ROCHESTER Six months have passed since 19-year-old Michael Mowry was shot and killed in the middle of the night inside his Monroe Drive bedroom.
While no one has yet been charged and public details about that Aug. 30 night have been limited, prosecutors and investigators say their work on the homicide case hasn’t stopped.
“I don’t think there’s been a week that’s gone by that I have not spoken with the lead investigators on the case or we have not gotten together to work on different aspects or talk about the some of the other things they are doing investigative-wise,” said Senior Assistant Attorney General Ben Agati. “They are certainly working hard. It’s not seen out in front of the camera, so to speak, but there’s a lot of things going on behind the scenes where they are interviewing witnesses, finding new witnesses and continuing to do a search for even more evidence to discern who is the person who did this or persons, as well (as) who may have been involve
N.H. Attorney General Gordon MacDonald will be the next chief justice of the state Supreme Court.
New Hampshire Attorney General Gordon J. MacDonald has been confirmed as chief justice of the New Hampshire Supreme Court, ending a protracted political dispute over who should lead the state’s high court.
The Executive Council vote Friday broke along party lines, with the council’s four Republicans uniting to elevate MacDonald, who’s never been a judge but who is widely respected in state legal circles, to the state’s highest judicial post.
“I haven’t seen an attorney general work any harder than Gordon MacDonald,” said Councilor David Wheeler, a Republican from Milford. “He has never lied to me that’s a big deal for me never given me false information. And that is a characteristic I’d like to see in a Supreme Court justice.”
The New Hampshire state trooper involved in a deadly traffic stop Wednesday has been identified as Matthew Merrill, according to New Hampshire Attorney General Gordon MacDonald. Merrill has been a law enforcement officer for approximately 11 years, MacDonald said in a written statement. He joined the New Hampshire State Police in 2012 after working as a Grantham Police officer from.
Man killed, trooper wounded in armed confrontation in Dalton, NH
The exact circumstances surrounding the incident remain actively under investigation, according to New Hampshire Attorney General Gordon MacDonald. Author: Griffin Stockford (NEWS CENTER Maine) Published: 2:42 PM EST December 24, 2020 Updated: 5:16 PM EST December 24, 2020
DALTON, New Hampshire An officer-involved shooting incident took place Wednesday in Dalton, NH. During the incident, a New Hampshire State Police trooper was wounded by gunfire and an adult man, Mark Clermont, 45, of Whitefield, NH, was killed.
On Thursday morning, Deputy Chief Medical Examiner Dr. Mitchell Weinberg conducted an autopsy on Clermont and determined that his cause of death was a gunshot wound to the head. The manner of his death is homicide. As used by the Office of the Chief Medical Examiner, homicide is defined as the killing of one person by another.
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CONCORD, NH – New Hampshire Attorney General Gordon J. MacDonald encourages consumers to be on the lookout for scams related to the distribution of the COVID-19 vaccine.
The first COVID-19 vaccines have arrived in New Hampshire and are being administered initially to directly impacted groups, including at-risk healthcare workers, residents of long-term care facilities and first responders. The general public should monitor the Vaccination Planning website for information about future distribution announcements: https://www.nh.gov/covid19/resources-guidance/vaccination-planning.htm
Due to high demand for the vaccine, scammers may take the opportunity to attempt to fraudulently obtain money or personal identifying information from consumers by representing that they can provide fast access to a COVID-19 vaccination.