jwhittaker@post-journal.com
Those accused of crimes involving a firearm or a weapon should be eligible to be sent to jail rather than be released under the state’s bail reform statutes.
Assemblyman Charles Lavine, D-Glen Cove, has introduced A.6737, which would amend the list of bail-eligible in the state Criminal Procedure Law.
The state’s April 2019 bail reform legislation included nine categories of charges overwhelmingly felonies that allowed judges to set bail. Amendments in 2020 added several categories of crimes to the bail-eligible list, but Lavine wrote that crimes committed with a firearm or weapon should be further added to the list. Some misdemeanors are eligible for bail, but none include being sent directly to jail for pretrial detention.
The stolen items are statues that belong to family memorials, among them one valued at $46,675.
That theft a bronze sculpture of a couple dancing has one family member devastated. What went through my head was, how can I go there now? said Michelle Gigante [daughter of the couple whose memorial was robbed] How can I go sit in that site and be able to handle that kind of a loss, that kind of a violation, and look at that empty stump?
In the last month, two statues from memorials have been stolen.
Buffalo Police Capt. Jeff Rinaldo said police have recovered one of them, but would not provide more details to avoid jeopardizing the probe into the thefts, reports the Buffalo News.
Thefts at Buffalo s Forest Lawn Cemetery Have Families Grieving wyrk.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from wyrk.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Buffalo cop at the heart of community policing retires Policing is about community
Eileen Buckley
Steve Nichols, retired Buffalo Police Captain, posses for a photo for 7 Eyewitness News outside Buffalo Police Headquarters in downtown Buffalo. br
and last updated 2021-01-05 18:20:33-05
âYou can t do this job alone â policing is about community,â declared Steve Nichols, retired Buffalo Police Captain.
Eileen Buckley
Steve Nichols, retired Buffalo Police Captain, meets with reporters to talk about retiring.
Nichols says after 23-years on the Buffalo Police force, he felt like it was a good time to retire and let someone new step in as director of community relations.