Quantcast
Channel: Maine Crime - Kennebec Journal and Morning Sentinel
Viewing all 8256 articles
Browse latest View live

Augusta sex offender arrested on three child porn charges

$
0
0

AUGUSTA — Convicted sex offender Robert L. Robinson III, 34, of Augusta, was arrested Thursday on three charges of possession of sexually explicit material depicting a child under the age of 12.

Robinson’s arrest follows a monthslong investigation starting in January, when police heard complaints about him photographing young girls in public.

“Detectives from the Augusta Police Department obtained a search warrant, and worked in conjunction with the Maine Computer Crimes Task Force to execute the warrant in search of evidence of the reported crimes,” Augusta Police Department Deputy Chief Kevin Lully wrote in a Friday morning news release.

Lully said detectives hunted through all the images on Robinson’s various social media accounts, leading to the three charges.

“We would like to thank the public for their assistance and patience; cases of this nature take time due the complexity of obtaining evidence,” he said.

Robinson is a lifetime registrant on the sex offender registry. He was sentenced in 2006 to serve an initial six months in prison, with the remainder of the five-year sentence suspended, and four years probation, on three counts of engaging in a sexual act with another person that had not attained the age of 14 years, according to the Maine Sex Offender Registry. Those convictions prohibit Robinson from “intentionally or knowingly initiating direct or indirect contact” with children under 14, the arrest affidavit read.

In the new changes, an affidavit, written by Sgt. Jesse Brann, of the Augusta Police Department, and filed Friday at the Capital Judicial Center, said Robinson’s account on Flickr — a photo-sharing platform — once had more than 300,000 photos on it. Brann said “thousands of images and videos” on various accounts showed Robinson “in close proximity to girls under the age of 14.”

Brann wrote that Robinson expressed in at least one update on his social media accounts “that sex with children should be legal.”

On Jan. 24, police obtained and executed a warrant to search and seize computer-related property from Robinson at his Northern Avenue apartment.

Robinson told Brann while the warrant was being executed that he “is attracted to young girls … once a girl reaches puberty.”

Robinson admitted to officers that there might be child pornography on the seized computers. He told Brann that “he was stupid and believed nights when he was intoxicated by alcohol and narcotics that he looked up websites he shouldn’t have.” These websites, Robinson explained, are hosted on the “dark web” and included chat groups that talk about pedophilia. Robinson said some conversations about children as young as 6 “actually bothered him,” Brann wrote.

The affidavit said that Robinson admitted to Brann that he was sexually attracted to the girls he photographed in public.

On May 10, Brann met with Maine Computer Crimes analysts who said they analyzed 100,000 photos on Robinson’s computers and found “a few images of what would be considered child pornography.”

Brann reviewed images for nine hours, according to the affidavit, and located “multiple images of girls who I was aware were under the age of fourteen that had been taken in Augusta.”

Some images from Robinson’s computer — some digitally altered and some not — showed children “approximately four to six years old” in sexually explicit scenarios, Brann wrote.

Robinson was arrested Thursday night.

A judge on Friday set Robinson’s bail at $10,000 cash, with conditions requiring a Maine Pretrial Services supervision contract and banning him from contact with children under 16 years of age and from using computers or cellphones that connect to the Internet. Robinson is being held at the Kennebec County jail.

At Robinson’s initial court appearance via video link with the jail, attorney Henry Beck, representing Robinson as attorney of the day, suggested a high unsecured bail with a Maine Pretrial Services contract.

Beck told Judge Eric Walker that while the computer crimes charges are serious, Robinson “suffers from a severe spectrum disorder, lives on Social Security and has in-home support three times a week.

“I believe there are health and safety issues having him here at the facility,” Beck said.

Robinson’s fingers on his right hand twitched constantly and he scratched repeatedly at his balding scalp while he stood next to Beck. Robinson also said he understood the charges against him.

The prosecutor at the hearing, Assistant District Attorney Carie James, argued for $10,000 cash bail with conditions for Robinson, saying, “There is no indication he can refrain from criminal conduct,” and that it was necessary “for the integrity of the justice system.”

The Maine Legislature, prompted by outrage this winter, began work on a bill to try to curb behavior similar to Robinson’s. On April 2, a law evolving from the bill was enacted to protect children under 14 from being photographed by “Certain Persons.”

The law differs greatly from the bill introduced in the Legislature, which began as “An Act To Establish as a Class D Crime the Intentional Photographing of a Minor without Consent of the Minor’s Parent or Guardian by an Individual Required To Register as a Sex Offender.”

The law identifies as criminal conduct “a person photographing another person who has not in fact attained 14 years of age after the person’s having been notified, in writing or otherwise, by a law enforcement officer, corrections officer or judicial officer not to engage in that conduct. The notification not to engage in that conduct expires after a year.”

Class D crimes are punishable by up to one year in prison and/or fines of up to $2,000.

Rep. Matt Pouliot, R-Augusta, the bill’s sponsor, told the Kennebec Journal in January that he introduced the legislation after hearing from upset constituents.

Betty Adams contributed to this report.

Sam Shepherd — 621-5666

sshepherd@centralmaine.com

Twitter: @SamShepME


Kennebec Journal Sept. 7 police log

$
0
0

IN AUGUSTA, on Thursday at 5:08 a.m., a loose dog was reported near Weeks Mills Road and North Belfast Road.

At 8:13 a.m., police investigated a theft complaint from a Cony Street caller.

At 8:23 a.m., city officials set a trap to catch a stray cat on Gannett Street.

At 8:25 a.m., police investigated a report of criminal threatening on Western Avenue.

At 8:59 a.m., police conducted a follow-up investigation on Tasker Road.

At 10:02 a.m., police investigated a theft complaint from a Summer Street caller.

At 10:18 a.m., city officials took a stray cat caught on Gannett Street to the animal shelter.

At 10:56 a.m., a stray cat was caught and taken back to its guardian on Greenlief Street.

At 11:02 a.m., suspicious activity was reported by a Northern Avenue caller.

At 11:05 a.m., suspicious activity was reported by a Lafayette Street caller.

At 11:53 a.m., police investigated a disturbance on Pierce Drive.

At 1:10 p.m., a Water Street caller reported an animal problem.

At 2:53 p.m., police issued a warning to at least one person while investigating a disturbance on Union Street.

At 3:21 p.m., police investigated a disturbance on Western Avenue.

At 3:30 p.m., police conducted an investigation about recovered property on Cony Street.

At 4:17 p.m., a disturbance was reported on Glendridge Drive.

At 4:58 p.m., police investigated a report of criminal threatening on East Chestnut Street.

At 5:13 p.m., suspicious activity was reported near Bangor Street and Park Street.

At 5:31 p.m., police investigated a theft complaint on Eastern Avenue.

At 5:46 p.m., police issued a warning to at least one person while investigating a disturbance on Bond Brook Road.

At 6:12 p.m., police conducted an investigation about recovered property on Capitol Street.

At 6:38 p.m., police investigated a theft reported by a Sewall Street caller.

At 7:36 p.m., police issued a warning to an intoxicated person on Stone Street.

At 9:48 p.m., police issued a warning after a pedestrian check near Water Street and Green Street.

At 9:52 p.m., police issued a warning after a pedestrian check near Water Street and Bond Street.

On Friday at 4:06 a.m., police responded to a burglar alarm on Bolton Hill Road.

IN GARDINER, on Thursday at 8:19 a.m., police conducted a follow-up investigation on Water Street.

At 1:26 p.m., a Spring Street caller made an animal complaint.

IN LITCHFIELD, on Thursday at 7:06 p.m., police issued a warning to one or more people after a trespassing complaint by a Richmond Road caller.

South Portland man pleads guilty to role in bank robbery

$
0
0

A South Portland man has pleaded guilty in federal court to conspiracy to commit bank robbery.

Waddah Siedahmed, 23, appeared Thursday in U.S. District Court in Portland to enter his plea. He faces up to five years in jail, a $250,000 fine and restitution.

Court records show Siedahmed and another person agreed to rob a Key Bank branch in Portland on Nov. 17. The other person entered the bank that afternoon wearing a black sweatshirt, black gloves, black glasses, dark colored jeans and what appeared to be a long black wig. That person also carried and used what appeared to be a firearm.

The bank robber made off with $1,721. Police say Siedahmed received a share of the stolen money. Within hours of the crime, police located Siedahmed and recovered some of that money.

It was not immediately clear what happened to the person who committed the robbery, who was not named in the press release from the U.S. Attorney’s Office about Siedahmed’s plea. Police closed multiple streets near the bank that day to find the suspect, who was believed to have fled on foot.

The case was investigated by the Portland Police Department and the FBI’s Southern Maine Gang Task Force.

 

Biddeford School Committee member faces assault, attempted rape charges

$
0
0

A member of the Biddeford School Committee has been indicted on multiple assault charges.

A York County grand jury handed down the charges Thursday. Dennis Anglea, 58, faces felony charges for aggravated assault and attempted gross sexual assault. He is also charged with a misdemeanor for domestic violence assault.

Anglea was first elected to the school committee in 2013. His current term expires at the end of next year, according to the city’s website.

“The accusations that are against me are false, and I’m letting my lawyer and the system take care of it,” Anglea said Friday when reached by phone. “I expect to continue serving. I have been charged. In the United States, you are innocent until proven guilty in a court of law.”

Anglea’s lawyer was not immediately available for comment. Biddeford Superintendent Jeremy Ray and Mayor Alan Casavant, who serves as the ex-officio chairperson of the school committee, have not yet responded to messages left Friday afternoon.

No further information about the alleged assault was immediately available.

This story will be updated.

 

Police say York man took psychedelic mushrooms before killing cat

$
0
0

KITTERY – Police say a York man was under the under the influence of hallucinogenic mushrooms when he killed a cat alongside a road this week.

Jared LaFleche

Police discovered the crime when responding to a call about a suspicious man. Officers discovered 23-year-old Jared Lafleche of York was on drugs and had just killed the cat.

Officials told the Portsmouth Herald that Lafleche’s vehicle was impounded and he was transported to the York County Jail, where he remained Friday.

Kittery police Lt. John Desjardins called the arrest “a really bizarre case, unfortunate case.”

A jail official said Lafleche was being held on $1,200 cash bail. It was unclear if he’d retained a defense lawyer.

Morning Sentinel Sept. 7 police log

$
0
0

IN ANSON, Thursday at 3:37 p.m., a burglary was reported on Hollin Waite Hill Road.

IN AVON, Friday at 8:09 a.m., vandalism and criminal mischief were reported on Pleasant Street.

IN ATHENS, Thursday at 5:25 p.m., fire and fallen wires were reported on Brighton Road.

IN CANAAN, Thursday at 4:01 p.m., a harassment complaint was taken from Dunlap Lane.

7:40 p.m., suspicious activity was reported on Hartland Road.

Friday at 8:20 a.m., suspicious activity was reported on Park Drive.

IN DETROIT, Thursday at 11:56 p.m., a noise complaint was investigated on Troy Road.

IN EUSTIS, Friday at 8:14 a.m., a disturbance was reported on Main Street.

IN FAIRFIELD, Thursday at 1:22 p.m., a harassment complaint was taken from Bray Avenue.

6:55 p.m., a complaint was taken from Main Street.

10:07 p.m., suspicious activity was reported on Hinckley Road.

Friday at 3:41 a.m., suspicious activity was reported on Burrill Street.

IN FARMINGTON, Thursday at 7:40 a.m., police were called to assist another officer or agency.

8:35 a.m., a disabled motor vehicle was investigated on Wilton Road.

8:36 a.m., a disabled motor vehicle was investigated on Main Street.

11:26 a.m., suspicious activity was reported on Industry Road.

7:57 p.m., threatening was reported on High Street.

IN JACKMAN, Thursday at 12:14 p.m., suspicious activity was reported on Halfway Brook Road.

IN JAY, Thursday at 5:39 p.m., threatening was reported on Main Street.

IN KINGFIELD, Thursday at 7:58 p.m., a domestic disturbance was reported on Main Street.

Friday at 1:06 a.m., suspicious activity was reported on Narrow Gauge Street.

IN MADISON, Thursday at 9:21 a.m., a domestic disturbance was reported on Clifton Street.

9:54 a.m., a civil complaint was taken from Clifton Street.

5:40 p.m., a report of a disturbance was investigated on Old Point Avenue.

6:49 p.m., a complaint was taken from Hardy Street.

IN OAKLAND, Thursday at 9:55 a.m., suspicious activity was reported on Libby Hill Road.

4:26 p.m., harassment was reported on Heath Street.

5:08 p.m., suspicious activity was reported on Mary Lane.

6:56 p.m., harassment was reported on Elizabeth Street.

8:10 p.m., threatening was reported on Oak Street.

IN PHILLIPS, Thursday at 9:23 a.m., trespassing was reported on Rangeley Road.

6:53 p.m., suspicious activity was reported on Rangeley Road.

IN RIPLEY, Thursday at 4:09 p.m., fire and fallen trees were reported on Page Hill Road.

IN SKOWHEGAN, Thursday at 5:15 p.m., a scam complaint was taken from Butler Street.

6 p.m., police made an arrest during a traffic stop on Silver Street.

6:31 p.m., a theft was reported at Fairgrounds Market Place.

7:26 p.m., a disturbance was reported on Waterville Road.

10:20 p.m., police made an arrest after a report of a disturbance on Waterville Road.

10:24 p.m., police were called to assist another agency on Water Street.

Friday at 1:41 a.m., a structure fire was reported on Milburn Street.

IN SMITHFIELD, Thursday at 3:01 p.m., a theft was reported on Village Road.

AT THE UNIVERSITY OF MAINE AT FARMINGTON, Thursday at 1:48 p.m., suspicious activity was reported at Lot 26.

2:18 p.m., suspicious activity was reported at Lot 26.

4:02 p.m., burglary was reported at Lot 26.

4:34 p.m., suspicious activity was reported at Lot 26.

9:09 p.m., burglary was reported on High Street.

Friday at 1:18 a.m., police were called to assist another agency.

IN WATERVILLE, Thursday at 10:56 a.m., harassment was reported on Halde Street.

11:54 a.m., an unwanted person was reported on Main Street.

1:54 p.m., shoplifting was reported on Main Street.

2 p.m., a report of drug offenses led to an arrest on Brook Street.

2:02 p.m., theft was reported on Elm Street.

2:12 p.m., suspicious activity was reported on Colby Street.

3:30 p.m., burglary of a motor vehicle was reported on Drummond Avenue.

4:40 p.m., drug offenses were reported on Colby Street.

5:03 p.m., criminal mischief was reported on Pleasant Street.

6:04 p.m., an unwanted person was reported on Colby Street.

8:18 p.m., theft was reported on College Avenue.

8:40 p.m., suspicious activity was reported on Armory Road.

9:42 p.m., suspicious activity was reported on Preston Street at Silver Street.

10:07 p.m., criminal mischief was reported on Temple Street.

11:54 p.m., harassment was reported on Hazelwood Avenue.

Friday at 1:07 a.m., harassment was reported on College Avenue.

2:21 a.m., burglary of a motor vehicle was reported on Crawford Street.

5:38 a.m., burglary was reported on Green Street.

IN WILTON, Thursday at 7:54 p.m., suspicious activity was reported on Applegate Lane.

Friday at 8:04 a.m., theft by fraud was reported on U.S. Route 2.

IN WINSLOW, Thursday at 11:09 a.m., fraud or forgery was reported on China Road.

12:24 p.m., bad checks were reported on China Road.

4:05 p.m., suspicious activity was reported on Garland Road.

8:13 p.m., an arrest was made on Benton Avenue.

9:36 p.m., an arrest was made on McCaslin Drive.

ARRESTS

IN FRANKLIN COUNTY, Thursday at 1:40 a.m., Andrew M. Delcourt, 45, of Coplin Plantation, was arrested on a charge of domestic violence assault.

4:55 p.m., Derek Scott Campbell, 32, of Wilton, was arrested on a writ for Family Court.

5:35 p.m., Dawson Adams, 18, of New Sharon, was arrested on a charge of allowing a minor to possess or consume liquor.

9:59 p.m., Christy L. Torres, 36, of Kingfield, was arrested on a charge of domestic violence assault.

10:38 p.m., Todd P. Sullivan, 26, of Jay, was arrested on a charge of domestic violence criminal mischief.

IN SOMERSET COUNTY, Thursday at 10:09 a.m., Jeffrey Giles, 34, of Palmyra, was arrested on charges of violating a protection order and failure to register a vehicle.

1:40 p.m., Don. E. Avery, 36, of Fairfield, was arrested on a warrant on a charge of domestic violence assault.

4:42 p.m., Donald Wayne Prescott, 29, of Skowhegan, was arrested on a probation violation.

8:54 p.m., Danny W. Rock, 56, of Skowhegan, was arrested on a charge of operating without a license.

11:38 p.m., Scott Malcolm McLean, 26, of North Anson, was arrested on a charge of violating conditions of release.

Friday at 7:12 a.m., Andrew John Proctor, 22, of Fairfield, was arrested and charged with criminal mischief, two counts of violating conditions of release and theft.

3:14 p.m., Duane Lee Killam, 70, of St. Albans, was arrested on a warrant for failure to appear on a charge of theft.

IN WATERVILLE, Thursday at 2:17 p.m., Priscilla Pagliaroli, 22, a transient, was arrested on warrants for failure to appear in court and operating after suspension.

Police investigate deadly shooting of pet cow in Embden

$
0
0

EMBDEN — The owners of a cow that was shot and killed after wandering into a neighbor’s yard and causing damage to an SUV are hoping charges will be brought against the shooter as police continue to investigate the case.

Police say Sophie, a 3-year-old pet Holstein heifer, was shot and killed by a neighbor of her owners after causing damage to an SUV. Photo courtesy of Nikkia Danforth

“She was a family pet, not just a cow,” said Amber Richardson, the niece of Bruce and Jaime Danforth, the animal’s owners. “People have been reaching out to us. They just don’t understand how someone could be so cruel. We’re just trying to wrap our heads around it. We want justice for her. That’s all we really want.”

The cow, a 3-year-old Holstein heifer, was named Sophie and was a beloved pet of the Danforths, who also have two teenage daughters, Nikkia and Cierra. The family says the cow was shot Wednesday morning after wandering into their neighbor’s yard on Getchell Road.

The girls, ages 14 and 17, were home alone after their mother had left for work and their father was out of town, said Richardson, who lives in Canaan. Sophie was in a pen in the backyard but had apparently gotten loose when the girls heard a “pop” around 10 a.m.

“They thought it was their horse hitting its hooves,” she said. “They heard it again a few seconds later but didn’t think anything of it until they heard a knock on the door and it was the animal control officer along with the deputy sheriff, saying, ‘Your cow was shot and it’s dead.'”

The Somerset County Sheriff’s Office, which responded to the call, has handed the case over to the county district attorney, who will decide whether charges will be brought up, said Somerset County Chief Deputy James Ross. In the meantime, the agency is not releasing the names of those involved.

“What it boils down to is a question of whether a property owner has a legal right to use lethal force like that to defend his property,” Ross said. “Is that level of force necessary?”

He said his agency was called to the scene after a report that the cow had done damage to a Lincoln Navigator by rubbing its horns on the fender.

Meanwhile, Richardson said her family has no way of knowing the extent of the damage because their neighbor would not allow them on his property to see the damage or retrieve the cow’s body. She said the animal was shot twice in the head by the neighbor’s adult son.

The two men did not respond immediately to requests for comment sent Friday night via social media.

After police arrived, Richardson said the pair dragged the cow by a chain tied to a pickup truck to the Danforths’ driveway.

The scene, captured by the family on video, shows the animal’s dead body being dragged up to the driveway as a woman’s sobbing is heard in the background.

The men undo the chain and drive off while the family proceeds to remove a collar from the cow’s neck and load her into a bucket loader, which Richardson said they used to move her to their yard and bury her.

“After they unhooked the chain, they’re smiling, turning around and backing out as the girls are crying, dropping to the ground because their animal is dead,” Richardson said. “Sophie was so loving. She was shot right in the top of the head twice.”

By Friday, the video had gathered almost 900 views on Nikkia Danforth’s Facebook page.

“This is the most loving cow I have ever seen but she lost her life today because of some f— faces wanting some meat for there freezer to bullets to her frontal lobe please blast this everywhere!!!!!!!!!!,” she wrote in another post.

Richardson said while Sophie had escaped from her pen before, she typically stays on the Danforths’ property when she gets out.

“All they had to do was come down and say, ‘Sophie is out,’ and the girls would have gotten the grain bucket,” she said. “Once you go and jingle it, she would have gone home. He didn’t even notify them Sophie was out. He killed her then called the animal control officer and sheriff. She was already dead when they reported it.”

Since the incident, the sheriff’s office has been made aware of threats on social media. Ross said he is urging people to “slow down and let us do our jobs.”

“Threatening people is not the way to do it,” he said.

Richardson also said while the family wants justice, they are not encouraging people to make threats against the alleged shooter.

“It really needs to be handled the right way through the law,” she said. “It should have been handled through the law in the first place the other day, rather than saying, ‘It’s justified. Sorry.'”

Rachel Ohm — 612-2368

rohm@centralmaine.com

Twitter: @rachel_ohm

Scarborough woman gets 2 years for embezzling from medical practices

$
0
0

A Scarborough woman who pleaded guilty to embezzling more than $500,000 from a Falmouth doctor’s office and a Maine dental practice was sentenced Friday to two years in prison.

Carrie Caporino, 46, was sentenced in U.S. District Court by Judge John A. Woodcock, Jr. to two years in prison and three years of supervised release. She was also ordered to pay $549,468.80 in restitution, according to a news release from the U.S. Attorney’s Office.

Caporino had worked as office manager for a dental practice – with offices in Portland, Biddeford and Yarmouth – between 2014 and 2016 and embezzled more than $293,000 by using office credit cards for personal expenses and by making online transfers from the dental office’s bank account to pay personal bills, according to federal officials.

She also worked as office manager for a Falmouth doctor in 2016 and 2017. There she embezzled more than $255,000 by stealing checks mailed to the office, according to federal officials.


Bubar, charged with attempting to murder Kennebec deputy sheriff, to go to trial Monday

$
0
0

AUGUSTA — A man accused of attempting to murder a sheriff’s deputy in Belgrade last year in a shoot-out that left a homeowner dead goes to trial here Monday.

Scott A. Bubar, 41, of Brunswick, was indicted on charges of aggravated attempted murder of Sgt. Jacob Pierce and reckless conduct with a dangerous weapon, both of which allegedly occurred May 19, 2017, at a mobile home at 1003 Oakland Road, near the Oakland town line.

Bubar’s father, Roger Bubar, 65, was killed in the exchange of gunfire with Pierce, and Scott Bubar was shot as well.

Scott Bubar had pleaded not guilty to both charges and waived his right to a jury trial last month, so the case will be decided by Justice Michaela Murphy alone. The trial is expected to take place throughout the week at the Capital Judicial Center.

The aggravated attempted murder charge is a class A offense and carries a penalty of up to 30 years in prison.

The Maine attorney general’s office, which investigates all uses of deadly force by law enforcement officers, issued a report to Kennebec County Sheriff Ken Mason in June 2018 clearing Pierce in the use of deadly force.

“It is our determination that when Sgt. Pierce shot Roger and Scott Bubar, he reasonably believed that unlawful deadly force against him and others was not only imminent but had in fact already been used,” concluded the letter signed by Deputy Attorney General Lisa Marchese.

Several defense pre-trial motions had sought to compel the state to provide its evidence in the case — much of which had been held by the attorney general’s office.

At one point, Murphy told the prosecutor, Deputy District Attorney Paul Cavanaugh, to give the attorney general’s office her order to turn over ballistics reports, photographs, laboratory analysis reports, DNA reports and autopsy information. Murphy said that “would be critical at that point.”

The defense previously sought a change of venue for a jury trial, with attorney Lisa Whittier telling Murphy at a May 23 hearing, “There is no place in the state that has not gotten a lot of publicity with Eugene Cole’s case. It’s still saturated.”

Somerset County Sheriff’s Deputy Cpl. Eugene Cole, 61, was shot to death April 25 in Norridgewock, about 35 miles from the courthouse in Augusta. John D. Williams, now 30, of Madison, is charged with the “intentional and knowing murder” of Cole. A number of fundraising events to set up scholarships in Cole’s memory and to benefit his family, have taken place or are scheduled throughout the region.

Bubar’s defense attorneys previously requested that jurors view the scene of the Bubar home in Belgrade, but it is unclear whether the judge will travel there.

Defense attorney Scott Hess told Murphy that the property, owned by Jenny Shorey and Roger Bubar, was in the control of Shorey’s family.

An arrest affidavit by Kennebec Sheriff’s Detective Michael Bickford — based partly on some statements by Pierce — and filed in court says police were sent at 9:35 p.m. that night to the home in response to reports of a fight between two men, with the son beating on the father’s car. It also says that the caller reported hearing a gunshot at 9:43 p.m., and that when Pierce arrived just before 11 p.m., he reported two people inside the home, barricading it.

Then Pierce reported seeing “an individual come to a window carrying a rifle or shotgun.” Pierce said the person was making threats, broke a window and threatened to shoot.

The affidavit states that at 11:07 p.m., Pierce said the two people inside were barricading doors and windows “and states one of the individuals made a reference to ‘going down in a blaze of glory.'”

More hollering from inside is reported 11 minutes later, and then gunshots, followed by two more rounds of gunshots. It also says that at the same time, “a female can be heard crying, also from inside the residence, then a male screaming.”

The woman, who identified herself as Shorey, then called police to say someone is shot and she is bedridden in the living room.

Scott Bubar was arrested that night and charged with reckless conduct with a dangerous weapon.

He was freed on bail conditions, but later admitted violating those conditions by have alcohol and drug paraphernalia at his Brunswick apartment when police conducted a bail search there on Sept. 22, 2017. Bubar was ordered to serve five days in jail for that violation.

Bubar is behind bars, and the defense has asked to have him appear in court in civilian clothes rather than a jail uniform.

Whittier also said previously that none of Scott Bubar’s DNA was found on any weapons in the home, and both sides wrangled over DNA testing of the bullets by experts at the Maine State Police Crime Laboratory.

On Friday, the judge ruled on several motions by both the defense and the prosecution.

Murphy refused to suppress statements Bubar made to police that night, including “his statement that his gun was ‘in the kitchen,’ which he is heard making on the 911 (call) placed by Ms. Shorey.” Murphy concluded that fell “within the public safety exception established by the U.S. Supreme Court. … The questions put to defendant here were limited, appropriate, necessary and were motivated by a concern for public safety.”

Murphy also found that Bubar’s statements were voluntary, noting at the time that “he had been shot by the police, that he lost a sufficient amount of blood to leave impressive amounts of visible stains, and that he emerged from the trailer naked wearing only a blanket.”

Murphy suppressed some statements Shorey made to a 911 operator about 11:15 that night, about a half hour after the shooting stopped.

Murphy’s order says, “Jenny Shorey is a bed-ridden woman who was confined in this shooting incident and ‘standoff’ to her bed which was in the trailer’s living rooms. Her longstanding boyfriend and his son, the defendant had been shot by law enforcement officers and her boyfriend was killed.”

Murphy said the statements Shorey made early in the conversation “qualify as excited utterances” and other exceptions, which would allow their use at trial.

Betty Adams — 621-5631

badams@centralmaine.com

Twitter: @betadams

Central Maine police log for Sept. 8

$
0
0

IN ANSON, Friday at 1:32 p.m., a theft was reported on Main Street.

Saturday at 2:53 a.m., a caller from Fahi Pond Road reported hearing shots fired.

IN ATHENS, Friday at 9:18 p.m., loud noise was reported on Leavitt Road.

10:14 p.m., loud noise was reported on Leavitt Road.

IN AUGUSTA, Friday at 7:58 a.m., suspicious activity was reported on Civic Center Drive.

8:05 a.m., a well-being check was done on Western Avenue.

11:25 a.m., suspicious activity was reported on Eastern Avenue.

1:20 p.m., fraud was reported on Cony Road.

1:27 p.m., suspicious activity was reported on Water Street.

3:41 p.m., suspicious activity was reported on Eight Rod Road.

3:52 p.m., disorderly conduct was reported on Cross Hill Road.

4:58 p.m., disorderly conduct was reported on Court Street.

5:10 p.m., an accident with injury was reported on Civic Center Drive.

5:30 p.m., a mental health and well-being check was done on Middle Street.

5:46 p.m., suspicious activity was reported on Child Street.

6:03 p.m., property was recovered on Mount Vernon Avenue.

6:10 p.m., suspicious activity was reported on Columbia Street.

6:51 p.m., suspicious activity was reported on West River Road.

6:56 p.m., a past burglary was reported on Leighton Road.

7:48 p.m., disorderly conduct was reported on Northern Avenue.

8:10 p.m., shoplifting was reported on Cony Street.

8:13 p.m., suspicious activity was reported on Winthrop Street.

9:14 p.m., disorderly conduct was reported on New England Road.

9:39 p.m., suspicious activity was reported on Cony Street.

9:57 p.m., an animal well-being check was done on Riverside Drive.

10:13 p.m., a disturbance was reported on New England Road.

10:17 p.m., a domestic disturbance was reported on Patterson Street.

11:44 p.m., a disturbance was reported on New England Road.

Saturday at 12:04 a.m., a mental health and well-being check was done on Mill Street.

1:21 a.m., burglary was reported on Eastern Avenue.

2:04 a.m., a domestic disturbance was reported on New England Road.

3:15 a.m., suspicious activity was reported on Windsor Avenue.

IN AVON, Friday at 8:09 a.m., vandalism and criminal mischief were reported on Pleasant Street.

IN BENTON, Saturday at 11:25 a.m., a domestic disturbance was reported on River Road.

IN CAMBRIDGE, Friday at 4:03 p.m., a disturbance was reported on Leavitt Road.

IN CANAAN, Friday at 6:53 p.m., a disturbance was reported on Battle Ridge Road.

IN CLINTON, Friday at 5:37 p.m., a theft was reported at Clinton Lions Fair on Route 100.

7:01 p.m., a disturbance was reported on Battle Ridge Road.

11:10 p.m., noise was reported on Diamond Avenue.

IN CORNVILLE, Friday at11:36 a.m., a theft was reported on Walton Mills Road.

1:02 p.m., a scam was reported on Huff Road.

IN DETROIT, Friday at 8:08 p.m., loud noise was reported on Troy Road.

IN EMBDEN, Saturday at 2:10 a.m., an assault was reported on Embden Pond Road.

IN EUSTIS, Friday at 8:14 a.m., a disturbance was reported on Main Street.

IN FAIRFIELD, Friday at 3:53 p.m., debris was reported in the roadway on Skowhegan Road.

3:56 p.m., a theft was reported on Water Street.

Saturday at 10:59 a.m., a railroad crossing problem was reported on Kennebec Street.

IN FARMINGTON, Friday at 12:22 p.m., harassment was reported on Marvel Street.

12:35 p.m., a theft from a vehicle was reported at Lot 26 at University of Maine.

2:52 p.m., a bus passing was reported on Middle Street.

6:50 p.m., a burglary was reported at Lot 26 on Quebec Street at University of Maine.

Saturday at 2:20 a.m., a disturbance was reported on Main Street.

Saturday at 1:05 a.m., a traffic accident causing injury was reported on Lucy Knowles Road.

2:17 a.m., a domestic disturbance was reported on Main Street.

IN HARMONY, Saturday at 4:07 a.m., trespassing was reported on Carson Hill Road.

IN KINGFIELD, Friday at 3:58 p.m., a case involving theft or fraud was reported on Salem Road.

IN MADISON, Friday at 12:30 p.m., a theft was reported on White School House Road.

Saturday at 6:23 a.m., vandalism was reported on Golf Course Road.

10:51 a.m., a theft was reported on Old Point Avenue.

11:21 a.m., threatening was reported on Preble Avenue.

IN NEW SHARON, Saturday at 8:44 a.m., vandalism and criminal mischief were reported on Starks Road.

IN NORRIDGEWOCK, Friday at 3:24 p.m., a disturbance was reported on Waterville Road.

6:58 p.m., a structure fire was reported on Lloyd Road.

IN OAKLAND, Friday at 1:18 p.m., noise was reported at Brickett Point Estates.

2:43 p.m., a traffic accident causing injury was reported on Kennedy Memorial Drive.

3:12 p.m., noise was reported at Camp Manitou.

9:17 p.m., debris was reported on the road on Kennedy Memorial Drive.

9:26 p.m., a domestic disturbance was reported on Smithfield Road.

IN PALMYRA, Saturday at 8:17 a.m., an assault was reported on Oxbow Road.

8:26 a.m., a traffic accident was reported on Spring Hill Road.

IN PITTSFIELD, Friday at 2:27 p.m., a scam was reported on Waverly Street.

2:43 p.m., a caller from Canaan Road reported hearing shots fired.

Saturday at 9:53 a.m., threatening was reported on Pondview Court.

IN ST. ALBANS, Friday at 12:17 p.m., harassment was reported on Corinna Road.

8:57 p.m., an assault was reported, no location given.

IN SKOWHEGAN, Friday at 6:33 p.m., trespassing was reported on Heselton Street.

7:32 p.m., a disturbance was reported on Middle Road.

9:59 p.m., loud noise was reported on Oak Pond Road.

Saturday at 12:02 a.m., a disturbance was reported on North Avenue.

12:18 a.m., loud noise was reported on Main Street.

7:42 a.m., a theft was reported on Stevens Road.

IN WATERVILLE, Friday at 8:26 a.m., criminal mischief was reported at Pine Tree Commons on Elm Street.

9:18 a.m., harassment was reported on Gold Street.

10:08 a.m., a theft was reported on Roosevelt Avenue.

10:23 a.m., a vehicle burglary was reported on Western Avenue.

11:02 a.m., a case involving forgery or fraud was reported on Spruce Street.

12:49 p.m., a disturbance was reported at McDonald’s restaurant on Main Street.

2:05 p.m., a caller from Pleasant Street reported an unwanted person on the premises.

2:34 p.m., a vehicle burglary was reported at Pine Tree Commons on Elm Street.

7:37 p.m., a disturbance was reported on Canabas Avenue.

8:05 p.m., someone from Gold Street reported a person was missing.

8:10 p.m., threatening was reported on College Avenue.

8:13 p.m., a protection order violation was reported at Southern Angel Properties on Pleasant Street.

11:36 p.m., a caller from Alfond Apartments at Colby College off Washington Street reported an unwanted person on the premises.

Saturday at 1:39 a.m., a disturbance was reported on Pleasant Street.

7:30 a.m., a domestic disturbance was reported on Dunbar Court.

IN WILTON, Friday at 8:04 a.m., a case involving theft or fraud was reported on U.S. Route 2 East.

2 p.m., a burglary was reported on Main Street.

3:05 p.m., a traffic accident causing injury was reported near U.S. Route 2 East and Cemetery Street.

IN WINSLOW, Friday at 9:04 a.m., a theft was reported on Hallowell Street. A woman was arrested and charged with theft by unauthorized taking or transfer, according to the report.

2:35 p.m., juvenile offenses were reported near Monument and Halifax streets.

6:57 p.m., a theft was reported on Harry Street.

IN WINTHROP, Friday at 4:55 p.m., a traffic accident with injury was reported on Main Street.

Arrests

IN AUGUSTA, Friday at 7:30 a.m., Christy Lynn Bush, 41, of Augusta was arrested on a warrant (failure to appear, theft by unauthorized taking or transfer), after an overdose rescue was done on Patterson Street.

IN CLINTON, Friday at 10:07 p.m., Dominicke Simard, 20, of Gardiner, was arrested on a warrant.

Also at 10:07 p.m., Teran A. Goodridge, 19, of Pittsfield, was arrested an charged with operating under the influence, operating without a license and minor consuming liquor.

IN FRANKLIN COUNTY, Friday at 8:18 p.m., David Andrew Noyes, 48, of Byron, was arrested and charged with falsification in official matters, attaching false plates and operating after suspension.

IN SOMERSET COUNTY, Friday at 5:27 p.m., Riley Jacob Corey, 19, of Randolf, Vermont, was arrested and charged with OUI.

5:30 p.m., Rachael Raye Murray, 34, of Cambridge, was arrested and charged with violating condition of release.

8:39 p.m., David C. Wells, 43, of Hodgdon, was arrested and charged with OUI.

11:58 p.m., Scott Michael Stanley, 30, of Skowhegan, was arrested and charged with OUI.

Saturday at 1:52 a.m., Raymond Lee Bailey, 45, of Skowhegan, was arrested and charged with aggravated assault and refusing to submit to arrest or detention.

3:22 a.m., Stephanie Alexis Freeman, 29, of Skowhegan, was arrested and charged with violation of conditions of release.

10:24 a.m., Brandon J. Mann, 28, of Detroit, was arrested and charged with OUI.

IN WINSLOW, Friday at 6:55 a.m., Ashley Linn Loisel, 24, of Winslow, was arrested on three warrants.

9:04 a.m., Dawn Renee Smith, 28, of Winslow, was arrested and charged with theft by unauthorized taking or transfer.

Summonses

IN AUGUSTA, Friday at 11:02 a.m., a 40-year-old Augusta man was summoned on an unidentified charge, after a medical rescue was done on Bangor Street.

5:52 p.m., Melissa A. Lydiate, 52, of Augusta was summoned on charges of violating conditions of release and criminal mischief, on Noyes Court.

7:39 p.m., Joshua Gabriel Devito, 24, of Augusta was summoned on two charges of criminal trespass and two charges of theft by unauthorized taking or transfer (less than $500), after a well-being and mental health check was done on Stone Street.

IN WINSLOW, Friday at 10:19 p.m., Devan M.J. Labrie, 22, of Clinton, was summoned and charged with operating a motor vehicle with expired registration beyond 150 days and operating after suspension.

Police investigate after fire destroys shack Friday night at Augusta dog park

$
0
0

AUGUSTA — Police are trying to determine who might have set a fire that destroyed a small shack late Friday night at the city’s dog park.

The fire was reported at 11:38 p.m. Friday in one of the fenced areas on the west side of the Kennebec River where dogs are allowed to roam off their leashes. The dog park consists of two sections and is part of the larger Mill Park, off Canal Street.

On Saturday afternoon, nothing but rubble remained where the shed had been standing, and authorities had closed the section of the park where it was located.

Police think someone intentionally set the fire and are investigating it as an act of arson, said Sgt. Eric Lloyd of the Augusta Police Department, in a voicemail message Saturday. Police have submitted the case to the Office of State Fire Marshal.

“A call was made to the fire marshal’s office, as we do believe it was intentionally set,” Lloyd said. “However, they will be the investigating office if they so choose to take the case on Monday.”

Lloyd said any further questions would have to be answered by a state investigator or one of his superiors at the Augusta Police Department.

Before it burned, the shed had been a place for owners to take shelter from sun, rain or snow while their dogs were playing in the park, according to people there on Saturday afternoon.

The park, which opened in 2010, is divided into two fenced-in areas: a larger area that is designated for larger dogs, according to signs posted at the entrance, and a smaller area for smaller dogs.

The area for larger dogs was where the shack had stood and now has been closed off, with caution tape strung along the fence. On Saturday afternoon, both large and small canines — a pitbull, a collie and a Chihuahua-Jack Russell terrier mix — were mingling in the smaller area.

“I bet it was kids down here partying,” said Felecia Graham, who lives on the Augusta-Vassalboro line and was just leaving the park with her Chihuahua-Pomeranian mix named Gizmo. “I bring him here a lot. I brought him yesterday around two-ish and it was still standing.”

Graham hopes someone will clean up the rubble and re-open the larger section of the park, she said, as Gizmo likes to have more space to stretch his legs.

“It’s sad,” said another woman, Kellie Thompson, who had brought Jill, a Chihuahua-Jack Russell mix, to the park with her fiancé, Elijah Yeaton.

Thompson and Yeaton say they liked having separate areas for bigger and smaller dogs, as the former can sometimes be too rough when they’re trying to play with the latter.

“It affects us all,” Yeaton said.

Charles Eichacker — 621-5642

ceichacker@centralmaine.com

Twitter: @ceichacker

 

Dog’s body found. Then came the curious tale of Franky the pug mix

$
0
0

Phillip Torrey glanced back into the kitchen as he headed out the door. His bug-eyed 6-year-old dog, Franky, looked back expectantly, just like always.

The next time the sixth-generation lobsterman saw Franky it was to identify his body after it was found washed ashore across the bay, shot and wrapped in plastic.

Now, two men Torrey once considered friends are accused of breaking into his Winter Harbor home, stealing his SUV and luring his dog to its death with pieces of cheese. The animal cruelty case shocked residents of the small, remote Down East village and garnered national attention from people outraged at the brutal death of a helpless family pet.

Franky, a 6-year-old mix, belonged to Phillip Torrey of Winter Harbor.

“It’s amazing at a time when the country is divided so much that a small town in Maine and this dog have brought such a huge outpouring of people showing love and compassion,” Torrey said in an interview last week. “It’s like a bunch of the ugliness stopped for a second, even though this was caused by such an ugly act.”

The bizarre case began Aug. 26, when Torrey called police to report his home was broken into, his Hummer was stolen and returned damaged, and he could not find his dog, a Boston terrier-pug mix named Franky. Four days later, Franky’s body washed up across Frenchman Bay in Hancock and, as it happened, onto a private beach at the coastal home of Hancock County District Attorney Matt Foster.

Soon thereafter, police issued arrest warrants for suspects Nathan Burke and Justin Chipman.

Burke, 37, of Hancock, and Chipman, 22, of Steuben and Winter Harbor, have been charged with one count each of aggravated cruelty to animals, aggravated criminal mischief, burglary, theft and unauthorized use of property. They have not entered pleas and told police they did not hurt Franky.

Burke, who had worked on Torrey’s lobster boat for about three years, was released on $1,000 bail. His attorney, Jeffrey Toothaker, said in court that Burke has received threats, according to the Ellsworth American. Toothaker was in court Friday and not available to comment.

Chipman’s bail was also set at $1,000, but he remains in custody because he was on administrative release for a terrorizing conviction at the time he is accused of burglarizing Torrey’s home and killing Franky.

“It’s so hard to wrap your brain around,” Torrey said after Chipman and Burke appeared in court last week. “My house is so quiet.”

‘HE’S MUCH BIGGER THAN WHAT HE IS’

Franky first came into Torrey’s life as a puppy when he and his girlfriend at the time adopted the “bug dog.” When they split up, Franky went to live with the ex-girlfriend. Then, three years ago, a friend spotted Franky’s familiar face at the local animal shelter.

“We went right down to the shelter and got him,” Torrey said. “He seemed so scared at the shelter, but once we got him back in the car he was running around kissing me and kissing (my other dog) Budget.”

Torrey’s 16-year-old son, Simon, was especially happy to have Franky back home. They’d lie on the couch watching movies, Franky sprawled on his back across Simon’s lap, paws in the air. Franky would get fired up when Torrey arrived home from setting and hauling traps, always ready to run around with a squeaky toy.

“He’s just a little dog, but he’s much bigger than what he is. He’d be there at lobster boat races and gatherings at my house,” Torrey said. “He loved those days because he could run around and everyone would feed him a little snack. He was a part of the family.”

But not everyone was a fan of Franky.

Burke told someone in town that he did not like Franky and that “one day Franky would come up missing,” according to court documents. Torrey said Chipman didn’t like Franky because he had gotten into a fight with Chipman’s dog.

When Franky turned up missing while Torrey and his family were in New Hampshire for a concert, Torrey didn’t immediately suspect his friends. Burke had been the sternman on his lobster boat for the past three years. He’d known Chipman, who had worked for him on the lobster boat, since Chipman was a child.

Torrey had left for the concert on a Thursday evening, saying goodbye to Franky on the way out the door. The next morning, his sister, Doreen Eschete, stopped by to let Franky and Budget out, but only Budget was in the house. She assumed Franky had escaped, but when he didn’t turn up by that evening, she began to worry something was wrong. Eschete also found her brother’s Hummer in the yard, damaged and covered in mud.

Worried about their dog and ready to search, Torrey and Simon returned home to Winter Harbor.

‘EVERYONE KNOWS EVERYONE’S DOG’

Winter Harbor lies east of Bar Harbor at the tip of the Schoodic Peninsula. It is home to just over 500 people in the winter, after the summer visitors go home. It’s the kind of small coastal Maine town where families have been fishing lobster for generations and no one among its year-round residents is a stranger.

“It’s almost like a storybook. You hear about these places where people wave to everyone or say ‘hello’ at the grocery store,” said Kylie Bragdon, chairwoman of the Winter Harbor Board of Selectmen.

It’s also the kind of place, she said, where not only does everyone know everyone else, but “everyone knows everyone’s dog.”

So when news broke that Torrey’s little dog was missing, it came as no surprise to Bragdon that people headed out to search for him and shared the dog’s photo on social media. For three days, Torrey and his son combed the town and searched the woods on four-wheelers for any sign of their dog.

“I had a feeling in my heart something bad had happened,” Torrey said. “Simon really wanted to keep looking.”

Torrey said Burke and Chipman told him they had borrowed the Hummer to run down to the town dock, but had no idea what happened to Franky. That didn’t make sense to Torrey, who said surveillance videos showed no sign of the Hummer at the dock. The damage to the Hummer was extensive, ranging from broken mirrors to gouges running down the side panels.

Torrey began to piece it together: the missing dog, the damaged truck. Franky’s leash and a piece of cheese – the kind Torrey used to lure his dog back into the house – were found on the backseat of the Hummer. A bullet casing was lodged in a grate on the hood of the vehicle.

“I called them and said, ‘You need to tell me what’s going on.’ I told them, ‘If you have something to tell me, tell me now or I’ll call the police,’ ” Torrey said. “A couple hours later, they said they had taken Franky with them to go for a ride and he ran off.”

SUSPECTS TURN THEMSELVES IN

Police said what really happened is far more grim.

Burke said in text messages to Torrey that he was “smashed” when he and Chipman went to Torrey’s home and took Franky for a ride because the dog was being mean to Budget, according to court records. Investigators believe the two men lured the dog from the home, shot him in the throat, wrapped his body in multiple layers of plastic and dumped him in Frenchman Bay. There is no indication of a motive in court records, except for the references to their dislike of the dog.

On the evening of Aug. 30, Melissa Foster, wife of the district attorney, found something wrapped in plastic on the family’s beach and called her husband out to see. They pulled back the plastic and saw the remains of a small dog. Just enough fur and markings remained to allow Torrey to later identify the dog as Franky.

A live Winchester .45 pistol cartridge was found on the hood of the vehicle, which Burke had admitted to taking from Torrey’s house, according to court records.

“Mr. Torrey and I both believe that Franky was shot using the headlights for illumination, and that this live round was manually ejected from a firearm while a person was standing directly in front of the vehicle,” Winter Harbor police Officer Eli Brown wrote in an affidavit.

Chipman and Burke turned themselves in to police three days after Winter Harbor police posted their photos of Facebook and asked the public for help tracking them down.

When news broke about Franky’s death, the story appeared on the news in at least 16 states that Torrey knows of. He did an interview with People magazine and fielded calls and messages from radio stations.

More than a dozen dog breeders reached out to offer him a puppy. Torrey was inundated with hundreds of messages and comments from people across the country and Canada. He got 57 Facebook messages during the short time he was in a courtroom during Burke and Chipman’s bail hearing.

“That’s what it’s been like every day. It’s people from all over saying, ‘I’m thinking of you, my prayers are with you,’ ” he said. “You see people who don’t even know each other commenting back and forth and sharing photos of their dogs.”

Bragdon, the select board chairwoman, said Franky’s death brought the Winter Harbor community closer together.

“I’ve never seen such an incredible response from such a large group of people in my life,” she said. “I knew we were a strong bunch, and when push comes to shove we take care of each other. It was never more apparent than now.”

Torrey, who is still sad about his family’s loss and frustrated by the low bail set by the judge, is trying to focus on the positive support of friends and strangers.

He’s still waiting for investigators to finish a necropsy of Franky’s body at a lab in Augusta. It was not immediately clear when that lab work will be done or what evidence police are looking for other than the cause of death. Winter Harbor Police Chief Danny Mitchell Jr. did not respond to a request for comment.

When he finally brings Franky home, Torrey will bury him on a quiet corner of his property.

Gillian Graham can be contacted at 791-6315 or at:

ggraham@pressherald.com

Twitter: grahamgillian

Kennebec County courts Aug. 30-Sept. 5, 2018

$
0
0

AUGUSTA — This is a roundup of cases closed Aug. 30-Sept. 5, 2018, at courts in Augusta and Waterville.

Jonethen Mullen, 22, of Oakland, found not guilty of operating under the influence April 12, 2017, in Clinton.

Tara M. Agosta, 38, of Winslow, false public alarm or report June 25, 2018, in Winslow; $100 fine.

David Akers Jr., 50, of Albion, unlawful use of bait in artificial lure only water June 6, 2018, in Winslow; $100 fine.

Tanika L. Alford, 20, of Salisbury East, South Australia, minor consuming liquor July 13, 2018, in Waterville; $200 fine.

John Bernard, 49, of Waterville, drinking in public July 27, 2018, in Waterville; $150 fine.

Tonya Bickford, 41, of Augusta, criminal trespass Aug. 2, 2018, in Augusta; 20-day jail sentence; violating condition of release Aug. 2, 2018, in Augusta; 20-day jail sentence.

Dalene Black, 36, of Augusta, theft by unauthorized taking or transfer June 3, 2018, in Augusta; $400 fine, $8.76 restitution.

Cameron Oneil Bouchard, 23, of Waterville, domestic violence assault March 20, 2018, in Waterville, dismissed.

Bradley Bourgeois, 26, of Winslow, operating under the influence July 20, 2018, in Winslow; $500 fine, 150-day license suspension.

Lloyd Everett Bowden, 59, of Augusta, criminal trespass July 12, 2018, in Augusta; six-day jail sentence.

Edwin S. Bradbury, 20, of Waterville, minor consuming liquor July 13, 2018, in Winslow; $200 fine.

Lourdes Bradley, 55, of Readfield, operating under the influence May 28, 2018, in Readfield; $900 fine, 20-day jail sentence, three-year license and registration suspension; violating condition of release, same date and town, dismissed.

Owen R. Burry, 23, of Toronto, disorderly conduct, loud noise, private place Feb. 18, 2018, in Waterville, dismissed.

Scott Canney, 50, of Waterville, drinking in public July 9, 2018, in Waterville; $150 fine.

Miranda K. Carpe, 18, of Bethlehem, New Hampshire, marijuana: under 21 years of age June 19, 2018, in Vassalboro; $350 fine.

Sara R. Clement, 20, of East Wakefield, New Hampshire, theft by unauthorized taking or transfer Nov. 30, 2017, in Waterville; $200 fine.

Marcella J. Coffin, 28, of Waterville, criminal mischief July 14, 2018, in Waterville; $300 fine.

Jamie J. Condon, 41, of Windsor, theft by unauthorized taking or transfer April 18, 2018, in Augusta; two-year jail sentence all but 45 days suspended, two year probation.

Dominic H. Conlogue, 20, of Palermo, minor consuming liquor July 29, 2018, in Winslow; $200 fine; walking or standing on track or bridge, same date and town, dismissed.

Richard James Corbett Jr., 59, of Oakland, criminal threatening Oct. 9, 2017, in Belgrade, dismissed.

Alexandrea A. Coslett, 29, of Hartland, operating under the influence July 25, 2018, in Winslow; $500 fine, 48-hour jail sentence, 150-day license suspension.

Mark M. Couturier, 49, of Manchester, failure to register vehicle July 11, 2018, in Waterville; $100 fine.

Shahad Crump, 28, of Waterville, use of drug paraphernalia July 14, 2018, in Waterville; $300 fine.

Joseph B. Curtis, 24, of Sidney, keeping dangerous dog July 11, 2018, in Sidney; $250 fine; keeping unlicensed dog, same date and town, dismissed.

Cole J. Donald, 19, of Palermo, minor consuming liquor July 29, 2018, in Winslow; $200 fine; walking or standing on track or bridge, same date and town, dismissed.

Gregory V. Douglas, 45, of Gardiner, operating while license suspended or revoked July 14, 2018, in Augusta, dismissed.

Andrew H. Dyer Jr., 34, of Waterville, violating condition of release Sept. 2, 2018, in Waterville; 48-hour jail sentence.

Damian G. Eames, 21, of Waterville, failing to give motor vehicle accident information July 19, 2018, in Waterville; $150 fine.

Maria A. Evers, 52, of Winslow, theft by unauthorized taking or transfer July 18, 2018, in Winslow; $200 fine.

Timothy J. Fay, 20, of Vassalboro, operating while license suspended or revoked July 3, 2018, in Vassalboro, dismissed.

Ryan J. Flewelling, 24, of Fairfield, obstructing government administration July 14, 2018, in Waterville; 48-hour jail sentence.

Rodney A. Getchell, 59, of Mount Vernon, operating under the influence April 18, 2018, in Hallowell; $500 fine, 48-hour jail sentence, 150-day license suspension.

Andre Giguere, 33, of Winslow, unlawful possession of scheduled drug July 8, 2018, in Winslow; $400 fine.

Christine Goldfrank, 65, of Wayne, operating under the influence June 10, 2018, in Augusta; $900 fine, 10-day jail sentence, 150-day license suspension.

Alivia Gordon, 20, of Waterville, hindering apprehension or prosecution Feb. 14, 2018, in Waterville, dismissed.

Ryan C. Guerrette, 29, of Augusta, operating while license suspended or revoked March 30, 2018, in Augusta; $250 fine.

Grindle Transport Inc., of Waldoboro, operating after registration suspended July 20, 2017, in Winslow, dismissed.

Paul K. Hammock Jr., 20, of Winslow, failing to notify of motor vehicle accident July 23, 2018, in Waterville; $300 fine.

Denna R. Hewlett-Dyer, 42, of Union, violating condition of release Sept. 1, 2018, in Windsor; three-day jail sentence.

Richard A. Hilton, 40, of Norridgewock, theft by unauthorized taking or transfer June 22, 2018, in Waterville; $200 fine.

Joshua M. Hofmeister, 21, of Vassalboro, marijuana: under 21 years of age July 1, 2018, in Winslow; $350 fine.

Teetouch Jiruppabha, 21, of Waterville, operating vehicle without license — conditions/restrictions Sept. 15, 2017, in Waterville, dismissed.

Adam N. Kalloch, 27, of Farmingdale, operating while license suspended or revoked and failing to notify of motor vehicle accident March 16, 2018, in Manchester, dismissed.

Nathanial M. Keith, 19, of Gardiner, violating condition of release May 16, 2018, in Augusta; 48-hour jail sentence. Violating condition of release June 12, 2018, in Gardiner, dismissed. Domestic violence assault May 7, 2018, in Clinton, dismissed. Minor consuming liquor May 16, 2018, in Augusta; $200 fine.

Keith Kolreg, 27, of Oakland, attaching false plates July 20, 2018, in Oakland; $100 fine.

Julie L. Laakso, 53, of Alna, operating under the influence April 6, 2018, in Gardiner; $500 fine, 150-day license suspension.

Jessica Lane, 31, of Sidney, displaying fictitious vehicle certificate July 26, 2018, in Sidney; $100 fine.

Christopher Luther, 57, of Belgrade, driving to endanger April 5, 2017, in Augusta; $575 fine, 30-day license suspension; operating under the influence, same date and town, dismissed.

Ethan Macomber, 21, of Waterville, violating condition of release Nov. 25, 2017, in Vassalboro; 48-hour jail sentence; violating protection from abuse order, same date and town, dismissed.

Felicia K. McArthur, 33, of Augusta, violating condition of release April 17, 2018, in Augusta; $200 fine; theft by unauthorized taking or transfer, same date and town, dismissed.

James D. McInnis Jr., 37, of Madison, theft by deception Jan. 9, 2017, in Vassalboro; seven-day jail sentence, $1,300 restitution.

Tori McLaughlin, 21, of Madison, minor consuming liquor July 13, 2018, in Waterville; $200 fine.

Joseph G. Munster III, 37, of Vassalboro, unlawful trafficking in scheduled drugs Nov. 27, 2017, in Vassalboro, dismissed.

Shane E. Murphy, 43, of Norridgewock, disorderly conduct, offensive words, gestures Jan. 5, 2018, in Waterville; $600 fine; assault, same date and town, dismissed.

Casey N. Nadeau, 38, of Winslow, theft by unauthorized taking or transfer Aug. 16, 2017, in Waterville; $400 fine. Theft by unauthorized taking or transfer May 26, 2018, in Augusta; $400 fine; violating condition of release and unlawful possession of scheduled drug, same date and town, dismissed..

Jessica M. Patnaude, 26, of West Gardiner, domestic violence assault March 8, 2017, in West Gardiner, dismissed.

Heidi Pepin, 53, of Sidney, failure to register vehicle May 25, 2018, in Augusta, dismissed.

Samantha M. Perry, 26, of Waterville, theft by unauthorized taking or transfer June 13, 2018, in Waterville; $400 fine.

Robert Perry, 61, of West Warwick, Rhode Island, motor vehicle speeding more than 30 mph over the speed limit July 7, 2018, in Sidney; $300 fine.

Brock C. Peters, 24, of Fairfield, theft by unauthorized taking or transfer July 11, 2018, in Waterville; $400 fine.

Jennifer Marie Poirier, 33, of Winslow, theft by unauthorized taking or transfer June 1, 2018, in Augusta; six-month jail sentence; violating condition of release June 1, 2018, in Augusta; 30-day jail sentence. Theft by unauthorized taking or transfer April 20, 2018, in Augusta; six-month jail sentence, $78 restitution; theft by unauthorized taking or transfer April 20, 2018, in Augusta; six-month jail sentence, $30 restitution; theft by unauthorized taking or transfer April 28, 2018, in Augusta; three-year jail sentence all but six months suspended, two-year probation, $238 restitution.

Lucien R. Poulin, 60, of South China, operating under the influence May 1, 2018, in Windsor; $500 fine, 60-day jail sentence, 150-day license suspension.

Dylan Pray, 26, of Bradford, attaching false plates July 13, 2018, in Waterville; $150 fine.

Dylan A. Quimby, 45, of Waterville, drinking in public July 10, 2018, in Waterville; $150 fine.

Jessica Lynn Seagrave, 28, of Augusta, violating protection from abuse order April 8, 2018, in Gardiner, dismissed.

Patrick Shorey, 25, of Clinton, unlawful trafficking in scheduled drug and endangering welfare of a child Oct. 27, 2017, in Augusta, dismissed.

Fredrick R. Sprague, 54, of Fairfield, shoot from motor vehicle Nov. 25, 2017, in Unity, dismissed.

Sylvia Janice Tanguay, 45, of Fairfield, violating protection from abuse order April 24, 2018, in Augusta, dismissed.

Marie Rose Towers, 39, of Winslow, theft by unauthorized taking or transfer June 5, 2017, in Waterville; 60-day jail sentence, $215 restitution; theft by unauthorized taking or transfer Oct. 4, 2017, in Waterville; 60-day jail sentence; assault Oct. 7, 2017, in Waterville; $300 fine, 30-day jail sentence; unlawful trafficking in scheduled drugs Jan. 29, 2018, in Waterville; four-year Department of Corrections sentence all but 18 months suspended, two-year probation; violating condition of release Jan. 29, 2018, in Waterville; 30-day jail sentence; operating while license suspended or revoked Jan. 29, 2018, in Waterville, dismissed; two counts aggravated trafficking of schedule W drug Nov. 10, 2017, in Waterville, dismissed..

Skylar F. Webb, 22, of Readfield, driving to endanger March 25, 2017, in Windsor; $575 fine, 30-day license suspension; operating under the influence, same date and town, dismissed.

Ryan A. Wood, 24, of Vassalboro, operating while license suspended or revoked and violating condition of release June 4, 2018, in Hallowell; dismissed.

Morning Sentinel police log for Sept. 9

$
0
0

IN BELGRADE, Saturday at 7:32 p.m., a fire or smoke investigation was reported on Pond Road.

IN BENTON, Sunday at 1:47 a.m., a burglary was reported in progress on Neck Road.

IN CLINTON, Saturday at 9 a.m., a protection order violation was reported on Bangor Road.

9:36 p.m., noise was reported on Tardiff Road.

10:18 p.m., juvenile offenses were reported at Clinton Fairgrounds on Route 100. A 13-year-old was summoned and charged with possession and use of cigarette or tobacco product, according to the report.

10:40 p.m., noise was reported on Holt Road.

IN CORNVILLE, Saturday at 11:07 p.m., a vehicle fire was reported on Shadagee Road.

IN FAIRFIELD, Saturday at 11:23 p.m., loud noise was reported on Western Avenue.

IN FARMINGTON, Sunday at 12:20 a.m., noise was reported on Perham Street.

2:23 a.m., a disturbance was reported on Main Street.

IN MADISON, Saturday at 5:15 p.m., a fire or smoke investigation was reported on Lakewood Road.

IN MERCER, Saturday at 4:56 p.m., harassment was reported on West Sandy River Road.

IN NORRIDGEWOCK, Sunday at 12:07 a.m., a domestic disturbance was reported on Winding Hill Road.

IN OAKLAND, Saturday at 8:27 a.m., criminal mischief was reported on Main Street.

9:14 a.m., criminal mischief was reported on Main Street.

6:09 p.m., noise was reported on North Gage Road.

10:10 p.m., noise was reported at Camp Manitou on Camp Manitou Cove.

IN PITTSFIELD, Saturday at 1:39 p.m., a vehicle burglary was reported on Somerset Avenue.

11:25 p.m., loud noise was reported on Hamilton Terrace.

Sunday at 8:50 a.m., harassment was reported on Hartland Avenue.

IN ROME, Saturday at 5:36 p.m., harassment was reported at Derby Estates.

IN WATERVILLE, Saturday at 7:30 a.m., a caller from Dunbar Court reported an unwanted person on the premises.

1:52 p.m., noise was reported on Elm Street.

2:30 p.m., harassment was reported on Hillside Avenue.

3:44 p.m., an intoxicated person was reported on College Avenue.

6:22 p.m., shoplifting was reported at Hannaford, at JFK Plaza off Kennedy Memorial Drive.

6:54 p.m., an assault was reported at Hathaway Creative Center on Water Street.

7:41 p.m., noise was reported on West Court.

8:19 p.m., a traffic accident causing injury was reported on Industrial Road.

11:25 p.m., a disturbance was reported on Elm Street.

11:49 p.m., a disturbance was reported on Gold Street.

IN SMITHFIELD, Saturday at 9:40 p.m., a fire with wires down was reported on Oak Hill Road.

IN STARKS, Saturday at 8:29 p.m., vandalism was reported on Mayhew Road.

IN WILTON, Saturday at 8:20 p.m., a burglary was reported on U.S. Route 2 East.

IN WINSLOW, Saturday at 8:13 a.m., a traffic accident causing injury was reported at Rite-Aid on China Road.

2:02 p.m., criminal mischief was reported at Whipper’s Car Wash on Augusta Road.

8:27 p.m., a disturbance was reported on Heywood Road.

Arrests

IN FRANKLIN COUNTY, Saturday at 1:42 a.m., Joshua M. Harris, 30, of Chesterville, was arrested and charged with operating under the influence.

11:25 p.m., Courtney A. Steeves, 40, of Freeman Township, was arrested and charged with OUI.

IN SOMERSET COUNTY, Saturday at 7:05 p.m., Jennifer Gail Beane, 34, of Bingham, was arrested on five warrants.

11:22 p.m., Leo William Householder, 26, of China, was arrested and charged with OUI.

Sunday at 1:11 a.m., Shayla Bickford, 22, of Waterville, was arrested and charged with domestic violence assault.

2:31 a.m., Justyn Robert Clark, 30, of Skowhegan, was arrested and charged with OUI.

IN WATERVILLE, Friday at 10:30 p.m., Joshua Erie, 36, of Waterville, was arrested on a warrant.

10:24 p.m., Teran Goodridge, 19, of Pittsfield, was arrested and charged with OUI, operating without a license and possession by consumption.

Sunday at 1:34 a.m., Peter Berkner, 26, of Rome, was arrested and charged with OUI.

Kennebec Journal Sept. 9 police log

$
0
0

IN AUGUSTA, Saturday at 5:37 a.m., criminal trespassing was reported on Medical Center Parkway.

7:57 a.m., a well-being check was done on Water Street.

8:01 a.m., a well-being check was done on Arsenal and Cony streets.

8:18 a.m., disorderly conduct was reported on Mount Vernon Avenue.

10:17 a.m., an animal well-being check was done on Mill Street.

10:38 a.m., property was recovered on Townsend Road and Northern Avenue.

10:55 a.m., theft of a motor vehicle was reported on Bangor Street.

11:02 a.m., a well-being check was done on Windsor Avenue.

11:45 a.m., a hit-and-run traffic accident was reported on Bridge Street.

12:36 p.m., criminal mischief was reported on Western Avenue.

12:58 p.m., a well-being check was done on Cony Street.

1:10 p.m., a well-being check was done on Willow Street.

1:12 p.m., counterfeiting was reported on Bangor Street.

1:15 p.m., a mental health and well-being check was done on Middle Street.

2 p.m., an animal well-being check was done on Stephen King Drive.

2:32 p.m., suspicious activity was reported on Water and Green streets.

2:55 p.m., a well-being check was done on Cony Street.

3:40 p.m., a hit-and-run traffic accident was reported on Canal Street.

5:50 p.m., suspicious activity was reported on Eastern Avenue.

6:35 p.m., theft was reported on Mount Vernon Avenue.

6:39 p.m., suspicious activity was reported on New England Road.

7:35 p.m., property was recovered on Cony Street.

8 p.m., suspicious activity was reported on Stone Street.

8 p.m., a disturbance was reported on Gage and Child streets.

8:01 p.m., a mental health and well-being check was done on Northern Avenue.

8:17 p.m., suspicious activity was reported on Stone Street.

8:24 p.m., a mental health and well-being check was done on Marketplace Drive.

9:36 p.m., suspicious activity was reported on Jefferson Street.

10:44 p.m., a mental health and well-being check was done on Bangor Street.

Sunday at 12:31 a.m., a well-being check was done on Hicks Road.

1 a.m., simple assault was reported on Glenridge Drive.

1:08 a.m., a well-being check was done on Davenport Street.

Arrests

IN AUGUSTA, Saturday at 9:02 a.m., Lee Brown, 61, of Augusta was arrested on a charge of criminal trespass, on Northern Avenue.

7:14 p.m., Karlie M. Clark, 21, of Fairfield was arrested on a warrant, after an investigation was done on Sewall Street.


Police searching for man who allegedly stole medication from Augusta pharmacy Sunday morning

$
0
0

AUGUSTA — Police are searching for a man who allegedly stole medication from the Walgreens Pharmacy on Memorial Circle on Sunday morning.

The man, who is believed to be in his late 20s or early 30s, stole a narcotic medication after handing a threatening note to the pharmacist, said Sgt. Eric Lloyd of the Augusta Police Department.

Lloyd, who declined to identify the type or amount of medication, said the suspect then left the pharmacy on foot.

The man was white, had a beard and did not show a weapon, according to a later news release from the Augusta Police Department.

After a Walgreens employee reported the theft at 10:37 a.m., city police officers and members of the Maine State Police combed the area with the help of a dog, according to Lloyd.

Shortly after the robbery was reported, officers found a black hooded sweatshirt discarded near the pharmacy, in front of Penney Memorial United Baptist Church on Water Street.

The case now has been turned over to Augusta detectives, who will consider evidence recovered in the search as well as photos of the suspect taken at the pharmacy, Lloyd said.

Police were on the scene of the robbery for about two hours on Sunday.

They’re now asking anyone with information about the robbery to contact Detective Sgt. Jason Cote of the Augusta Police Department at 626-2370 ext. 3423.

Charles Eichacker — 621-5642

ceichacker@centralmaine.com

Twitter: @ceichacker

‘Wild party’ in Waterboro leads to 2 arrests

$
0
0

Zackery Sawyer

The York County Sheriff’s Office says it broke up a party where there was underage drinking Saturday night.

Deputies responded at 11:30 p.m. to complaints about a “wild party” in the area of Foxridge Court in Waterboro, according to Sheriff William King. They located a home where a group of people were “being loud and boisterous,” King said in a statement.

The deputies summoned four minors for illegal possession of alcohol. They were over 18 years old but under 21. The deputies arrested 20-year-old Jeffrey Kimball for furnishing a place for minor to consume alcohol and issued him a summons for illegal possession of alcohol by a minor, King said.

During the arrest, 19-year-old Zackery Sawyer became disruptive, according to the sheriff. Sawyer was arrested for disorderly conduct and issued a summons for illegal possession of liquor by a minor, King said.

Jeffrey Kimball

Kimball posted a $300 bail and was released early Sunday. Sawyer posted a $200 bail and was also released.

Both men are scheduled to appear in Springvale District Court on Nov. 27.

 

A Czech seaman has an unusual advocate – a federal judge in Maine

$
0
0

When the MV Marguerita arrived in Portland Harbor on July 7, 2017, the Coast Guard was ready for it.

Court documents show a Coast Guard inspector boarded the 606-foot cargo ship that same day and found evidence of what had already been reported to American officials. His inspection report says that the crew on the Marguerita had been dumping oily water into the ocean, a violation of an international treaty, and falsifying required records of oil discharges.

The German shipping company that managed the ship has a long history with the paper industry in Maine. Now the state would be the site of its criminal prosecution.

The Coast Guard immediately detained the ship in Portland, and the environmental crimes unit of the U.S. Department of Justice filed charges against the shipping management company MST Mineralien Schiffarht Spedition und Transport and ship owner Reederei MS “Marguerita.”

The indictment alleges that the ship entered U.S. waters and ports at least eight times with a false and misleading oil record book available for inspection by the Coast Guard. It also includes one charge of obstruction of justice.

Earlier this year, the company reached a plea agreement with the U.S. government that would have included a $3.2 million fine and four years of probation. But in an unexpected twist, a federal judge in Portland rejected it Thursday because there was no reward for the whistle-blower, a seaman from the Czech Republic named Jaroslav Hornof.

“People are not going to take risks that Mr. Hornof took if they’re going to be kicked in the shins at the end of the day,” U.S. District Judge Nancy Torresen said.

The case is now scheduled for trial next month unless the parties reach a new agreement. The federal government routinely prosecutes vessel pollution, but trials are rare because most cases end with plea deals.

Prosecutors from the Department of Justice declined to comment after the hearing, and a spokesman did not respond to a request for comment. A lawyer for the German company left the hearing quickly and later did not respond to requests for comment. The Coast Guard did not return a request for comment Friday.

The German shipping company MST has quietly transported clay slurry to Maine for use in the paper mill industry for more than two decades. When it was time to christen the newly built Marguerita in 2016, the ceremony took place at Portland’s Ocean Gateway Terminal. The ship is named after a New York City woman, Marguerita DeLuca, whose husband, Matthew, a shipping broker, has known MST’s founder for more than 45 years. It is registered and flagged by Liberia.

The naming offered a glimpse of the global maritime industry that makes Portland Harbor one of the state’s busiest ports.

“People notice all the cruise ships and tankers, but this cargo ship represents the other side of Portland Harbor. They slip in under the cover of darkness, before they ship out again,” Capt. Shawn Moody, agency operations manager with Chase, Leavitt & Co. of Portland, said at the time.

Moody said Friday that the agency still works with MST, and a cargo ship from the company calls in Portland monthly. Moody doesn’t have any involvement in the company beyond coordinating its stops in Maine, so he did not have any details about the criminal case. But legal trouble does not seem to have affected the company’s business in the state’s ports.

This is second time MST has been charged with environmental crimes.

In 2016, the company pleaded guilty in federal court in Minnesota to a similar obstruction of justice charge on another ship, the MV Cornelia. MST paid a $1 million fine for covering up significant leakages of oily waste water into the Great Lakes, and $200,000 of that money went to the protection of Lake Superior and its watershed. The agreement also included three years’ probation, which was still in effect when seaman Hornof first boarded the Marguerita in the Panama Canal in May 2017.

Hornof joined the crew as third engineer and quickly became aware of the illegal discharges, court documents say.

More than 170 countries have joined an international treaty to prevent pollution at sea, and the United States has regulations in place that dictate how shipping vessels handle their oily wastewater. Crews are supposed to remove the oil before sending the water into the ocean, and they are required to record all of those discharges. In American ports, Coast Guard officials inspect the ship to make sure the records are truthful, and a record book with false information could be the basis for criminal charges.

Last year, the Department of Justice imposed more than $50 million in penalties in vessel pollution cases. Those included a $40 million fine – the largest ever – for Princess Cruise Lines. Other fines were smaller, like the $1.9 million paid by two shipping companies based in Singapore and Egypt for covering up the illegal dumping of oily water and garbage.

In an affidavit, Hornof said he learned one of the chief engineers on the Marguerita was using extra pipes to discharge oily water directly into the ocean and falsifying records. When that employee denied doing anything illegal, Hornof began to collect evidence and make secretive videos. He gave his findings to higher-ups in the company, who investigated and eventually alerted the U.S. government to the problem. The chief engineer who had allegedly orchestrated the illegal discharges was fired and replaced in Brazil. The ship’s next American port was Portland, where it was detained by the Coast Guard.

The company was indicted in August 2017, and the case has gone on for more than a year. On Thursday, the parties appeared at two hearings in Portland that could have ended it. The government and MST had reached a plea deal, which needed the judge’s approval.

In the courtroom, Torresen credited Hornof for making the videos, saying the government would not have had a case without him.

“Watching that videotape is like watching a Jason Bourne movie,” Torresen said. “You can tell watching that video that he is taking risks.”

Whistle-blowers sometimes receive a portion of the penalties paid in such cases, but Hornof was not mentioned by name in the plea deal. Under the agreement presented to the court, MST would plead guilty to the charge of obstruction of justice, pay the multimillion-dollar fine and submit to four years of probation. The company would also be required to create an environmental compliance plan.

Hornof and two others who worked on the Marguerita had filed a challenge to the plea agreement. Their lawyer, Edward MacColl, argued that they should be considered victims in the case, which could make them entitled to money from their former boss. The three men were detained in Portland from July until September 2017, unable to return to their homes in Europe because they were material witnesses in the government’s case. They were finally allowed to make video depositions and leave Maine, but they returned in May for a trial that was then delayed. None of the three men works for MST now, and they did not travel to the United States for last week’s hearings.

The judge ruled that Hornof and his former colleagues should not be considered victims in the case, and she supported a hefty fine against the company.

“The loss is the harm to the environment, it is the harm to the system,” Torresen said. “That loss is very elusive, and that $3.2 million fine captures it.”

But she pushed back when the Department of Justice lawyers said there was no whistle-blower award for Hornof. The prosecutors argued that he had not made his report directly to the Coast Guard and that he had been uncooperative later in the investigation. Torresen cannot force the company or the government to pay Hornof, but she asked them to consider it.

When they refused to budge, she rejected the plea agreement, which sent the parties back to negotiations or on to trial.

“I’m not going to put my blessing on this agreement,” Torresen said. “I don’t think it is fair.”

MacColl on Thursday focused on the judge’s decision not to treat the three seamen as victims, rather than her defense of Hornof alone. He planned to appeal her order.

“I would really be pleased if I could get some justice for all my clients,” he said.

Meanwhile, the Marguerita still travels the high seas. It was allowed to sail out of Portland, leaving behind the detained crew members like Hornof, and has made regular trips back to Portland Harbor since then. The ship most recently called in Portland on Sunday.

 

Topsham police seek 3 who ran from scene of wreck

$
0
0

Topsham police are looking for three people who ran from the scene of a Sunday morning car crash on River Road.

Officers were called to the area of 680 River Road around 12:45 a.m. Sunday for a car crash. A silver Mercedes had gone off the road, across and lawn and into a house before flipping over, police said.

A witness told police two men and a woman ran from the scene after the crash.

“We’d like to identify who was involved in this crash, as we’re sure you would if it happened on your lawn,” police said in a Facebook post.

Information related to the incident can be reported to Sgt. Ramsay at 207-725-4337.

Defense says no evidence ties Scott Bubar to weapons in police shootout in Belgrade

$
0
0

AUGUSTA — The defense attorney told a judge on Monday there’s no evidence tying Scott Bubar to any weapons used in a shootout with police that left his father dead in his Oakland trailer on May 19, 2017.

Bubar, 41, of Brunswick, is accused of aggravated attempted murder of Kennebec Sheriff Office Deputy Sgt. Jacob Pierce that night.

The prosecutor at Bubar’s trial Monday said Pierce returned fire after seeing through a window a muzzle flash from a shotgun held by a man wearing a green T-shirt.

Assistant District Attorney Alisa Ross held up both the green shirt that had Scott Bubar’s blood on it as well as the red shirt found on Roger Bubar, 65, that night. She used those exhibits during her opening statement in the non-jury trial of Scott Bubar at the Capital Judicial Center.

She said Pierce and Deputy Adam Bacon went to the door of the trailer that night. “Sgt. Pierce knocked and announced ‘Sheriff’s Office,'” initially getting no response until he repeated his actions. Then the men inside the trailer told them to leave immediately.

“Get out of here. We don’t want you here. Get out of here,” she said the officers recounted.

One man told them, “I will (expletive) shoot you; I have a shotgun,” Ross said, and the officers heard someone loading a shotgun, so they retreated.

Bubar was also indicted on a charge of reckless conduct with a dangerous weapon in connection with the same incident. The trial is on a two-day break Tuesday and Wednesday, and is scheduled to resume 8:30 a.m. Thursday.

Defense expert witnesses are expected to testify early next week.

Lisa Whittier, one of Bubar’s defense attorneys, said that in interviews with police, “Scott Bubar is steadfast that he did nothing but try to stop his father from shooting those firearms. He tried unsuccessfully to get those firearms out of his father’s hands.”

She told Justice Michaela Murphy, “The defense contends that the worst mistake of Scott Bubar’s life was leaving his apartment in Brunswick and spending the day with his father, Roger, on May 19 of 2017.”

Whittier said Roger Bubar drove his red Mustang to Brunswick to pick up his son, Scott.

She said a 12-gauge shotgun was found under Roger Bubar’s body in the hallway of the trailer and a 9-millimeter pistol was found nearby in the hallway. Whittier also said that in initial interviews, Pierce said he saw a man in a red shirt after the muzzle flash when he returned fire.

“He now recalls seeing a man in a green shirt after the muzzle flash,” Whittier said, “That’s a very significant departure from what Sgt. Pierce said hours after the event to now, 16 months later.”

Whittier said Roger Bubar owned both firearms, and that both had been seized by police in August 2008 and then returned to him at the end of that year.

“The physical evidence, the science, the DNA says Scott Bubar did not fire either weapon,” she said.

Whittier said that in order to convict Scott Bubar, the state needs to prove who was firing the weapons and that the shooter intended to kill Pierce, a police officer.

Police were called to Roger Bubar’s trailer by a series of complaints by neighbors reporting squealing tires, a red Mustang hitting the trailer and screaming voices.

Pierce, who was the first officer on the scene, reported hearing a male voice from inside the trailer say that they were “going out in a blaze of glory,” Ross said.

Bubar, who is being held at the Kennebec County jail, wore a dark jacket and tie over a white dress shirt. He was in shackles, with a chain wrapped around his waist, and shuffled from a side door to sit at the defense table in the courtroom.

Opening statements by attorneys were watched by one woman in addition to members of the media and Kennebec County Sheriff Ken Mason.

The initial witnesses called by the state, all neighbors of Roger Bubar and his girlfriend, Jenny Shorey, described hearing loud male voices and gunshots — two apparently before police arrived — as well as police sirens that night. Several of them called police. The witnesses walked over to a large monitor to point to the location of their homes on a large aerial view of the neighborhood.

One neighbor, Joshua Worcester, testified, “I did hear one (arguer) say that they were going to call the cops. The other one said, “‘Go ahead and call the cops.'”

He said he and his wife were worried about his family’s safety that night.

“When we first moved there Roger Bubar was in an armed standoff with police,” Worcester said.

The defense played a 911 audio record of Aletha “Ali” Short calling for help. “We have a crazy neighbor that drove his car into his house,” Short says, adding that she was afraid for her own vehicles in her driveway.

“They’re both so drunk, and now he’s coming over here,” she continued.

On the witness stand, Short testified that Scott Bubar drove the car into the side of the trailer. She said she could see what was happening because there were floodlights on the front of Bubar’s trailer.

Roger Bubar was truck three times by bullets from Pierce’s firearm and died at the scene, and Scott Bubar was hit once in the abdomen. One witness described seeing Scott Bubar crawling out of the trailer under police orders hours after the shooting stopped.

Betty Adams — 621-5631

badams@centralmaine.com

Twitter: @betadams

Viewing all 8256 articles
Browse latest View live


<script src="https://jsc.adskeeper.com/r/s/rssing.com.1596347.js" async> </script>