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Man pleads guilty to murdering dance instructor in fight he started for no damn reason

A Roxbury man pleaded guilty today to voluntary manslaughter for the death of Shawndell Mitchell two years ago.

Siraaj Abdulnur, 21, was sentenced to 16 to 18 years in prison for Mitchell's death at the Mission Park Housing Development behind 84 New Whitney St.

Prosecutors say Mitchell, a dance instructor from Roslindale, was hanging out with some friends outside the project around 3 a.m. on Oct. 6, 2007 when Abudlnur walked up to him and punched him in the face for no reason - the two did not know each other:

The victim defended himself from Abdulnur and returned a punch. The two men continued to engage in a physical confrontation, until Abdulnur produced a gun and shot once at the victim, hitting him in the chest.


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Average Boston property owner to see tax increase


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Guy with knife tries holding up letter carrier in Dorchester; reward offered

WantedThe Dorchester Reporter has details on the attack yesterday on Mt. Bowdoin Terrace.

Wed, 12/09/2009 - 14:20
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No criminal charges in fatal firetruck crash; DA blames crappy maintenance

Suffolk County District Attorney Dan Conley today blamed a poorly maintained firetruck and human error for the death of Boston Fire Lt. Kevin Kelley in January, but said nobody was criminally responsible for Ladder 26's fatal crash into a Huntington Avenue apartment complex.

In a statement, Conley said an 11-month investigation of the crash of Ladder 26 found "every braking device on the truck was compromised to one degree or another at the time of the crash" after years of poor maintenance - and that it had been on the streets for years with bad brakes. The firefighter at the wheel of the truck also had not been properly trained in the use of the truck's air braking system.

Kelley possibly sealed his fate by ordering the truck's driver to keep going straight rather than try to stop by swerving into cars on the narrow street - but Conley praised that as a heroic action that possibly saved the lives of pedestrians and people inside houses along the street. S

Investigators considered charges of manslaughter and motor vehicle homicide by negligent operation, but Conley said there was no single action that led directly to Kelley's death - and because his office concluded that even if the firefighter at the wheel had received proper training, the truck might still have crashed because the brakes were already in such poor shape.

"Human error, insufficient driver training, the substandard in-house and outside maintenance of Ladder 26, the topography of Parker Hill Avenue, and Lieutenant Kelley’s self-sacrificing determination to protect civilian lives all combined on that fateful day to send a massive piece of firefighting machinery hurtling toward a tragedy that is still felt almost a year later,” Conley wrote in a letter to Fire Commissioner Rod Fraser.

Copy of Conley's letter to Fraser.


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Tis the season: Window smashers return to Newbury Street

Boston Police report arresting two men early Tuesday on smash-and-grab charges.

According to police, around 2:40 a.m., a beat cop watched two guys walk up to the window at the Armani shop at 22 Newbury St., look in, saunter into the Public Garden, then return and strike the window with a brick wrapped in a sock.

Police say the pair snatched a purse, but didn't get a chance to show it off at a ball because the cop chased them, catching the dude with the purse as officers called up on the radio went after the other guy - whom witnesses told police was busy running down Berkeley toward Comm. Ave.

John S. Dowd, 29, of Winthrop, and Kevin Wells, 34, of Boston, were charged with breaking and entering in the nighttime. Allegedly, police overheard Wells telling his mother on his free phone call "you can forget about me for the holidays, I'm gonna have to go back to the joint. I hid in the bushes for a little while but I guess I didn’t stay long enough."

Innocent, etc.


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Beefy guy in black Sox hat sought for East Boston holdup

District A-7 reports a man walking down Paris Street around 6 p.m. on Dec. 6 was held up by a man who motioned as if he had a gun.

The suspect, whom the victim reports seeing in his gym earlier in the evening, was described as being Hispanic, in his late 20s, about 5'8" and weighing around 200 lbs. He took the victim's gold chain and cell phone, then fled in a dark Acura coupe, Mass. plates 51H X34, with four other men in it.

Sun, 12/06/2009 - 18:00
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Beth Israel surgeon refuses to admit he could ever make a mistake

Beth Israel Deaconess CEO Paul Levy posts an exchange of e-mails among surgeons over a new requirement that they complete an online training module brought in after a surgeon operated on the wrong side of a patient last year. However, he omits the name of the surgeon who thinks he would never make a mistake like that and that the training is just a waste of his time.


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Channel 7 reporter learns what happens when you stand on the beach at high tide during a storm

We're still waiting for the day when a reporter is swept out to sea, though:

Via Jessica Heslam.


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Ain't no sunshine for Quincy bar in copyright lawsuit

A group representing music publishers yesterday filed a federal lawsuit against Bad Abbots for allegedly letting a band play copyrighted music without a license one Saturday night in September.

Broadcast Music, Inc. did not put a price tag on its lawsuit in US District Court, but how could it? "The specific acts of copyright infringement alleged, as well as defendants' entire course of conduct, have caused and are causing plaintiffs great and incalculable damage," the copyright clearinghouse gravely complains about the actions of bar musicians on Sept. 26.

The suit alleges that musicians at the bar, which advertises live music on weekends, played ten copyrighted songs with no proof they'd paid a licensing fee, including "Ain't No Sunshine," "Mustang Sally," "You Can't Always Get What You Want" and "Love the One You're With."

Entire complaint.


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