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New Bedford Man Challenges Gang to Pull Up, Gets Police Instead
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Fairhaven selectmen reject Rogers School senior housing proposal
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Massachusetts man, accused of punching gay man and yelling homophobic slur at him in alleged hate crime, ordered held without bail, DA says
Updated Feb 23, 2021;
A Massachusetts man accused of punching a gay man last year and yelling homophobic slurs at him outside his home in an alleged hate crime was ordered to be held in prison without bail earlier this month, according to prosecutors announced Tuesday.
Michael Cates was arrested in July 2020 and indicted by a Bristol Superior Court jury in November over accusations he walked onto a couple’s property in Taunton last summer and violently assaulted one of the men, according to a statement from Bristol District Attorney Thomas M. Quinn III’s office.
Massachusetts man, accused of punching gay man and yelling homophobic slur at him in alleged hate crime, ordered held without bail, DA says
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State pardon board recommends a murdererâs life sentence be commuted
By Shelley Murphy Globe Staff,Updated January 15, 2021, 10:33 a.m.
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Thomas Koonce in his Marine uniform in a photo taken at Marine Boot Camp in 1985.
For the first time in six years, the state Advisory Board of Pardons is urging Governor Charlie Baker to commute a convicted murdererâs life sentence after unanimously concluding that Thomas E. Koonce deserves his freedom after spending 28 years in prison for the 1987 slaying of a New Bedford man.
In a decision made public Friday, the board recommended that Koonceâs sentence be reduced from first- to second-degree murder, making him eligible for parole, because of his âextraordinary commitment to self-improvement and self-development.â