The special agent in charge of the FBI Boston office said Tuesday that the FBI did not know of any threats of armed protests in the four New England states the office covers, but he warned that the information could change “in a second.” Maine State Police announced separately that they are preparing for « potential events » at its state capitol on Jan. 17 and 20.
By Reporter Staff
Reporter Staff
Hung Tien Pham, the man wanted by FBI for a quintuple-murder he committed in Chinatown in 1991.
The FBI Boston Division, the Boston Police Department, the Suffolk County District Attorney’s Office, and the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the District of Massachusetts are asking for the public’s assistance in locating longtime fugitive Hung Tien Pham, who is wanted for the brutal execution-style murders of five men at a Chinatown social club in Boston, Massachusetts thirty years ago today.
The FBI is offering a reward of up to $30,000 to anyone who can provide information leading to Pham’s capture and conviction. He should be considered armed and dangerous, and an international flight risk.
The FBI is asking for the public’s assistance in locating fugitive Hung Tien Pham, who is wanted for the execution-style murders of five men at a Chinatown social club in Boston 30 years ago.
December 30, 2020
An 11-year-old boy was mauled by a pit bull in Dorchester Wednesday and was brought to a hospital for surgery, according to Boston Police.
An off-duty officer heard the child screaming in a home’s backyard, jumped several fences, and fired his gun to stop the attack, Commissioner William G. Gross told reporters at a conference on the scene near 7 Rock Terrace. It’s not clear if the dog was actually shot.
The child was bitten in the neck, arm, and groin. While the attack was vicious, a police spokesman said the child’s injuries were not life-threatening.
“There was also another pit bull being restrained by an individual, that I’m confident would have joined in on the attack as well,” Gross said.