for the incident.

Murphy said that businesess with "just" a common victualer's license, as opposed to a liquor license, should only face punishment if the incident was part of a pattern of problems. He said this was the first such incident at the station.

Ferrer, who gave no indication how she would vote on the citation, however, told him she was very concerned that the employee didn't call police and that he refused, at least at first, to cooperate with them. "I don't care that it is 'just' a common victualer's license," she said. "The rules of this board are meant to be followed. By everyone."

Although the board typically rules two days after a hearing, this case could be held off a week or two to allow commissioners Suzanne Ianella and Milton Wright, neither present today, a chance to listen to a recording of the hearing.


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Dr. Kurosawa to the Licensing Board, stat

Accounts from Boston Police and a bouncer at an East Boston bar agree on only one point: Two guys threatened the bouncer with a gun after they were denied entrance one July night.

But which version of the truth the Boston Licensing Board accepts could determine whether Medallo, a Colombian bar on Chelsea Street. has to suffer any punishment, such as a warning or license suspension.

According to a Boston Police account read at a hearing today by Lt. Eric Eversley, the bouncer told police that he denied the Chelsea men entry around midnight on July 25 because they had been banned a few months earlier and that one of the two responded by pulling out a black gun, maybe a Glock, and "worked the slide" or arming it. The manager, according to the police account, then let them in, and they proceeded to give out cards advertising their prostitution business.

Because of the report, the restaurant was cited for assault with a dangerous weapon on an employee, failur to call police and allowing a patron with a firearm on the premises.

Speaking through an interpreter, however, the Spanish-speaking bouncer agreed that while the men did threaten him for barring them, it happened nowhere near the restaurant. He said that after helping to close up around 2 a.m., he walked home - and found himself followed by the two guys in a car. He said the gun display happened outside the steps to his apartment - and that a few days later, they spotted him again walking around the neighborhood and that one pointed his finger at him as if to shoot and promised to "get him."

He denied that the manager let the men in or that they distributed cards advertising companionship services.

Medallo owner Hugo Arrango said the first he head of the incident was when he got the citation a few days later from police.

Board Chairwoman Nicole Murati Ferrer asked the bouncer, "Did you change your story because you feel you're going to get into trouble with Medallo?"

"No," he replied.

"Did you tell employers about this?" she asked.

"No," he said again.

The board could make its decision in a week or two. Board members Suzanne Ianella and Milton Wright were not present today; they will listen to a recording of the hearing and then join Ferrer in deciding what, if anything, to do.


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The protest didn't seem to suit him

Guy in suit walks by Occupy Boston

Power suiters going to and from their lunchbreaks kept passing by the Occupy Boston encampment in Dewey Square today. The guy below urged occupods to stand by the sidewalk and to engage - but not antagonize - passersby, rather than just fraternizing with fellow protesters in the confines of the encampment.

Commandante Cero


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Criminal charges dropped against would-be Bank of America occupiers

The Suffolk County District Attorney's office today dropped misdemeanor trespassing charges against 24 people who tried to stage a sit-in at Bank of America's Massachusetts headquarters as a protest against its lending and foreclosure policies on Friday.

"The Commonwealth makes this recommendation based on the peaceful nature of the protest and the non-confrontational manner of their interactions with police," Assistant District Attorney Susan Terrey said in Boston Municipal Court today.

The change, accepted by the protesters, ranging in age from 19 to 68, means none will face a criminal record as a result of the protest, organized by Take Back Boston, a coalition of local and national groups that also staged a weekend protest in Dorchester.


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Another waterfront bar tries to stop patrons from making a splash

A man who jumped into Boston Harbor from the roof deck at Whiskey Priest in August has gotten the bar in hot water.

A manager at the Northern Avenue watering hole told Boston Licensing Board Chairwoman Nicole Murati Ferrer today they've added additional staff to the deck and posted 10 to 12 signs around the deck warning that harbor jumping will be prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law - assuming they can catch the jumpers to begin with.

According to the bar and Boston Police, two bar workers had to fish the guy out of the water, because he kept trying, but failing to get up on a floating dock across the water from the bar. A bar manager and doorman tried to hold the man - a member of a bachelor party, possibly the bachelor himself - but he slipped away and ran down Northern Avenue. The two workers caught up with him by Jerry Remy's, but then he managed to run away again.

The jump happened four days before a similar incident at the neighboring Atlantic Beer Garden, which has since posted similar signs.

The manager, however, said there is little the bar can do to stop a determined jumper from performing "spontaneous acts of stupidity" - especially somebody who is surrounded by guys egging him on - and hiding him. In this case, bar workers had absolutely no indication the guy was going to jump, he said, adding there have been no further jumps since then.

The board will decide in the next week or two what action, if any, to take, after board members Milton Wright and Suzanne Ianella, both absent today, listen to a recording of today's hearing.


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Truck wars: Cambridge councilor proposes reversing flow of main route to force trucks into Boston

Seems Cambridge doesn't like Boston's idea of keeping gasoline tankers out of the North End and so City Councilor and Vice Mayor Henrietta Davis wants to look at making River Street one way towards Boston to keep trucks coming off the turnpike from entering her city, Cambridge Day reports.

The Boston proposal is aimed at tankers using Atlantic Avenue and Commercial Street as a shortcut from places like Chelsea to the South Shore, by forcing them onto 128, so nowhere near the Allston/Cambridge tolls, but that didn't stop Davis, who had to emphasize she was dead serious.


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Driver says he felt threatened by helmetcam bicyclist

Channel 4 tracks down and interviews the driver captured on Eoin O'Carrol's helmetcam on Mass. Ave. a couple weeks back.


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Keep on food truckin'

Hairee Lee interviews the people behind three of our homegrown food trucks - and one homegrown coffee-cart-on-a-bike.


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