By mYia X and Phebe Eckheldt Boston Banning paper letters for the incarcerated: Would you consider this torture? Would you consider this sensory deprivation? Would you consider this a violation of human rights? We do! Imagine not having seen your family, children, loved ones for years, and now you are…
Attorneys Raise Questions About Medical Parole After 2 People Returned To Prison wbur.org - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from wbur.org Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
MassLive picks up eight awards from New England Newspaper & Press Association, including best mobile product and Rookie of the Year for reporter Jackson Cote
Updated 6:00 AM;
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MassLive received eight awards at the New England Newspaper & Press Association’s annual convention April 8 and 9, including first place awards for MassLive’s mobile product as well as the Rookie of the Year honor for reporter Jackson Cote.
The annual competition is the largest and most comprehensive journalism recognition program in New England and was held virtually this year with media from across New England participating.
MassLive took home three first-place awards, two second-place awards and two third-place awards at the event.
ICE, seeking deportation, won’t release man indicted in Souza-Baranowski prison guard attack
WORCESTER Officials for U.S. Immigrations and Customs Enforcement are refusing to turn over a man Worcester authorities are trying to prosecute for his role in a January 2020 attack on prison guards at the Souza-Baranowski Correctional Center, lawyers said in court Wednesday.
Lennon Dossantos, 26, is in ICE custody in New Hampshire, a prosecutor said, and the federal agency says it plans to deport him rather than turn him over to face charges.
Dossantos was indicted in Worcester Superior Court in February 2020 on six charges related to a Jan. 10, 2020 attack at the maximum-security prison on the Lancaster-Shirley line that left four guards hurt.
SJC reduces conviction of man who was 15 when he committed murder in South End
By Travis Andersen Globe Staff,Updated March 16, 2021, 5:24 p.m.
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The stateâs highest court on Tuesday reduced the first-degree murder conviction of a defendant who was 15 when he fatally shot a 22-year-old man in Bostonâs South End to second-degree murder, citing factors including his cognitive impairment at the time of the crime.
Justice David A. Lowy authored the 35-page, 5-0 ruling by the Supreme Judicial Court in the case against Raymond M. Concepcion, now 23, who was convicted of first-degree murder in 2016 in the 2012 slaying of Nicholas Martinez.