Gas main break snarls Kendall Square area; service disrupted on T
Buildings in busy Kendall Square are being evacuated due to a gas main break, authorities said. Cambridge police say 5 Cambridge Center and surrounding buildings are affected. The break has led to road closures in the area of Ames, Main, and Broadway in the area, Cambridge police said in an official tweet.
FULL ENTRYNot a jackpot, but they’ll take it — Two $1m tickets were sold in N.H. during Powerball frenzy
It was a winning weekend for New Hampshire. Though no one in the Granite State won Powerball’s record-setting jackpot, two $1 million tickets were among the eight tickets that garnered nearly $2,050,000 in prizes during Saturday’s drawing, officials said today. The $1 million tickets were purchased at Manchester’s Bunny’s Superette and the Exit 3 Travel Stop in Portsmouth, New Hampshire Lottery spokeswoman Maura McCann said today.
FULL ENTRYDriver who struck and fatally injured MIT visiting professor has been identified, officials say
The driver of the truck that struck and killed visiting MIT scientist Kanako Miura as she rode her bicycle near Kenmore Square on Sunday has been identified, said two law enforcement officials. He is cooperating with investigators, one of the officials said. Miura was riding near the intersection of Beacon Street and Charlesgate West at about 3:30 p.m. when she was hit by a truck and sustained massive injuries. Miura, 36, had been working at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology since the fall of 2012 in the university’s Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory.
FULL ENTRYWarm, muggy weather expected to start off week
The start of the week won’t be a washout, though it will be warm and muggy, with afternoon showers and a chance of thunderstorms beginning today, the National Weather Service said. Overnight showers gave way to mostly cloudy skies this morning. A warm front moving eastward will usher showers and thunderstorms into the Boston metro area after 2 p.m., meteorologist Bill Simpson said. It’ll be warm today, too, with highs expected to top 80 degrees in Boston.
FULL ENTRYIreland’s prime minister, Enda Kenny, lays flowers on Boston Marathon bombing memorial Sunday
Ireland’s prime minister Enda Kenny, in town to give a commencement speech at Boston College Monday, visited the Boston Marathon bombing memorial site in Copley Square with Boston Police Commissioner Ed Davis on Sunday to pay his respects. During his visit, Kenny added his own token to the memorial: a bouquet of orange and white roses laced with green fauna — the colors of Ireland’s flag — tied together with ribbon of the same colors, on behalf of his home country.
FULL ENTRYMBTA Transit Police Officer Richard Donohue, wounded in the post-marathon shootout, speaks about his ordeal
Officer Richard “Dic” Donohue of the MBTA Transit Police sat smiling next to his wife, Kim, this morning in the Spaulding Rehabilitation Hospital gym overlooking the harbor. Just 30 days ago, he was shot in an exchange of gunfire in Watertown between police and the two Boston Marathon bombing suspects and nearly died of his injuries. “I’m getting stronger and healthier by the day,” he said. Donohue iced his leg, his crutches nearby, as he spoke about the pain he suffers from nerve damage.
FULL ENTRYPossible hit-and-run in Fenway kills cyclist; 2 women hit in South Boston in serious condition
A possible hit-and-run incident killed a cyclist in the Fenway neighborhood of Boston Sunday afternoon, police said. The cyclist, a woman in her early 20s, was pronounced dead at the scene near the intersection of Beacon Street and Charlesgate West, Boston Police Officer James Kenneally said. Boston Police Officer Katherine Shea said that the victim was struck by a truck at about 3:30 p.m. and that the truck drove away. Shea said police had spoken to several witnesses.
FULL ENTRYPossible hit-and-run in Fenway kills cyclist; 2 women hit in South Boston in serious condition
A possible hit-and-run incident killed a cyclist in the Fenway neighborhood of Boston Sunday afternoon, police said. The cyclist, a woman in her early 20s, was pronounced dead at the scene near the intersection of Beacon Street and Charlesgate West, Boston Police Officer James Kenneally said. Boston Police Officer Katherine Shea said that the victim was struck by a truck at about 3:30 p.m. and that the truck drove away. Shea said police had spoken to several witnesses.
FULL ENTRYIn a show of neighborhood unity, Dorchester residents hold event to raise money for Marathon bombing victims
After a month of planning with help from about 100 volunteers, Dorchester residents touched by the Boston Marathon bombings gathered this afternoon to jump in moon bounces, paint, eat, and raise money for the One Fund for bombing victims. The daylong event, called Hometown Comfort, continues this evening: From 6 to 9 p.m., there will be food from local chefs, live music, and an auction inside the IBEW hall hosted by Tom Ashbrook, host of NPR’s “On Point” from WBUR Boston. Tickets are $75 a person, or $50 for those who donate blood.
FULL ENTRYRevere man sentenced to 10 years in prison for breaking and entering as repeat offender
A Revere man has been sentenced to 10 years in prison after he was convicted of breaking and entering while being a habitual offender, according to Middlesex District Attorney Marian T. Ryan’s office. Patrick Wiswall, 41, was found guilty on Tuesday of breaking and entering in the daytime to commit a felony and larceny under $250, following a 5-day trial at the Middle Superior Court, according to a statement from the district attorney’s office.
FULL ENTRYFisherman rescued from Megansett Harbor in North Falmouth
A fisherman was rescued from Megansett Harbor in North Falmouth Sunday morning after he was found unresponsive in the water, Falmouth Police wrote in a statement. The man’s fishing companion alerted area residents, who pulled him from the water. He was resuscitated and taken to Falmouth Hospital. The man was identified as a 69-year-old Somerville resident, though police have not released his name.
FULL ENTRYCar crash kills Brockton man one day before college graduation
A 21-year-old Brockton man died in a car accident in Connecticut one day before he was scheduled to graduate from college there, officials from Fairfield University said. Deandre Lawton, a senior at Fairfield University in Connecticut, died early Saturday morning from injuries suffered in a one-car accident in the town of Fairfield, according to a statement from the university. Lawton was scheduled to graduate on Sunday at the Jesuit university’s 63nd annual undergraduate commencement.
FULL ENTRYThe winning ticket for massive $590.5 million Powerball pot was sold in Florida, officials say
One winning ticket for Saturday night’s Powerball lottery game was sold in Florida, officials said Sunday morning. The winner will collect from a total pot of $590.5 million, and the cash option is worth $370,896,780.54 - before taxes, according to the Massachusetts Lottery Commission.
Where the winning ticket was sold was not available early today.
FULL ENTRYBoston Police Commissioner Ed Davis wins rousing applause at UMass-Lowell graduation
LOWELL -- Boston’s Police commissioner returned today to the city where he grew up, winning thunderous applause at UMass-Lowell’s commencement, where he was the keynote speaker, for his performance in the aftermath of the marathon bombings. “Every decision I made ... was based on the totality of my life’s experiences that spanned the three decades since I earned my college degree,” Davis said, referring to his response after the April 15 bombings.
FULL ENTRYAfter decades-long hiatus, train service to Cape Cod embarks on trial run before official debut
At exactly 9:36 this morning, the CapeFlyer — the MBTA’s new train service from South Station to Hyannis — set off on its inaugural run. The service is set to officially debut next weekend, but several hundred T and commuter rail officials, along with general train fanatics, boarded the car to ride along on its trial run. Next weekend will be the first time in about 25 years that service from Boston to Cape Cod will be offered.
FULL ENTRYRoute 3 northbound ramp to Lowell Connector will be closed for clean up Sunday
The ramp connecting Route 3 northbound to the Lowell Connector will remain closed Sunday as crews continue to clean up 4,000 gallons of fuel that spilled into nearby wetlands on Friday when a tanker truck crashed and rolled over, officials said. The cause of the crash remains under investigation, but investigators are looking into the possibility that another vehicle cut off the tanker, State Police said in a statement on Saturday.
FULL ENTRYSomerville, Dorchester men arrested for possession of heroin after Transit Police witness alleged drug deal
Police arrested two men from Somerville and Dorchester after seeing them exchange heroin and cash at the JFK/UMass Red Line T station Friday night, Transit Police said. Plainclothes Transit Police officers reported they overheard Daniel Merrill, 28 of Somerville, saying the words “buying” and “dealer” in a conversation around 9 p.m., police said in a statement. Derick Anderson, 40 of Dorchester, got off a northbound train and briefly spoke with Merrill on the platform.
FULL ENTRYPassenger on derailed Connecticut train describes violent collision, acts of kindness
Scott Bartelson, a passenger on the Connecticut commuter train that derailed Friday night, was making his familiar daily commute to his hometown of Stratford, Conn. when chaos erupted. “Right as the conductor was taking my ticket, the train went right off the tracks,” said Bartelson, who estimated the train was traveling 40 to 50 miles per hour. “It started tipping to one side, constantly bumping up and down and back and forth like crazy. I saw sparks right outside my window.”
FULL ENTRYBay State travelers delayed as Connecticut train accident leaves rail service shut down indefinitely
The collision of two commuter trains in Connecticut Friday evening left rail traffic in the busy Northeast Corridor at an indefinite standstill today, causing delays and headaches for travelers headed south from Boston. At South Station, where Amtrak trains depart for New York, Philadelphia, and Washington, D.C., passengers were instead booking bus tickets. “We looked at the board, and the board said ‘cancelled, cancelled, cancelled,’ ” said Cambridge resident Ted Hansen, who had planned to catch a train to New York with his wife.
FULL ENTRYMan freed because of Annie Dookhan case charged in Brockton murder
BROCKTON -- A man charged with committing a murder here Tuesday afternoon would have been behind bars, but he was free because his drug dealing conviction had been tossed out after it was discovered that disgraced state chemist Annie Dookhan handled the evidence and testified at his trial, officials said today. Donta Hood, 22, appeared today in Brockton District Court, where he pleaded not guilty to charges he fatally shot 45-year-old Charles Evans on Belmont Street Tuesday in one of six homicides in the city so far this year.
FULL ENTRYState Police open one lane on Route 128 after five-car crash near Dedham
State Police have opened one lane of traffic on Interstate 128 near Dedham after a five-car crash paralyzed the southbound highway, according to the official State Police Twitter account.
The drivers of the tractor trailer, dump truck, and three cars involved in the crash were not injured, the Tweets said, warning drivers to expect a “extensive traffic delay” and seek alternate routes.
FULL ENTRYCatherine E. Greig’s 8-year-prison sentence was justified, federal court rules
Catherine E. Greig was properly sentenced to eight years in federal prison for helping her long-time love James “Whitey’’ Bulger remain on the run from racketeering and murder charges for 16 years, a federal court ruled today.“On June 22, 2011, Greig’s many years of harboring Bulger came to an end,’’ Judge O. Rogeriee Thompson wrote for the unanimous three-judge panel. “Our consideration of her claimed errors has similarly reached its conclusion...Greig’s sentence stands.’’
FULL ENTRYSources: Bomb suspect Dzhokhar Tsarnaev took responsibility for Marathon attacks in note scrawled in boat
Two officials say Boston Marathon bombing suspect Dzhokhar Tsarnaev left behind a note in the boat where he was captured after a massive manhunt. Praising Allah, he said he would be joining his brother soon and identified himself as one of the bombers, two officials with knowledge of the note said.
FULL ENTRYTsarnaev’s lawyers seek permission to photograph him to show ‘evolving mental and physical state’
Lawyers for the Boston Marathon bombing suspect want to be able to take pictures of the 19-year-old now and over time to show evidence of his injuries and his “evolving mental and physical state,” according to a filing in federal court in Boston. As the defense team for Dzhokhar Tsarnaev argues against the death penalty, it would use the photo evidence to challenge whether he was fit enough to voluntarily provide statements to investigators just after his arrest, according to the filing.
FULL ENTRYPowerball jackpot hits $600 million, setting new record; $6,000 in tickets sold every minute
Powerball lottery tickets are generating the kind of gravitational pull that only unprecedented fortunes can, as the jackpot soared slightly above $600 million, setting a new record.
The astronomical odds for the prize, 1 in 175 million, are not scaring away buyers, who are flocking to stores across Massachusetts. Just before noon Friday, state lottery spokeswoman Beth Bresnahan sais she was watching “mesmerized” as proceeds from Powerball tickets ticked up past $911,000 for the day, at a rate of more than $6,000 per minute.
FULL ENTRYTransit Police Officer Richard Donohue, wounded during Boston Marathon bombing shootout, moves to Spaulding Rehab hospital
In a major medical milestone, Transit Police Officer Richard “Dic” Donohue has now moved to Spaulding Rehabilitation Hospital in Boston, 28 days after he was rushed, nearly lifeless, to Mount Auburn Hospital in Cambridge. Donohue was shot in Watertown on April 19 as he and other police officers faced off against Boston Marathon bombing suspects Tamerlan and Dzhokhar Tsarnaev. The showdown ended with Tamerlan mortally wounded when shot by police and run over by his brother as he fled the scene in a car.
FULL ENTRYWhitey Bulger’s lawyers say federal prosecutors do not need to check criminal backgrounds of jurors
Attorneys for James “Whitey” Bulger today said they do not want federal prosecutors conducting criminal history checks on prospective jurors in Bulger’s upcoming racketeering and murder trial in US District Court in Boston. In court papers filed today, attorneys J.W. Carney Jr. and Henry Brennan said the request made Thursday by US Attorney Carmen Ortiz’s office is a waste of court resources. Moreover, they wrote, the existence of a criminal record, by itself, should not be a bar to jury service.
FULL ENTRYCar strikes pole in Quincy, 4,400 lose power
Approximately 4,400 homes lost power in the Houghs Neck and Germantown neighborhoods in Quincy when a vehicle crashed into a utility pole on Sea Street Thursday night, according to National Grid Spokeswoman, Jackie Barry.
National Grid was working to restore power to 800 homes during the night, but the remainder would remain without electricity until repairs could be made, she said.
FULL ENTRYBrewpub to honor slain MIT officer with ‘Collier Stout’
Sean Collier had many loves in life, from hiking to police work, the Patriots to country music. And, as friends attest, he was forever fond of a good beer. That is why, nearly a month after the MIT police officer’s tragic death, allegedly at the hands of the Boston Marathon bombers, news that Cambridge Brewing Company in Kendall Square is creating a beer in Collier’s honor -- “Collier Stout”-- is giving those who loved him reason to smile.
FULL ENTRYEast Boston man sentenced to 15 years in vigilante justice case; killed man who sexually abused him
Tortured for years by memories of the sexual abuse he allegedly suffered at the hands of a close family friend, 17-year-old Marco Tulio Flores finally snapped after finding a photograph of his young nephew in the man’s apartment. In what prosecutors said was a case of vigilante justice, Flores went to Jaime Galdamez’s East Boston apartment on May 22, 2011, armed with a knife and a dog chain, interrogated Galdamez, and got him to admit on camera what he had done. Then he killed him and burned down his home.
FULL ENTRYFederal jury ponders fate of John M. Analetto, trooper accused of extortion
A federal jury in Boston today began deliberating in the case of John M. Analetto, the Massachusetts State Police trooper charged with two counts of extortion. The 12-member jury began deliberating just before noon today, after the testimony of three witnesses over two days. Analetto, 49, of Belmont, a trooper for more than 20 years, is charged with extorting payments from a bookmaker whom Analetto had loaned $24,000, by threatening to beat him, and, in one case, kill him.
FULL ENTRYState Police: Alleged trespassers at Quabbin Reservoir not connected to other criminal activity
The seven people who were allegedly trespassing at the Quabbin Reservoir in Ware early Tuesday are not tied to any other criminal activity, State Police said today. In a statement, spokesman David Procopio said the five men and two women found inside the reservoir were cleared after a “thorough investigation.”
FULL ENTRYRoxbury woman allegedly tried to extort lawyer to pay for breast enhancement operation
A Roxbury woman who allegedly threatened to press charges against a lawyer who brushed her with his car unless he gave her $7,000 for breast enhancement surgery has been arraigned on extortion charges, prosecutors said. A not-guilty plea was entered on behalf of 24-year-old Deborah Yi in South Boston District Court on one count of extortion by false claim, the Suffolk County district attorney’s office said in a statement.
FULL ENTRYFederal prosecutors ask for criminal background checks of jurors in James ‘Whitey’ Bulger trial
Federal prosecutors asked a judge today to grant them permission to conduct criminal background checks of jurors at the upcoming trial of gangster James “Whitey” Bulger. In its motion, prosecutors noted that in another high-profile federal case in Boston, a federal judge set aside a jury’s verdict recommending the death penalty for convicted carjacker and killer Gary Lee Sampson after it was discovered that a juror failed to disclose information during jury selection.
FULL ENTRYTwo Powerball tickets worth $1m sold in Mass. as jackpot climbs to $550m
Two people who bought lottery tickets in Massachusetts are millionaires, but who they are is still a mystery. Though no one won last night’s Powerball jackpot, two individuals who purchased Powerball tickets at Pittsfield and Andover convenience stores have won the game’s second-tier prize of $1 million, the Massachusetts Lottery said. A horde of other hopefuls nationwide were not so lucky, but the surge in ticket sales boosted the jackpot for this weekend’s drawing to $550 million, up from $360 million last night.
FULL ENTRYSome fishermen in N.H. tournament will have to undergo lie detector test before getting big prize
Fishermen are famous for telling good stories. Now, one of New England’s most prestigious fishing tournaments is instituting a strict policy intended to distinguish what’s factual from what’s fishy: Anglers must submit to a polygraph test to claim their prizes. The Winni Derby, held May 17 to 19 on New Hampshire’s Lake Winnipesaukee, offers more than $50,000 in total winnings and a grand prize of $12,500, according to the tournament’s website.
FULL ENTRYWarm temps, dry conditions lead forecasters to warn of brush fire danger
Today’s warm temperatures and high winds may feel nice, but they’ve also created conditions for fires to start and spread. Thanks to gusty winds between 30 and 40 miles per hour and low humidities, the National Weather Service issued a hazardous weather outlook for the entire state, warning of fire weather conditions lasting through tonight.
FULL ENTRYHigh-ranking IRS official withdraws as commencement speaker at Western New England University Law School
A high-ranking IRS official embroiled in a burgeoning scandal surrounding the agency’s targeting of conservative organizations has canceled her appearance as the keynote speaker at the Western New England University School of Law’s commencement ceremony, school officials said. Lois Lerner, the director of the IRS’s tax-exempt organizations division, notified the school of her decision Wednesday, five days after she publicly acknowledged that her agency had wrongly singled out groups with “tea party” or “patriot” in their name for additional scrutiny.
FULL ENTRYOne month after, Marathon bombings are remembered
On the one-month anniversary of the Boston Marathon bombings, the scene for much of today at the site of the first explosion could have passed as a Boylston Street tableau on any typical weekday. Business people and tourists, students and residents, strolled or hurried past the place where a shrapnel-filled pressure cooker created carnage only steps from the finish line. Few stopped at the spot, and few hints of its significance could be found there.
FULL ENTRYMass. high court orders new trial in lawsuit of man paralyzed after trampolining into Framingham pool
The state’s highest court has ordered a new trial in a lawsuit brought against two property owners by a man who was paralyzed when he jumped from a trampoline into a backyard wading pool in Framingham. Cleber Coleta Dos Santos had unsuccessfully sued Maria A. and Jose T. Coleta, who owned the Framingham home and set up the trampoline next to the pool.
FULL ENTRYLynn pastor faces charges of sexually assaulting five children
A Lynn pastor accused of sexually assaulting five children over several years was released after posting $25,000 cash bail following his arraignment in Lynn District Court, prosecutors said. An automatic not-guilty plea was entered Tuesday on behalf of Daniel Lopez, 62, on seven counts of indecent assault and battery of a child under 14 and one count of rape of a child, said Carrie Kimball-Monahan, a spokeswoman for the Essex County district attorney’s office.
FULL ENTRYOne Fund payments will include those treated as hospital outpatients
Payments from The One Fund Boston charity will go to Marathon bombing victims treated as hospital outpatients, in addition to those seriously injured and the families of those killed, according to final rules issued Wednesday for the distribution of the compensation fund. The addition of those treated then released is the principal change to the proposed distribution formula unveiled last week by the fund’s administrator, lawyer Kenneth Feinberg. The One Fund charity has raised more than $30 million so far from individuals and corporations.
FULL ENTRYGrand jury issues indictments against five Massport ‘cab starters’
A Suffolk County grand jury handed up a 53-count bribery indictment of five Massachusetts Port Authority employees who allegedly accepted bribes from cab drivers in exchange for better spaces in line at the Boston Logan International Airport taxi queue, prosecutors said today. Kenneth Clement, 67, of Attleboro; Michael Garvey, 51, of Melrose; Vadim Mkrtychev, 38, of West Roxbury; James Mulrey, 45, of Canton; and Donald Potis, 47, of Medford face charges.
FULL ENTRYClimate change activists say they blocked freighter from delivering coal to Mass. power plant
Climate change activists say protesters in a little white lobster boat flying an American flag blocked a coal delivery today at the Brayton Point Power Station in Somerset, getting in the way of a freighter nearly 700 feet long. “The climate crisis is real, and it’s staring us in the face and we’re not doing anything,” said Marla Marcum, 38, a spokeswoman for the protesters aboard the boat, who said she plans to bail them out of jail later this afternoon.
FULL ENTRYState high court rules that Worcester college student apartments are not ‘lodging houses’
The state’s highest court has rejected an attempt by the city of Worcester to declare that apartments in two- and three-family homes rented out to four college students were “lodgings” and fell under the state lodging house law. “While we recognize that the city seeks to protect student safety, and apparently regards the apartments at issue here as being the equivalent of dormitories, such concerns are better addressed through enforcement of applicable zoning ordinances and provisions of the sanitary and fire safety codes,” the Supreme Judicial Court said.
FULL ENTRYTwo rescued bottlenose dolphins found dead in Yarmouth
Two bottlenose dolphins that were rescued after becoming stranded on a Dennis beach earlier this week have died after beaching again in Yarmouth. The International Fund for Animal Welfare examined and released the dolphins, a male and female, into open water after finding the two animals beached on Crowes Pasture Beach in Dennis around 4 p.m. Monday, IFAW spokeswoman Kerry Branon said.
FULL ENTRYWorcester charter school faces probation
A Worcester charter school is facing probation less than four years after it opened because of weak academic results, declining enrollment, and unstable finances. The state Board of Elementary and Secondary Education will decide whether to place the Spirit of Knowledge Charter School on probation at its monthly meeting next Tuesday. The move could eventually lead to the school’s closure if it fails to fix its problems. Paula Bailey, the school’s executive director, said it already is taking steps to address the concerns.
FULL ENTRYPolice investigate Brockton shooting death
It’s not clear what led to a Brockton man being fatally shot in the chest late Tuesday afternoon, officials said. Brockton police responded just after 4 p.m. to reports of multiple gunshots and a man shot, lying in the driveway on Belmont Street, Plymouth District Attorney Timothy J. Cruz and Brockton Police Chief Emmanuel Gomes said.
FULL ENTRYLowell police seek clues in string of ATM robberies
Police are hoping the public can help identify a man suspected of robbing five customers in separate incidents at a Lowell bank ATM since January, Lowell police said. The suspect has surprised customers using the ATM at the Washington Street Savings Bank on Middlesex and Central streets, Lowell Police Department Deputy Superintendent Arthur Ryan said. “Our concern is that the robberies seem to escalate in violence,” Ryan said.
FULL ENTRYBoston police search for suspects in Roxbury home invasion, kidnapping of 16-year-old girl
Boston police are looking for four suspects in an armed home invasion this morning in Roxbury that led to a 16-year-old girl being briefly kidnapped. A female caller reported at about 1:25 a.m. that four masked male suspects wearing hooded sweatshirts had forced their way into her home on New Whitney Street, kidnapped her daughter, and stolen a TV, a Sony Playstation, and her white Toyota Sienna van.
FULL ENTRYOn the beat

Columnist Adrian Walker says UMass Dartmouth is shaken after revelations that one of the Marathon bomb suspects was a student there. Read more
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Recent posts
- Gas main break snarls Kendall Square area; service disrupted on T
- Not a jackpot, but they’ll take it — Two $1m tickets were sold in N.H. during Powerball frenzy
- Driver who struck and fatally injured MIT visiting professor has been identified, officials say
- Warm, muggy weather expected to start off week
- Ireland’s prime minister, Enda Kenny, lays flowers on Boston Marathon bombing memorial Sunday



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