Articles Posted in Violent Crimes

Krysty Sampson of Abington, Massachusetts was awakened Thursday morning by a man standing at the foot of her bed, carrying a knife and demanding money. Apparently Ms. Sampson chased the intruder from her home and down the street. A neighbor witnessed these events and called the police. Ms. Sampson’s yell for help during the incident alerted the neighbor to the problem. Police officers responded and noticed a strong odor of marijuana coming from the basement. They investigated and found growing equipment and eighty three marijuana plants. Ms. Sampson’s husband was not home at the time however both have been charged with Cultivating Marijuana. The case is being prosecuted in the Brockton District Court.

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Possible Possession With Intent To Distribute Marijuana Charges Loom Over Abington Home Invasion Victim

Cultivating Marijuana in Massachusetts is a crime in accordance with Massachusetts General Laws Chapter 94C Section 32C. The law states that anyone found guilty of this crime can be sentenced for up to two years in the house of correction. This crime is a Misdemeanor in Massachusetts meaning that the punishment for the crime itself does not include a state prison option. A Massachusetts Criminal Defense Lawyer with Experience in Brockton Courts might be able to get this case continued without a finding, particularly if the defendants do not have criminal records.

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Nelson Nunez of Lynn, Massachusetts is currently being held in the Essex County Jail in Middleton on a cash bail of twenty thousand dollars. Nunez has been charged with Indecent Assault and Battery, Assault With a Dangerous Weapon and Assault With the Intent to Commit Rape. According to reports, on August 22, 2009 Nunez tried to rape his forty three year old girlfriend as he took off her clothes at knifepoint. The victim fought with Nunez and ran away calling for help after she freed herself. At that time the two had been in a relationship for over one year. Police stated that when they came into contact with the woman she had red marks and bruising around her neck. These cases are Felonies in Massachusetts.

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$20,000.00 Bail For Lynn Man Who Tried To Rape Girlfriend

In cases like this the fact that Nunez and the woman had a longstanding relationship often becomes a critical aspect of the defense. If they had a consensual sexual relationship a Massachusetts Rape Defense Lawyer might want to know what purpose would brandishing the knife serve. Was there truly an attack or was the report fabricated as a result of some dispute between the parties and the woman’s efforts to gain control of sorts in the relationship. What were the marks on the woman, if any consistent with. What statements has the woman made since the act that may suggest she is not being truthful. A thorough investigation is often the springboard for a successful defense. Defending Rape Cases in Massachusetts requires the expertise of an Experienced Criminal Defense Lawyer who has defended Sexual Assault Crimes and one who knows how to investigate such allegations.

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Just before Thanksgiving Massachusetts Police set up a sobriety checkpoint in North Andover, Massachusetts. According to many reports Kenneth Howe, a forty five year old father of three was a passenger in a car being driven by a friend. The car was pulled over at the sobriety checkpoint. Howe might have had a marijuana cigarette in his possession that he was trying to extinguish. When asked to get out of the car he jumped out of a window, supposedly struck an officer and attempted to run away. He was quickly apprehended. Other reports suggest that Howe was dragged out of the car by a female trooper who claimed that Howe had assaulted her. A friend of Howe’s who was present at the time stated that up to twenty police officers descended on Howe. The lawyer for Howe’s family, Frances King commented that the “police acted like savage beasts” and that a witness overheard officers stating it was a “good thing we had flashlights”. Howe was taken to the police barracks in Andover where he collapsed during booking. He was taken to the Lawrence General Hospital where he was pronounced dead.

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Massachusetts Man Dies After Struggle At Sobriety Checkpoint

Almost every time I have a client who has been charged with Assault and Battery on a Police Officer the client comes into my office looking pretty beat up. There is no secret in Massachusetts Criminal Legal circles that this charge is filed anytime the police get overly aggressive with a suspect. Defense attorneys, judges and prosecutors know this and often the result of the case; i.e. a dismissal of this charge reflects this sentiment. The best thing defense attorneys can do in a case like this is go to the crime scene and look around for surveillance cameras. Post 9-11 many businesses and government structures such as schools, highways, bridges and even police vehicles have installed videotaping equipment to monitor suspicious activity. In this case, if there is video evidence of this incident I have no doubt that Attorney King will find it. She is an excellent attorney who knows firsthand how law enforcement officers operate.

I am more curious to see how the Essex County District Attorney’s Office handles this case. If Attorney King’s witnesses’ account of this event is accurate, what will Mr. Blodgett do? Twenty or even ten police officers beating a man to death at a sobriety checkpoint is nothing short of murder. How can these actions be justified? How injured was the female trooper? Did she go to the hospital? The law on self-defense in Massachusetts is clear. You can use no more force than is necessary to defend yourself. Was it necessary to use force sufficient to kill Howe? And would it not make more sense for an independent agency to investigate this case? After all, Mr. Blodgett’s office prosecutes cases that many of these officers have investigated. If ten or twenty civilians went to the aid of a female friend or colleague who claimed to have been struck by a stranger and beat him to death you can be assured that Mr. Blogdett would respond with indictments. One thing you can be sure of. If Jonathan Blodgett does not properly investigate this case, Frances King will.

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Manson Brown was serving a seven to ten year sentence at the Old Colony Correctional Facility in Bridgewater, Massachusetts. He was scheduled to be paroled in 2012. This past Friday Brown escaped from the prison sometime in the early evening hours, just after dark. In 2005 Brown was convicted of home invasion and robbery. However he was recently indicted on rape charges in the Middlesex Superior Court in Woburn stemming from a 1996 attack in Cambridge. Brown last lived in the Mattapan section of Boston. Reports from the Plymouth County Sheriff’s Office suggest that Brown may have escaped during a cigarette break. Other sources state that the escape was from the kitchen.

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Man Facing Rape Charges In Massachusetts Escaped From Prison

The crime of Escape in Massachusetts is a felony in accordance with Massachusetts General Laws Chapter 268 Section 16. A conviction for this crime is punishable by up to ten years in state prison. This however seems to be the least of Mr. Brown’s problems. It is believed that Brown’s escape attempt was motivated by the recent rape and home invasion indictment. Local media outlets have suggested that DNA testing linked Brown to the thirteen year old rape. A conviction for Home Invasion in Massachusetts carries a minimum mandatory twenty year state prison sentence. If convicted of this crime alone Brown would not be paroled until he was in his mid 70’s.

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Last Friday Daniel O’Brien was arrested in Littleton, Massachusetts after trying to entice a twelve year old girl to meet him at a local train station. O’Brien is from Virginia. Authorities claim that after months of online exchanges with the girl he came to Massachusetts by train as planned. When he arrived he was met by local police and arrested him. O’Brien had a return ticket for the girl in his possession. Charges of Attempted Kidnapping and Child Endangerment are now pending in the Ayer District Court. Bail was set at fifty thousand dollars cash.

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Man To Be Arraigned For Attempted Child Abduction In Massachusetts

Typically in cases like this law enforcement officials are able to produce email and other computer generated correspondences between the victim and someone else. Identifying that other person accurately can be problematic. People use other people’s computers. Predators use fictitious names. IP addresses help narrow the search for the suspect but do not necessarily direct police to the culprit. Defending these case can be challenging. In Massachusetts Criminal Defense Lawyers who Defend Internet or Cyber Crimes are necessary in these types of cases. Your best chance of success is hiring a Massachusetts Internet Crimes Lawyer to protect your rights. Prosecutors take these cases very seriously and they are usually prosecuted in the Superior Courts.

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Michael Ehlert is eighteen years old. Michael Leoni is seventeen year old. Both live in Marblehead, Massachusetts. Both are now facing serious felony charges in the Lynn District Court. It would not surprise me at all to see these charges indicted and prosecuted in the Essex County Superior Court in Salem. According to reports Ehlert and Leoni viciously attacked a school age boy who was walking home in the early evening hours on October 29, 2009. When the boy passed by the defendants they dragged him into a local cemetery, choked him, beat him, kicked him and searched him for money. They made him smoke a cigarette, stole his wallet and made him lead them to the victim’s home where they located and stole his iPOd. As a result of these acts Leoni has been charged with Assault With Intent to Rob, Kidnapping, Assault and Battery by Means of a Dangerous Weapon and Larceny. Ehlert has been charged with the same crimes along with Intimidation of a Witness. All of these Crimes are Felonies in Massachusetts.

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Massachusetts Men Charged With Assorted Violent Crimes In Connection With Robbery Of Another Teenager

In the context of these facts all of these crimes are considered very Serious Felonies in Massachusetts. The Robbery charge alone carries a maximum life sentence. Assault and Battery by Means of a Dangerous Weapon carries a potential ten year sentence. Kidnapping convictions can also result in the imposition of a ten year state prison sentence. There are however a few thoughts that come to mind when reading about this case. How was it that nobody saw the victim being dragged into the cemetery? Why did he not yell out for help when walking back to house? Could he have run away when going back to his home or could he have yelled out to a neighbor for help? Was the attack unprovoked or was there something that precipitated the event? These are questions that an Experienced Massachusetts Defense Lawyer will address in preparing the defense of these defendants.

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Just after midnight the other day Framingham, Massachusetts police received a call from a local pizza restaurant employee complaining that Ryan McArthur was causing problems after he was denied entry to the establishment. When the police arrived they observed McArthur in the street waiving his arms. When they exited their cars McArthur supposedly then charged the officers. As the police tried to subdue McArthur the defendant struggled and tried to escape. He was ultimately apprehended and charged with two counts of Assault and Battery on a Police Officer and Resisting Arrest. Charges are now pending in the Framingham District Court.

Assault And Battery Charges Issue Against Framingham Man After Scuffle With Police

People think that Assault and Battery on a Police Officer is a difficult charge to defend. It is natural to think that a jury or a judge will believe a police officer over a defendant and that you have no chance to win a case like this one. That however is not true. As I have written in past blog posts Assault and Battery on a Police Officer is a charge that the police bring any time they apply force, particularly excessive force to a suspect. They realize that if they do not bring that charge they risk getting sued for their conduct. Experienced Massachusetts Criminal Defense Lawyers understand this trend and often prepare their client’s defenses to these charges with that in mind.

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“JR'”, a pseudonym, of Randolph, Massachusetts was charged with Armed Assault With Intent To Murder, Discharging a Firearm Within 500 Feet of a Building and Improper Storage of a Firearm after a dispute with his neighbor over a fence ended up in a shooting. According to reports JR and his wife were in their yard last Friday night when the neighbor went onto JR’s property to discuss an ongoing dispute regarding a fence that separates the neighbor’s properties. The discussion turned violent when JR hit the neighbor who responded by throwing a beer can at JR. Supposedly JR then pulled out a gun and shot the neighbor in the stomach. Afterwards JR tried to stop the bleeding and tended to the man’s wound. JR’s wife told police that he had been out drinking earlier in the evening and that he becomes violent when he drinks. JR is licensed to carry firearms. His bail was set at twenty thousand dollars by a judge in the Quincy District Court.

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Massachusetts Man Shoots Neighbor During Dispute Over Fence

A couple of thoughts come to mind when reading this article. Did JR act in self-defense? Even if he did the law in Massachusetts makes clear that people can use force in self defense however no one can use more force than is reasonably necessary under the circumstances of this case. In a case like this jurors will consider the relative sizes of the combatants, their actions and the location of this incident. Keep in mind that this happened on JR’s property suggesting that the neighbor could have been the aggressor. The neighbor used a dangerous weapon on Leonard prior to the shooting. Further actions by the neighbor not addressed in the article could give rise to a legitimate self-defense claim. The fact that JR immediately assisted the neighbor suggests that the shooting might have been an accident. An “accident” in Massachusetts is defined as an unexpected happening that occurs without intention or design on the defendant’s part. It means a sudden, unexpected event that takes place without the defendant’s intending it. Here, brandishing the gun does not necessarily mean that JR intended to fire it. The act of shooting might have been an accident, a valid defense to these charges.

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Devin Joseph Sheehan-Powers of Boston was indicted by an Essex County Grand Jury last week following his arrest for a July 15, 2009 incident. According to reports Sheehan-Powers was observed by Lynn Police chasing down a disabled man while brandishing a knife. Law enforcement officers saw Sheehan-Powers then punch the victim in the face and steal his cell phone. The attack was described as brutal. The officers who witnessed the incident chased the defendant and were able to apprehend him shortly after observing the crime. He was found in possession of the knife and crack cocaine. Bail in the case has been set at ten thousand dollars. The case will now be transferred from the Lynn District Court to the Salem Superior Court. Sheehan-Powers has formally been charged with armed robbery, possession of cocaine, assault and battery with a dangerous weapon causing serious bodily injury, aggravated assault and battery, mayhem and resisting arrest.

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Boston Man Charged With Assortment Of Violent Crimes, Drug Possession After Assault On Winthrop Man

The crime of mayhem in Massachusetts is proscribed by Massachusetts General Laws Chapter 265 Section 14. The law states that the prosecution must prove that the defendant had the malicious intent to maim or disfigure the victim and that with that intent he “cuts out or maims the tongue, puts out or destroys an eye, cuts or tears off an ear, cuts, slits or mutilates the nose or lip, or cuts off or disables a limb or member, of another person”. Alternatively the prosecution can obtain a conviction for this crime if it proves beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant, possessing the intent to “maim or disfigure, assaults another person with a dangerous weapon, substance or chemical, and by such assault disfigures, cripples or inflicts serious or permanent physical injury upon such person”. A conviction of this crime carries a potential twenty year state prison sentence. The article suggests that the prosecution in this case will be proceeding under the second theory given the victim needed eye surgery at a Boston hospital.

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Bruce Sartwell of Abington, Massachusetts has been charged with extortion. It is alleged that Sartwell, who owns a tattoo parlor and another Outlaws Motorcycle Club member confronted a nearby pizzeria owner to ask if he intended to open a tattoo parlor upstairs. He responded that he did intend to do so. One of the motorcycle members told him that that was a bad idea. The complainant responded that he did not ask for their opinion and that he would open a tattoo parlor if he wanted to. Supposedly either the defendant or his friend made an arguably threatening remark about damaging the pizzeria owner’s building. By his own admission the complainant made clear that the defendant denied threatening him or his building by stating that he was not threatening him and that threats as such would be illegal. Nevertheless the pizza shop owner called the police. They arrested Sartwell and charged him with extortion. The case is pending in the Brockton District Court.

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Massachusetts Motorcycle Gang Member Charged With Extortion In Brockton

The crime of extortion in Massachusetts is proscribed by Massachusetts General Laws Chapter 265 Section 25. The law states that anyone who threatens another with injury to his person or property in order to extort money or gain a pecuniary advantage is guilty of extortion, a felony in Massachusetts. A conviction of this crime is punishable by a maximum fifteen year state prison sentence or two and one half years in jail. Most likely this case will be prosecuted in the district court where it is now pending.

This case might be difficult for the district attorney to prove. It is the word of the pizza parlor owner against that of the defendant and his friend. Keep in mind that the “victim” in this case is a business competitor of the defendant’s. His self-proclaimed bravado about standing up to the defendant and his friend is tough to swallow. He is able to stand up to these men yet decides later to call the police due to a perceived threat? This sounds a bit sketchy. Perhaps it is the complainant who is trying to gain a competitive advantage in his business over the defendant by making this complaint.

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