WHECTV Created: April 14, 2021 12:16 PM
GATES, N.Y. (WHEC) People gathered Wednesday morning to say goodbye to the man shot and killed during an attempted carjacking last week.
Friends and family held a service for 71-year-old Richard Sciascia at St. Pius Church in Gates. When News10NBC
previously spoke to his family, they remembered Sciascia as a good person who was loved by all.
A procession took the group through the city and past Buell Road
04:00 AM EST Share These are the largest commercial building permits by job cost issued April 6 by the city of Jacksonville.
Church, Other Religious
St. Pius Church, 1470 W. 13th St., contractor is J.C. Harward & Associates Inc., 1,500 square feet, interior renovation, $314,000.
Office, Bank, Professional
Genpact, 10401 Deerwood Park Blvd., No. 4, contractor is Dav-Lin Interior Contractors Inc., 5,616 square feet, tenant build-out, $150,000.
Service Station, Repair Garage
Take 5 Oil Change, 8924 San Jose Blvd., contractor is J. Lane Construction LLC, wall repair, $70,280.
Signs
Exxon, 15411 N. Main St., contractor is Petroleum Group LLC, ground sign with electronic gas pricer, $15,000.
South State, 1325 Hendricks Ave., contractor is Don Bell Signs LLC, two permits for signs, $4,000.
Craig Lee, who owned popular Lee’s Market in Bath, died of COVID-19 at 77
He declined quickly after testing positive for the disease in mid-December.
Craig Lee, in a family photo
Craig Lee, who grew up in Bath and owned Lee’s Market for many years, died this month after contracting COVID-19. He was 77.
Lee was admitted to Franklin Memorial Hospital in Farmington on Dec. 11 with health issues relating to his type 2 diabetes. Lee’s family said he tested positive for COVID-19 on Dec. 17 during his hospital stay and was transferred to Southern Maine Health Care in Biddeford, where he died on Dec. 18.
More than 1,600 Rhode Island lives have been taken by the virus. That is often how we talk about it: in numbers. But each was more than that, a part of the state’s fabric. Today, we give the stories of four.
His name was Christos Mantsos, but everyone knew him as Tony.
That was the pizza shop he ran forever on Cranston’s Pontiac Avenue Tony’s Pizza Palace.
“He just went with it,” his daughter Tammy said. “He really was Tony.”
Tammy, a medical lab tech, is 25 and lost her dad Oct. 29 to COVID.
He was 71.
He was also dad to her sister Smaro, 28, who works at University Orthopedics, and husband to his wife of 33 years, Roula. That’s part of these stories those left behind.