2-vehicle accident in New Bedford leads to DUI arrest

There was a major 2-vehicle accident on Route 18 and Coggeshall Street today around 2am. Police suspected the accident involved driving under the influence. This video shows the aftermath of two vehicles with major damage and the MA State police conducting a field sobriety test then placing the driver under arrest.

Video by Carlos Pimentel Felix.




State Police Investigate a Fatal Crash in Plymouth

At 9:44 a.m. this morning troopers assigned to the State Police Barracks in Bourne responded to reports of a two car crash on Route 3 northbound in Plymouth. Preliminary investigation indicates that a 73-year-old Bourne man was driving a 2007 Ford Freestar when it struck a 2002 Chrysler PT Cruiser operated by a 46-year-old Taunton man. The Ford swerved off the roadway after the impact and struck a tree. The driver of the Ford was transported to Beth Israel Hospital in Plymouth where he was pronounced deceased. The driver has been identified as Frank A. Valas. The initial investigation by Trooper Kurt Bourdon indicates the crash was caused by medical issues. Assisting with the crash and investigation are troopers from the State Police Barracks in Bourne, the Collision Analysis and Reconstruction Section and the Crime Scene Services Section. The Plymouth Fire Department and EMS rendered medical assistance and transported Mr. Valas to the hospital.





Southcoast Wellness Van announces April schedule for community screenings and vaccinations

The Southcoast Wellness Van announces its April schedule for community screenings and vaccinations.

The Southcoast Wellness Van upholds Southcoast Health’s mission to promote the optimal health and well-being of individuals in the communities it serves. Southcoast Health focuses its attention on increasing access to services and caring for the entire population through wellness initiatives and disease management that are designed to limit — and preferably prevent — the patient’s need for acute care.

The Southcoast Wellness Van travels across the region bringing health screenings into the communities of Southeastern Massachusetts. Free mobile health services available by the staff include:

•Cancer screenings and education.
•Blood pressure screening.
•Cholesterol screening
•Teen resource information
•Glucose (diabetes) screenings.
•Nutritional information and education.
•Health education services.
•Medical physician referral.
•Vaccinations.

Please note that screenings sponsored by the Southcoast Wellness Van are sometimes held at community locations and not always on the van. Look for signs when arriving at a location if you do not see the van outside.

For more information and to schedule free screenings, please call Susan Oliveira, RN, at 508-973-8740 or email oliveiras@southcoast.org. You can also check the schedule online at www.southcoast.org/van/ or subscribe to daily notices on Twitter, Facebook and RSS feeds.

LAKEVILLE
Sunday, April 3
Apponequet High School
100 Howland Rd., Lakeville
Health Screenings & Vaccines
10 a.m. to 2 p.m.

NEW BEDFORD
Tuesday, April 5
Bay Village/ Boa Vista Housing
134 South Second St., New Bedford
Health Screenings & Vaccines
12 p.m. to 6 p.m.

NEW BEDFORD
Thursday, April 7
Ben Rose Gardens
679 Delano Street, New Bedford
Health Screenings & Vaccines
11 a.m. to 4 p.m.

MARION
Saturday, April 9
Sippican School
16 Spring Street, Marion
Health Screenings & Vaccines
10 a.m. to 2 p.m.

SWANSEA
Monday, April 11
Big Lots
207 Swansea Mall Dr., Swansea
Health Screenings & Vaccines
10 a.m. to 3 p.m.

NEW BEDFORD
Tuesday, April 12
Oral Cancer Screenings Clinic
114 McArthur Drive, New Bedford
Oral Cancer Screenings
12 p.m. to 5 p.m.

FALL RIVER
Friday, April 15
Walmart
638 Quequechan St., Fall River
Health Screenings & Vaccines
10 a.m. to 4 p.m.

FALL RIVER

Saturday, April 16
Fall River Fitness Challange
Kuss Middle School, Fall River
Health Screenings & Vaccines
8:30 a.m. to 10:30 a.m.

NEW BEDFORD
Sunday, April 17
Boys And Girls Club of New Bedford
166 Jenny Street, New Bedford
Health Screenings & Vaccines
11 a.m. to 3 p.m.

NEW BEDFORD
Tuesday, April 19
Brickenwood
Harvard St, New Bedford
Health Screenings & Vaccines
10 a.m. to 4 p.m.

ONSET
Wednesday, April 20
Onset Foursquare Church
301 Onset Ave., Onset
Health Screenings & Vaccines
10 a.m. to 2 p.m.

NEW BEDFORD

Thursday, April 21
Presidential Heights
Community Room Filmore Street, New Bedford
Health Screenings & Vaccines
11 a.m. to 4 p.m.

WESTPORT
Friday, April 22
Lees Market
796 Main Rd, Westport
Health Screenings & Vaccines
9 a.m. to 3 p.m.





Taunton man arrested in Roxbury for Taunton homicide on Thursday

Bristol County District Attorney Thomas M. Quinn III and Taunton Police Chief Edward Walsh announced today that an arrest has been made in connection to yesterday’s fatal shooting of 23-year-old Gordon Weekes.

Miguel Marrero, 20, of Taunton was arrested this afternoon in Roxbury by members of The Massachusetts State Police Violent Fugitive Apprehension Section and Boston Police. An arrest warrant for Marrero issued last night after investigators developed evidence against him.

Mr. Marrero is charged with murder and carrying an illegal firearm. He will be held in jail during the weekend and arraigned in Taunton District Court on Monday morning.

Taunton Police received a call regarding a shooting outside of 9 Fifth Avenue shortly after 9:30 a.m. Thursday. The victim, who was taken to Morton Hospital in Taunton by a friend, died at the hospital at 10:06 a.m. The shooting occurred outside a home at 9 Fifth Avenue.

The investigation into the homicide is being coordinated by Assistant District Attorneys Jeanne Veenstra and Daniel Hourihan, and is being conducted by Massachusetts State Police detective assigned to this office and Taunton Police.

The investigation is active and ongoing, and no further information can be disseminated Prior to the defendant’s arraignment in open court on Monday.




Child Who Was Subject of Search in New Bedford Located

The young boy who was the subject of a search in New Bedford has been located and is safe. Media seeking more information should contact the New Bedford Police Department.

Original details:

The New Bedford Police and Massachusetts State Police are currently searching for a missing boy in that city. Preliminary reports stated that the boy was dropped off at school this morning, but that school is not in session today. The child was last seen outside the Hathaway Elementary School, located at 265 Court St., New Bedford. A witness reported seeing the child visibly upset at the entrance to the school.

The boy is described as 5 years old, white, wearing a green winter hat, a black jacket, and a neon yellow backpack.

Anyone who thinks they see the child or has information about him should call 911 or the Massachusetts State Police at 508-820-2121 immediately.




Faces Of New Bedford – #43: Stacey Mendonca

Meet Stacey Mendonca, 42-year-old certified occupational therapist assistant for the New Bedford Public Schools.

Stacey had lived a normal life that most in her position would, as an employee, wife, mother, and grandmother until an event that took place during the Summer of 2015 turned her life upside down. On August 2nd, she received the news that no mother ever wants to hear, her 24 year old son, Jeffery Sylvia, Jr. was found murdered in the city’s South End.

In the wake of this tragic event, her family was at a total loss. Although she knows that her son may have not always made the best decisions, nobody should ever be able to choose whether someone lives or dies.

She owes her ability to be able to make it through each day with support from family and friends, grief crisis counseling, which was established by the Victim Advocacy Program days after her son’s death and support from the POMC (Parents of Murdered Children) groups she attends with her daughter.

Having come along way since her son’s death, she wants to impact the community and raise awareness to the Youth about the cause and effects of senseless acts of violence. She has started the J.E.F.F. (Just Envision Future First) campaign in memory of her son to do just that. She is currently raising funds to start a scholarship for a NBHS graduate and to donate a new baseball scoreboard to the GNBYBL, where he played as a child and is hosting the Spare the Pain Bowl-A-Thon to do so. With J.E.F.F. she hopes to be able to stop another family from facing the pain and challenges that she and her family has had to endure in the aftermath of her son’s traumatic passing.

“We have been taught to not put our hand in fire because we know we will be burned. However because the consequence is delayed we don’t think of the severity of our actions. It’s time to get our youth to envision a future self before making a choice that could crush their hopes and dreams for a better future.”

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Faces of New Bedford is a project by Colton Simmons. If you are interested in booking a shoot or getting prints from the series email all inquiries to colton@coltonsimmons.com

Follow Colton on Instagram: https://instagram.com/simmonscolton




Mayor Jon Mitchell State of the City Address Thursday, March 24, 2016

Mayor Jon Mitchell State of the City Address – Thursday, March 24, 2016

Live Stream on Facebook

Prepared remarks:

“Thank you to Joe Michaud, Rick Kidder and the Chamber of Commerce for another great job in organizing this important civic event. Rick is off to a fast start at the helm of the Chamber, and there are big things to come for this organization.

Thank you also to Webster Bank for its generous and consistent sponsorship, and of course to Jim O’Brien and Greater New Bedford Regional Vocational-Technical High School for your hospitality.
Any day I get to have lunch with the busiest person in my household is a good day. I am grateful that Annie has joined me today. I am not afraid to admit that I married up, and there’s a part of me that regrets depriving her patients, whose lives she strives everyday to save, of even a little of her time. I can’t thank her enough for all her love and support of me, our three girls and this great City.

Today, thanks to the hard work of the residents, employees and supporters of New Bedford, there is much progress to report.

We’ve seen a sharp drop in our unemployment rate over the last few years, new businesses spring up all over New Bedford, and a record number of construction permits this past year.

In the South End, two new schools and a $55 million expansion of the SMAST research facility are being built. In the North End, industrial growth has been so robust that former mills are filling up and we now have the desirable problem that our business park, for the first time in its sixty year history, is nearly full.

On the waterfront, cargo tonnage is growing, new seafood processors are moving in, a new Nantucket ferry service is about to be launched, and resident and visitors are flocking to restaurants and events along the water’s edge.

The downtown now has become the center of the region’s entertainment and dining scene, which is bound to grow with a new hotel on Union Street in the pipeline.

Test scores in our schools are rising faster than the state average, New Bedford High School is rebounding and is now one of the few schools in the state with the prestigious Advanced Placement Capstone designation, and here at Voc-Tech, students are receiving the technical education that will prepare them to compete in tomorrow’s workforce.

In our neighborhoods, violent crime is down some fourteen percent year over year, and our neighborhood task force has not lifted its foot off the pedal in pursuit of irresponsible landlords. Our fire department, through the leadership of Mike Gomes, the skill of our firefighters and the city’s investment in fire equipment, joined Boston and Cambridge as the only communities in the state with the insurance industry’s “ISO 1” rating.

City services are as effective and efficient as they’ve been in the city’s history – and I’m not just talking about snow removal. Through the multi-year effort of our department heads and our performance analyst, Christina Mills, we now have in place the ability to measure and more effectively manage the performance of government agencies. And as a national leader in renewable energy, New Bedford has saved nearly $1 million this year alone in energy costs.

There is no doubt about it. New Bedford has its act together.

I’m not suggesting by any of this that it’s time for a victory lap. The point is that for a City that had been down for so long, these and other accomplishments are the evidence that our community is capable of steady, sustained progress. These are the kinds of wins that build the collective confidence necessary to achieve even more.

The question of course is, where do we go from here? Not just tomorrow, not just next year. But what kind of city are we building for our children and grandchildren? What will it take to build a New Bedford that will throw open the doors to their dreams? What do we need to do to make them proud to live in this city?

There’s no one-size-fits-all approach to urban revitalization. Cities are complex and different. But successful cities have this in common: they don’t sit back and passively hope for things to happen. They make things happen. They initiate the action.

Others are not going to rain assistance down on us, nor would it change matters. You could start running trains from here to Boston tomorrow, and we’d still be faced with the same set of challenges. The state could give us more aid, and the federal government could create new grant programs, and we would still have to chart our own course. The state and federal governments are partners, but they are not saviors.

We in New Bedford are responsible for our own future.

So what will it take for New Bedford to thrive in a competitive world in the long run? I believe there are three pillars on which our future success rests.

The first is that we must continue to strengthen New Bedford’s capacity to govern itself. That means that local government must be able to anticipate, confront and effectively solve the collective challenges the city faces at any given time. It is incumbent upon us to help the future elected leaders of our community to do their job well.

Making sure those leaders have the resources to run government the right way is a critical part of it. Cities, and countries even, sow the seeds of decline when they start making short-sighted budget decisions. Water problems in Flint, Michigan, to take a current example, have their origins, in part, from a failure of municipal government to make prudent investments in its water system over many years. There are plenty of other examples.

We in New Bedford have been living through a period of tight finances in part because of poor decisions or neglect in the past. There are hundreds of millions of dollars of deferred building maintenance, still more unfunded future retiree benefits, and not enough funding for schools and basic services.
Now, there’s no better cure for insomnia than a discussion of municipal budgeting, so I will spare you that today.

But it is enough to say that although money remains tight, we have been digging ourselves out. Sacrifices have been made along the way. Certain city departments have been cut to the point where their ability to function has been compromised, and tax payers have been imposed upon. Unfortunately, these sacrifices have been made, and more may need to be made, because more modest sacrifices were foregone in the past.

The good news is that under the skillful guidance of our CFO, Ari Sky, New Bedford’s fiscal outlook is growing more stable. We have been able to build our fund balances, conduct effective capital planning for the first time in the city’s history, and achieve efficiencies across city agencies. There is good reason why we have secured the highest bond rating in the city’s history, and why taxpayers should be confident that their funds are being carefully spent.

The goal is to get the city on a steadier course still. Together we’re making the right moves, but it takes time, and may require some more sacrifices. But, when it comes to finances, we are clearly on a healthier, more sustainable path that will lead to a stronger city government and an easier burden on taxpayers in the long run.

Strengthening New Bedford’s ability to chart its own course also requires a government structure that is suited to the city’s needs. There’s a lot of tinkering that could be done to the structure of city government, but the single biggest institutional impediment to effective governing in this city is the two-year mayoral term.

It places intense pressure on the occupant of the office of mayor to cut corners for political expediency, chills risk taking, displaces the long hours of governing with long hours of campaigning; and discourages talented people from running for the position. It is archaic; it is a millstone around the city’s interests, and it should have been fixed a long time ago.

None of this is meant to be self-serving. Two years ago, I filed a petition with the city council to change the term to four years, with a provision that would exclude me eligibility.

I will be resubmitting the ordinance again, and I appreciate the openness to it expressed by Council President Morad and other councilors. When it comes to improving the city’s long term prospects, this one is a no brainer. It is time to act on this issue.

What is less straightforward, but just as important, is the need to get qualified people into government. Attracting talent is critical to any organization, and city government is no exception. As mayor, I have been blessed with a first rate team, and it’s been that way partly because we have been committed from the start to a policy of hiring based on merit, not on connections.

Most folks in senior leadership positions in government are willing to take less pay than in the private sector – to a point.

Lately we’ve had difficulty filling certain leadership positions because our salaries are well below the going rate for similar positions elsewhere. To attract and retain qualified managers, and to have the effective government our residents deserve, we need to offer fair and competitive salaries, and we can do it with a relatively minimal impact on the city budget.

At the same time, we need to acknowledge that during this current period of fiscal austerity, the lowest paid employees in city government have not seen their wages increase in real terms. Out of fairness we must see to it that they get a fair shake. We must commit now, as the city gets on firmer financial footing, to a long term goal of paying a living wage to employees at the bottom of the pay scale.

The second pillar of success is our making the most of the City’s assets. Fortunately, New Bedford has more cards to play than most. As you’ve heard me emphasize so many times before, the highest card in our hand is our connection to the water.

Here’s one explanation of why our coastline is so important: On a sunny day last Fall I was walking along the newly completed HarborWalk with one of my daughters, and I was approached by a retired city employee, who was walking by himself, and he said, “Mayor, I really love this new walkway. I’m glad we have this in our city.” And I asked, “What do you like most about it?” And he said, it’s a short walk from my house, and it’s just so beautiful,” as he pointed out to the ocean.

The people of New Bedford deserve to have something as beautiful as that, no less than far wealthier communities. Great neighborhoods have great public spaces, and the most attractive public spaces are often those near the water. That’s why we built the HarborWalk, and that’s why we aren’t stopping there. Through the determination of DPI Commissioner Ron Labelle and his team, I am pleased to report that we designed and secured the permitting for the CoveWalk, on the Clark’s Cove side of the hurricane barrier. It is shovel-ready, and we are relentlessly pursuing funding for it from the state. I want to thank both Senator Montigny and Representative Cabral for their supportive phone calls, and State Transportation Secretary Pollock for considering our strong funding pitch.

At the same time, we are moving ahead with the RiverWalk along the Acushnet River in the North End. Although this will take more time as it is proceeding side-by-side with the EPA cleanup of the harbor, we completed the design with ample community input, and the project is moving along steadily, thanks to the hard work of our environmental steward, Michele Paul, and the cooperative approach of the EPA.
Our goal here is an ambitious one: to ring the city with system of waterside trails that will enrich the quality of life in neighborhoods from the North End to the South End, raise property values, and draw visitors to the City. New Bedford will be known as a place known for its unique and extensive connection to the water. To quote a certain presidential candidate, it’s going to be HUGE!

The single biggest economic asset in Greater New Bedford is of course the port, which is poised for more growth. If you got this morning’s paper, you read about the waterfront planning study that we’ve been working on for the last year with a broad array of waterfront stakeholders. The planning effort brings into sharper focus our “all-of-the-above” strategy for our port, whose emphasis is on diversifying the industries that call our port home, supporting the continued success and evolution of the fishing industry, and promoting development that will knit our central waterfront into the downtown for the first time in a half-century.

I want to thank the Harbor Development Commission and the local Steering Committee of more than three dozen waterfront stakeholders who shaped this plan. It is a clear road map for the future of our port, and will lead ultimately to more job opportunities for our residents.

In addition to the port, New Bedford has numerous assets – too many to list. But there is one set of assets that is right in front of us that still hasn’t been leveraged nearly as much as it should. I’m talking about the city’s cultural and artistic assets. There’s the big ones of course: the Whaling Museum, the Z, the Art Museum, the CVPA, the National Park, and the Zoo, each of which is fabulous and enjoying a banner year.

But there’s a lot more: it’s places like the Rotch-Jones-Duff House, Fort Rodman, and Sargent Carney’s house; it’s events like the Feast, the Cape Verdean Recognition Parade, and the Fisherman’s Memorial Service. And it’s the growing arts community that is getting more national attention. And of course, it’s our rich story as the center of the whaling, cotton textile and commercial fishing industries, in successive chapters, in a city that is as culturally diverse as any in America.

We need to accentuate all of this. Re-establishing the Office of Marketing and Tourism three years ago was a significant first step. And New Bedford has no more passionate champion than our tourism director, Dagny Ashley, whose work has driven our growing tourism numbers.

It’s time in my view to take it a step further. In the coming weeks, I will present a proposal to create a dedicated fund for the promotion of the cultural and artistic assets, that will be funded by the receipts of the city’s hotel tax. With a new hotel in the pipeline, we will amplify our promotion efforts. We need the world to hear our rich story. And just as importantly, we need to be known as a creative place.

The third pillar of long term viability is what I would call building gravity. To succeed, New Bedford must be a place where people who have choices would want to move to and stay in.

Young and old across America are moving back into cities for lots of reasons, not the least of which is the desire to be in the center of things.

We need to start by reinforcing that New Bedford is in the center of things in Southeastern Massachusetts. New Bedford is not just another community along a coastline, nor are we part of a larger metropolitan area. New Bedford after all is farther from Boston than the capitals of the next two states. We have to hold ourselves out as the hub of region.

So what does it take to get people to be drawn here? We’ve talked about some of them: the economic assets like the port that would cause business clusters like those in the fishing and offshore wind industry to grow here. It’s our pursuit of anchor institutions that are a good fit here like the NOAA Science Center. It’s the public amenities like our parks and, yes, the HarborWalk. It’s all the cultural amenities we talked about that make us unique and interesting. And much more.

Two other prerequisites need particular attention. To retain folks here, our neighborhoods must be safe, and our schools must perform well.

When it comes to public safety, we’ve made substantial progress. A fourteen percent drop in violent crime in one year is significant and the hard working men and women of our police department deserve tremendous credit.

While most of our neighborhoods are safe, certain ones are not nearly safe enough, and that should bother all of us. It bothers me.

And what we need are not the gimmicks and sound bites that too often pass for public safety initiatives in other cities, but substantive measures that will yield sustainable improvements in public safety.
In the next month, we will hire a new police to fill the shoes of the late David Provencher, who established a foundation of professionalism in the department we will build on. The most important thing we can do to keep our community safe is to install and support an effective leader in our police department. That is exactly what I intend to do.

But this is moment to do more. Ours is a high-performing police department that is respected far beyond New Bedford, but as with every component of city government, we need always look for ways to improve. Among my expectations for the next chief is that he will undertake a strategic plan for the department so that we can answer the basic questions about how the department can meet the needs of a changing community. Such planning efforts commonly take place after a crisis or controversy, including the last one done in New Bedford some twenty years ago now.

There’s no reason why we should wait for a crisis to plan well. We’re going to use this moment to make an effective police department even better.

In a city of roughly 100,000, it takes but a handful of dangerous criminals to make the community much less safe. Our strategy in recent years has been to identify and focus on our attention on recidivists. And it has worked – mostly. The problem we have faced is that far too often judges, especially in state district court, are unwilling to lock them up despite ample evidence of the danger they pose.

This is a problem I have discussed extensively with District Attorney Quinn, an experienced career prosecutor if there ever was one, who sees it the same way. We believe that the solution is to concentrate time and resources to develop more serious cases against these key offenders so that they end up in Superior Court, where there is a great willingness to remove dangerous criminals from society.

Toward this end, the District Attorney has formed a unit of experienced prosecutors in his office that will focus exclusively on cases based in New Bedford. That way, his office can give the impact players the extra attention necessary to get them into Superior Court. I can’t thank Tom enough for his professionalism and collaborative effort with me on this. Frankly, he should be making this announcement, not me, so let’s give him a round of applause.

We also need to get at the roots of crime in the city. We’ve made a lot of progress on the so-called “broken window” roots of crime, such as graffiti and trash, and we won’t of course let up on that.
But the most persistent driver of crime in this city and others across the Northeast is opiate dependency. The news continues to pour in that entire state, not just New Bedford, is facing a public health and safety problem like none before. Just yesterday we learned that the state’s hospitals saw a two-hundred percent increase heroin-related visits between 2007 and 2014. Together, with our partners at SouthCoast Health Care and others, we will continue to invest in the task force our health director Brenda Weis is ably leading to get addicts into the treatment they need. We will strive to help them get their lives back on track before they resort to criminal behavior.

Safety alone is not enough to make a city attractive. It must also offer pathways to opportunity, and more than anything else, that means that the city has to be a place where a child can get a great education.

In this area, of course, we have been doing some heavy lifting. Four years ago, we were on the brink of state takeover, and since then, the school administration has laid an extensive foundation for reform and renewal. And objective measures of success are appearing. The dropout rate has fallen to the lowest point in fifteen years, and last year, student test scores grew faster than the state average – a remarkable feat given the relative wealth of our community. The superintendant, her team, teachers, and the school committee deserve tremendous credit for setting the district on the right path.

There is still much work to do. As the district moves forward, it can’t lose sight of the building blocks of reform. Successful school systems have a culture of respect and high standards of personal conduct, where student safety is not even an issue. A positive school climate is a fundamental prerequisite to educational attainment. All the other improvements that are underway: more rigorous instruction, expanded learning time, new technological tools, and so forth, won’t be effective if classrooms are orderly and focused on learning.

The news of disruptive student behavior, or worse, at Keith Middle School, is very troubling. The problem is real, and it reflects poorly not just on Keith, but on the entire school district.
But more importantly, discipline problems should be in the rearview mirror by now. When it comes to discipline, the school administration must not take its eye off the ball. This is a solvable problem, and I say to parents out there the school committee expects it to be fixed. Your children will get the education they deserve – in the environment they deserve.

Strengthening the city’s capacity to govern itself, making the most of our assets, and building gravity, these are the three pillars on which New Bedford will thrive in the long run. This is what it’ll take to build a vibrant city in the future.

There’s one part I left out in the discussion of governing capacity. It was what John Adams referred to as “skillful and upright” government, and it’s what today most would call effective leadership. The quality of people we elect to office matters a whole lot.

We are graced today by the members of the Mayor’s Youth Council, who are high school students that provide me with input on issues that affect youth in the city. They are high achievers, and the seniors among them are waiting right now to hear back from the best colleges in America. They are sprinkled across the audience today, and their attendance was made possible because Councilors Morad and Ribeiro had the really thoughtful idea of inviting them here to get a glimpse of government in action.

I am going to address my final remarks directly to them. And the remaining five hundred or so of you are welcome to listen in.

Today, I am concerned about the introduction to politics that younger Americans like you are being treated to these days. Images of a presidential debate descending into school yard name calling before a worldwide audience doesn’t exactly inspire your generation to participate in the electoral process. Neither does the hysteria and false information routinely propagated on social media. It all makes tuning out all too easy.

But it doesn’t have to be this way. Politics is not a base profession. It’s as noble as you choose to make it. Government is about doing for people that which they can’t do on their own. If you believe, as I do, that the interests of your country, your community, your family and your friends are worthy of your full devotion, public service can be source of personal fulfillment.

Our future depends on the willingness of talented, honest and hard working people like you to run for office or serve in government. We need to work together to build a political culture of civility and high standards that will draw you, the next generation, to this important work. As a community, let us together be a shining example to the rest of the country of renewal, rebirth and responsible government.

Thank you, and God bless our great City.”




Fugitive Child Rapist Captured in Florida

A joint investigation by Fall River Police, the United States Marshals Service, a Regional Fugitive Task Force based in Orlando, Fla., and the Massachusetts State Police Violent Fugitive Apprehension Section (VFAS) this morning culminated in the capture of fugitive child rapist JOHN MUNROE.

MUNROE, 75, was located hiding out at a residence in Deland, Fla. He was taken into custody and transported to the Volusia County Jail and charged as a fugitive from justice. A Massachusetts State Police VFAS trooper who had been involved in the Munroe investigation, by coincidence, was vacationing in Florida and drove across the state to assist with the arrest.

MUNROE had been sought by local, state and federal authorities since October 23, when he cut off a court-ordered GPS monitoring bracelet and fled. The previous month, he had been arrested by Fall River Police for the alleged sexual assault in their city of a child under age 10. On Dec. 14, the Massachusetts State Police put MUNROE on its Most Wanted list.

Over the next few months police conducted an exhaustive multi-state investigation. Investigators today developed intelligence that MUNROE was renting an apartment in a home at 1771 West Parkway in Deland, Fla. US Marshals and Volusia County officers from the Florida Regional Fugitive Task Force set up a surveillance on the residence this morning; at approximately 10:45 a.m. he was located and taken into custody.

MUNROE will be rendited to Massachusetts to face charges of rape of a child with force; indecent assault and battery on a child under 14; aggravated rape of a child; enticing a child under age 16; posing or exhibiting a child in a nude or lascivious manner; and possession of child pornography.





Man shot and killed in Taunton

The victim of this morning’s homicide in Taunton has been positively identified as Gordon Weeks, 23, with a last known address in Somerville.

Taunton Police, Massachusetts State Police detectives assigned to this office and Homicide Unit prosecutors are actively investigating a homicide, which occurred in The City of Taunton this morning.

Taunton Police received a call regarding a shooting outside of 9 Fifth Avenue shortly after 9:30 a.m. today. The victim, who was taken to Morton Hospital in Taunton by a friend, died at the hospital at 10:06 a.m.

The shooting occurred outside a home at 9 Fifth Avenue. The investigation is active and ongoing, and no further information can be disseminated at this time.




New Bedford man arrested on heroin charges

Fairhaven Police Detectives, working with the Bristol County Sheriffs Office South Coast Anti Crime Task Force and New Bedford Police Detectives executed a search warrant just after 12pm Wednesday afternoon at a third floor apartment located on Acushnet Avenue in New Bedford. The search took place after 32 year old Henry Catanho was arrested after he completed a drug transaction not far from that location.

Investigators took Catanho into custody without incident and returned him to his Acushnet Avenue apartment where they conducted a search of the premises. During the search, police seized a digital scale, drug packaging material, a small amount of heroin and over $2,000.00 in cash. A Massachusetts Environmental Police K-9 unit was utilized to assist in the search.

Catanho was charged with distribution of heroin and possession of heroin. Prior to this arrest, Catanhao already had open cases for trafficking heroin, distribution of heroin and possession with intent to distribute heroin, subsequent offense. He was out on $10,000.00 bail at the time of his arrest Wednesday afternoon.