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Niagara Falls man gets 17 years for killing his uncle

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LOCKPORT – An 18-year-old Niagara Falls man was sentenced Thursday to 17 years in state prison for killing his uncle last fall.

Darius M. Belton, 18, of South Avenue, had agreed to the sentence as part of a plea bargain for the Sept. 25 shooting of Luis Ubiles, 37, outside Belton’s home.

Belton pleaded guilty April 16 to first-degree manslaughter; he was initially charged with second-degree murder.

“I don’t hate you, but I’ll never forgive you. Ask God for forgiveness,” Chemelia Williams, Ubiles’ fiancee, told Belton.

“I never intended for this to happen to my uncle,” Belton said. “My uncle was like a father figure to me.”

Belton said the shooting followed “a family dispute that spiraled out of control.”

He was also indicted on a charge of illegal weapon possession.

Belton was standing on his front porch when he shot Ubiles with a handgun. Under New York law, it is not illegal to have gun in one’s home or place of business if it is registered and the owner has a permit.

But in a pretrial ruling, Niagara County Judge Sara Sheldon Farkas said she intended to tell the jury that a porch is not part of a home. Her ruling deprived Belton of a key defense strategy for the gun charge, which alone carries a 15-year maximum prison sentence.

The ruling set up the plea deal.

Prosecutors had planned to ask for consecutive sentences, meaning that if Belton were convicted of the weapon charge and the murder charge, he risked a potential prison sentence of 40 years to life.

Defense attorney Angelo Musitano had planned to argue at trial that Belton killed Ubiles in self-defense.

“To suggest that this man for no particular reason did what he did is wrong,” Musitano said. “He regrets every minute of what happened that day, and if he could take it back, he would.”

“I never left my home,” Belton said, adding that he thought he needed to protect his mother and sisters.

“I fired a shot to scare my uncle away,” Belton said.

Williams, the victim’s fiancee, did not buy it.

“Just like you show no remorse, I’m going to show no remorse for you,” she told Belton. “I hope you enjoy your time in prison.”

email: tprohaska@buffnews.com

Stabbing defendant convicted of assault

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Anthony Carter, 46, of Massachusetts Avenue, was convicted today of second-degree assault for the stabbing near his home of Alton Cooley, 24 a neighbor, who told police the defendant stabbed him the face and legs when they argued.

The victim told police Carter said he had to stab him for having given him a “disrespectful” look.

During a brief trial before Senior Erie County Court Judge Michael L. D’Amico, a jury deliberated about an hour before finding Carter guilty as charged. Trial Prosecutor John P. Gerken Jr. said he will urge Erie County District Attorney Frank A. Sedita III to recommend the judge impose the maximum-allowable seven-year prison term when Carter is returned to court for sentencing Sept. 11.

Canadian loses border pass privilege with his arrest

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A 58-year-old Canadian citizen living in Niagara Falls, N.Y., lost his pass privileges to cross the border between the two countries today with his arrest by U.S. Customs and Border Protection Field agents on marijuana charges at the Whirlpool Rapids Bridge in Niagara Falls.

Peter Lelievre was ordered out of his car when a canine ”officer” alerted agents to an odor in his vehicle.

Officers found a small bag of a green leafy substance in Lelievre’s shoes, and he voluntarily took a bag containing three small plastic containers of the substance from beneath his clothing. Field test confirmed that all the questionable substances were marijuana and he was arrested on charges of criminal possession of a controlled substance and criminal possession of marijuana. He was turned over to Niagara Falls Police.

Lelievre was a participant in the easy bridge pass NEXUS program but his privileges were immediately revoked upon his drug arrest.

A meth lab is found for a second time in Newfane

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NEWFANE – Niagara County sheriff’s deputies called Tuesday night to check on the welfare of a woman on Hope Lane uncovered a meth lab on the property, just months after it had been cleaned up at the same site.

Sean A. Smith, 39, was charged with seventh-degree criminal possession of a controlled substance and additional charges for methamphetamine production are pending, according to Undersheriff Michael J. Filicetti. Smith was arraigned in the Town of Newfane and remanded to Niagara County Jail on $15,000 bail.

Filicetti said the address was the same one they raided in January, where Smith was arrested on charges of selling and possessing methamphetamine.

New York State Police were called in January and again on Tuesday to clean up the toxic site.

Two Buffalo men arrested for hit-and-run crash

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Two Buffalo men were arrested on charges of hit-and-run and resisting arrest after they allegedly avoided a traffic stop about 6 p.m. Wednesday on 15th street and then their car struck a parked car on York Street, according to Erie County sheriff’s deputies.

Deputies said they tried to stop Vernon Jefferson, 32, and Harshaun Jefferson, 35, after they noticed that neither man was wearing a seat belt. Buffalo police said they captured both of them after they ran from their car on York Street.

Both were remanded to the Erie County Holding Center on resisting arrest and obstruction charges. Jefferson was also charged with multiple vehicle and traffic counts including leaving the scene of a property damage accident, unlawfully fleeing the police in a motor vehicle, reckless driving, not wearing a seatbelt and reckless endangerment. The home addresses of the suspects were not disclosed.

Handcuffed man arrested after brief flight toward freedom

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LOCKPORT – A prisoner in handcuffs tried to escape from police, but he didn’t get far.

An urgent call was sent out at about 2:43 p.m. today when a prisoner, identified as Tarale T. Haugabook, of Niagara Falls escaped from the Niagara County Courthouse.

Haugabook had been in the courtroom of State Supreme Court Justice Richard C. Kloch Sr. to answer charges on unrelated felonies and after pleading guilty his hands were put behind his back, he was handcuffed and he was placed into custody.

Haugabook was able to run out the unlocked front door adjacent to the first floor courtroom and began running along Ontario Street with his hands still cuffed behind his back.

Haugabook was taken into custody on Ontario Street a few minutes later.

Haugabook appeared in court to be sentenced for violating his probation on an attempted robbery charge from December 2010 when he and another man robbed a victim at gunpoint in Niagara Falls, and was also pleading guilty on an unrelated third-degree burglary charge. He was remanded without bail in both cases and he faces mandatory state prison time as a second felony offender.

He later was taken into custody by the Lockport Police Department.

Two arrested in burglary-in-progress

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NIAGARA FALLS – Police led two men out of a house at gunpoint after responding to a burglary-in-progress call just after noon Wednesday in the 8300 block of Laughlin Drive.

Darren J. Holland, 17, of 87th Street and Aaron M. Adamec, 19, of 70th Street were both charged with felony counts of second-degree burglary, fourth-degree grand larceny and fourth-degree possession of stolen property, as well as fourth-degree criminal mischief.

A neighbor alerted police that two men had entered the home through a rear window and police found the window open, a door handle broken and saw movement inside the house. Both men were ordered to surrender and were taken into custody at gunpoint without incident.

Adamec was found with a silver watch, gold necklace and silver earrings in his pocket which were later identified as belonging to the victim, police reported.

Motorycle safety checkpoints result in 92 traffic tickets

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More than 80 motorcyclists and their vehicles were checked by specially-trained State Police motorcycle inspectors Wednesday evening on Gunville Road and on Main Street in Clarence. The two checkpoints resulted in the issuance of 92 traffic tickets for offenses that included helmet and equipment violations. One rider was arrested for unlawful possession of marijuana.

The state police checkpoints were linked to efforts to improve motorcycle safety and education efforts in Western New HYork. Spokesmen said that while it is only the start of motorcycle season there have been several motorcycle fatalities in Western New York.

The state Departmentof Motor Vehicles said 168 fatalities were linked to motorcycle crashes in 2011 statewide. Erie County saw 8 of those fatalities in 2011.


Drunk driver using cell phone arrested in Buffalo

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A 47-year-old man spotted using a cell phone while driving on William Street was stopped by Erie County Sheriff’s Deputies Daniel Harris and Richard Retzlaff at the intersection with Pine Street about 10:45 p.m Wednesday and ended up being charged with driving while intoxicated after he refused to take a breath test. Elton Deas was issued an appearance ticket for a Buffalo City Court arraignment in several weeks. His home address was not disclosed by the sheriff’s office.

Teens arrested after high-speed chase in stolen truck

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Three youths from Medina were arrested in Batavia about 9 p.m. Wednesday after a high-speed police chase involving a stolen truck.

Batavia police, Genesee County sheriff’s deputies and agents of the Genesee County Drug Task Force participated in the arrests.

Charged Thursday with criminal possession of stolen property in the fourth degree and obstruction of governmental administration were Angel T. Calderon, 16, of South Main Street; Treyvon K. Johnson, 17, also of South Main Street; and Syed A. Baity, 18, of Commercial Street, all of Medina.

Calderon, identified as the operator of the stolen vehicle, was also charged with reckless endangerment, unlawfully fleeing a police officer and 40 different V&T Law violations. Baity was also charged with unlawful possession of marijuana.

The chase began about 9 p.m. Wednesday when the Batavia Emergency Dispatch Center received a call of a sighting of a red 2004 Dodge Ram pickup truck, which had been reported as stolen to the Medina Police Department earlier in the evening.

A Genesee County sheriff’s deputy reported spotting the vehicle in Batavia at Oak Street and Park Road traveling southbound on Oak Street.

An attempt to stop the vehicle failed, and the stolen truck sped south along Oak until it hit a curb and struck a pole in the Hess Mart parking lot, causing damage to the pole and to a parked vehicle.

The stolen vehicle then headed west on West Main Street and over several other city streets at speeds of more than 70 miles per hour.

The truck stopped in the front yard of 9 Buxton Ave. after striking a fence, and the three suspects tried to flee on foot. However, they were captured quickly on Buxton Avenue, according to a police report.

Arraigned Thursday morning in Batavia City Court, all three suspects were sent to Genesee County Jail , pending additional court sessions today.

A Batavia police officer suffered a leg injury in the foot pursuit and capture of the three suspects.

email: mgryta@buffnews.com

Freeman’s attorney seeks mental health defense in girl’s killing

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LOCKPORT – John R. Freeman Jr. suffers from an assortment of mental defects caused by fetal alcohol syndrome, his attorney said Thursday in explaining why he intends to offer a mental health defense on a charge that Freeman strangled a 5-year-old girl and dumped her body in a stolen garbage tote.

But Niagara County prosecutors said the claims by defense attorney Robert Viola aren’t specific enough, and they want County Judge Matthew J. Murphy III to prevent any kind of psychiatric defense for Freeman.

“It’s a very serious issue,” said Murphy, who told both sides he will rule on the matter Wednesday.

Freeman, 17, of Sixth Street, Niagara Falls, is charged with second-degree murder in the death of Isabella M. Tennant, the 5-year-old Cheektowaga girl who allegedly was killed Aug. 26, while Freeman was baby-sitting her in her great-grandparents’ Sixth Street home.

After the death, Freeman allegedly called a friend, Tyler S. Best, 18, of Barnard Street, Buffalo. Best went to Niagara Falls Police Headquarters the next day and told police he helped Freeman dispose of the body in the garbage tote in an alley, and told them where to find it.

Best is charged with a felony count of tampering with physical evidence.

Viola had told the prosecution last October he intended a mental health defense for Freeman, but by law, he must give some specifics. Viola hired two psychologists to examine Freeman, but there were months-long delays in doing so.

Finally, Viola turned over reports May 31 from Dr. Louise Feretti and Dr. Luther Henderson. But he did not amend his motion for a mental health defense with details by June 7, as Murphy had ordered.

Deputy District Attorney Holly E. Sloma said Viola didn’t come across with an update until Wednesday, when he said he intended to offer a defense of not guilty by reason of “extreme emotional disturbance,” instead of “mental disease or defect.”

Sloma said Viola was claiming Freeman suffered from fetal alcohol syndrome. “It manifests itself in a myriad of ways,” Viola said.

Feretti mentioned five mental disorders in her report, and Henderson named one disorder and mentioned the possibility of a second.

Fetal alcohol syndrome, resulting from heavy drinking by a mother during pregnancy, has been linked with damage to the baby’s brain, leading to mental or behavioral problems including attention deficits, impulsive behavior and poor reasoning skills. According to the Mayo Clinic website, “Defects caused by fetal alcohol syndrome are irreversible.”

Viola “still hasn’t linked that malady to the defense of extreme emotional disturbance,” Sloma argued. “It’s not our task to figure out his defense … how [Freeman] was under extreme emotional disturbance back in August 2012, when he murdered Isabella Tennant.”

“The people are taking the notice requirement far beyond what is necessary,” Viola said.

email: tprohaska@buffnews.com

Fitness club owner charged with sexually drugging intern

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The owner of Alessi Fitness-Kids in Williamsville was arrested Thursday by the State Police Bureau of Criminal Investigation for allegedly drugging and sexually assaulting a college intern who was working for his business in April 2012.

Donald A. Alessi Jr., 44, of Orchard Park was arraigned on an arrest warrant in Clarence Town Court and released without bail.

Alessi turned himself in with his attorney after being notified he was charged with felony counts of second-degree assault and facilitating a sex offense with a controlled substance. He is accused of giving the intern some GHB (Gamma-Hydroxybutyrate), which state police spokesmen said is commonly used illegally as an intoxicant or as a date rape drug.

Anyone with information about this incident or similar incidents is asked to contact the State Police in Clarence at 759-6831.

Hoskins says prosecutorial misconduct persisted in animal-cruelty case

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Beth Lynne Hoskins says a private investigator she hired has evidence indicating that one of the prosecutors in her criminal trial on animal-cruelty charges and an SPCA investigator remain romantically involved, even after the judge in the case was told earlier this month that the liaison had ended in March.

The Aurora horsewoman is again insisting that the case should be thrown out of court because of what she terms prosecutorial misconduct by Assistant District Attorney Matthew A. Albert due to his relationship with Alex A. Cooke, an employee of the SPCA Serving Erie County, who has been very involved in the case but never testified in the trial.

Earlier this month, Aurora Town Justice Douglas W. Marky refused to dismiss the criminal case despite Hoskins’ accusations.

The Erie County District Attorney’s Office had clearly stated in court this month that the relationship between Cooke and Albert lasted from November to March.

The latest twist will force a delay in the verdict that Marky had planned to announce before July 4. The court must now first revisit Hoskins’ request to reargue the motion.

The issue resurfaced publicly Thursday – and in greater detail – when a thick stack of documents was filed in Aurora Town Court by Hoskins’ attorney, John P. Bartolomei, on the motion to renew her argument to have the criminal case dismissed.

Hoskins insists that the court was lied to about the status of Albert and Cooke’s relationship and believes it unfairly prejudiced the trial. The District Attorney’s Office insists otherwise and says it would never misrepresent something or lie to a court.

“I remain astonished and horrified that my daughter, my animals and my life have been held hostage at the mercy of people who clearly think they are above both the truth and the law,” Hoskins said in an interview. “The representations to the court were false by the District Attorney’s Office. … We feel that we’re being lied to.”

Hoskins said she believes that the court would have ruled differently and granted her original motion to have the charges dismissed against her had information about the continuing relationship been available. In court papers, Bartolomei says the relationship between Albert and Cooke is “still going strong.”

Meanwhile, Erie County District Attorney Frank A. Sedita III, who said he has not yet seen the new motion, said the real issue is not about Albert and Cooke.

“I can’t intelligently comment on a motion because I haven’t seen it yet, or read it,” Sedita said. “This case, in my mind, is not about the alleged love life of an assistant district attorney and a person who is not even a witness in the case. This case is about whether the defendant is guilty of animal cruelty.”

Prosecutor Nicholas Texido – who defended Albert in court in early June and argued against Hoskins’ first attempt to have the case dismissed – said in court at the time that the relationship between Albert and Cooke had ended in March, shortly after Bartolomei had contacted the District Attorney’s Office.

Thursday, Sedita said that there was no way Texido or his office would ever lie in court. “As far as we knew, their relationship was over at that time,” Sedita said. “I don’t know if whether subsequent to the last court date, Ms. Cooke and Albert may have rekindled their relationship. But make no mistake about it: I will find out.

“There was no intentional lying to the court. We would never do that. It’s an ethical violation,” Sedita said. “Mr. Texido’s representations to the court were truthful representations. He was not misleading the court.”

A court hearing on the renewed argument before Marky could come as early as next week. That means the announcement of his verdict will be delayed in the nonjury trial of Hoskins on 74 counts of misdemeanor animal cruelty. The criminal trial, which began in May 2012, stems from a 2010 raid by the SPCA of Hoskins’ Morgan horse farm on Emery Road.

Hoskins’ attorney Thursday released two photographs taken by Thurston Investigative Agency of Hamburg, showing Cooke, dressed in her SPCA uniform, and Albert getting into her car Wednesday morning, apparently outside of his residence on Richmond Avenue in Buffalo. Another photo shows the same car dropping Albert off about 14 minutes later in front of 25 Delaware Ave., where the District Attorney’s Office is located.

The surveillance began late Tuesday afternoon, with a spot check at the SPCA’s Ensminger Road site in the Town of Tonawanda, noting a black 2010 Hyundai Elantra car registered to Cooke. At about 8:47 p.m., the investigator followed Cooke, eventually tracking her car in the vicinity of a home on Richmond Avenue, where Albert was outside placing trash receptacles at the curb. Cooke, who was wearing casual attire, was observed entering the front door at about 9:14 p.m., according to the surveillance report.

Surveillance resumed at 4:55 a.m. Wednesday. According to the report, Cooke’s car had remained parked in the same spot. Just before 8 a.m. Wednesday, Cooke was seen leaving the Richmond Avenue home, wearing an SPCA uniform with the name “A. Cooke” on it. She placed some items in the car and then re-entered the home. A few minutes later, Albert emerged, wearing a suit and carrying what appeared to be a gym bag and a newspaper. The two then left in her vehicle, which briefly stopped in front of 25 Delaware Ave., where Albert left the car and entered the building, the report said.

Following a June 18 deposition that Bartolomei conducted with Cooke, Hoskins said her attorney felt it was worth delving deeper.

“She wasn’t simply an intern observing activity” for the SPCA, Hoskins said of Cooke. “Alex Cooke’s role has been much more central.”

Hoskins also said it was learned that Cooke apparently was receiving $500 per month from the SPCA – through court-ordered bond money paid from Hoskins – toward care of a few of Hoskins’ horses being fostered at Cooke’s parents’ farm in East Aurora. Initially, the defense had believed Cooke’s parents were being paid. “Once we found this, we thought maybe we should take another look, to see if the relationship had really ended,” Hoskins said Thursday.

The private detective’s surveillance “only took one time, and he got everything,” Hoskins said.

Albert could not be reached to comment. Cooke declined to comment when reached, as did the SPCA. Bartolomei did not return a call seeking comment.

email: krobinson@buffnews.com

East Side grandmother admits running cocaine ring with family members

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Bit by bit, Theresa Anderson’s family business is being dismantled.

Her daughter pleaded guilty earlier this year, and her granddaughter followed suit Wednesday.

And if all goes as prosecutors plan, four more members of the “Anderson Drug Trafficking Organization” – her husband, a son and two other daughters – may soon join the list of convicted drug dealers.

Anderson, the 56-year-old matriarch of the family, stood in a downtown courtroom Thursday and acknowledged her role in leading a cocaine ring that police say controlled several city blocks in the Broadway-Fillmore neighborhood.

Neighbors said the family’s drug dealing was one of the reasons why St. John Kanty School on Swinburne Street, a neighborhood institution, closed several years ago.

“Her business operated 24-7, we were told by confidential informants,” Assistant U.S. Attorney Melissa M. Marangola said of the around-the-clock nature of her drug enterprise.

Marangola detailed for the court Anderson’s leadership role in the conspiracy, including her purchases of homes used to sell the drugs and her purchases of the cocaine base she later admitted selling.

She pleaded guilty to distributing cocaine base and now faces between 14 and 17 years in prison.

“Drugs, they take hold of you,” said Robert Ross Fogg, Anderson’s defense lawyer. “They take your soul, and they take your mind.”

Fogg said his client decided to take a plea deal in an effort to make things easier for the other family members facing drug charges.

“For the sake of her children and her grandchildren, she took the plea,” he said.

The beginning of the end for Anderson and her family came in February 2012 when seven SWAT teams raided 15 drug houses owned by her and relatives.

Prosecutors said the drug ring thrived for more than a decade because she employed family members who would never turn her in. They also pointed to her reliance on paid lookouts strategically located in many of the houses her family owned.

Anderson is not the first family member to plead guilty. One of her daughters, Wymiko Anderson, took a plea deal in February, and her granddaughter, Tajia Anderson, pleaded guilty Wednesday.

Four more family members, according to court records, are scheduled for plea hearings in the next two weeks. They are Melvin Calhoun, her husband; Dion Anderson, a son; and Anquensha and Toshia Hodge, two other daughters.

Steven Butler, a boyfriend of one of the daughters, also took a plea deal this year. He faces up to 57 months in prison. Another boyfriend, Leo Mellerson, also is expected to take a plea deal.

In addition to facing jail time, the family may lose its property. All 15 homes have been seized by the government.

“Just as Theresa Anderson and her family targeted and held a city neighborhood hostage, our office, along with our law enforcement partners, will continue to target any individual or groups of individuals who would consider similar behavior,” U.S. Attorney William J. Hochul Jr. said. U.S. District Judge Richard J. Arcara will sentence Anderson Oct. 8.

email: pfairbanks@buffnews.com

Jury rules Nushawn Williams has condition making him likely to commit more sex crimes

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MAYVILLE – A Chautauqua County jury Friday determined that Nushawn Williams has a mental abnormality that makes him likely to commit more sexual crimes in the future.

Williams lost his bid to be released from civil confinement under the state’s Mental Hygiene Law.

Williams gained national notoriety in the 1990s after authorities said he infected at least 13 young Chautauqua County women, including one 13-year-old, with the virus that leads to AIDS.

The 12-person jury deliberated 70 minutes Friday afternoon. Jurors found clear and convincing evidence Williams has a mental abnormality that makes him unable to control his sexual impulses and thus makes him potentially dangerous.

“With this determination, Mr. Williams will get the treatment he needs, and the citizens of New York will be safer,” said Melissa Grace, spokeswoman for State Attorney General Eric Schneiderman.

Williams, wearing a sweater with a collar and khaki trousers, sat expressionless as nine men and three women on the jury were individually polled. He walked out of the courtroom carrying a tattered folder and did not say anything.

Williams, 36, has been behind bars since pleading guilty in 1999 to two counts of statutory rape and one count of reckless endangerment.

He completed a 12-year prison sentence for these crimes in 2010. But the State Attorney General’s Office, which has maintained Williams is a sexual predator likely to infect more people with the virus that causes AIDS, has used the Sex Offender Management and Treatment Act of 2007 to keep Williams imprisoned.

The state law allows sex offenders to be detained indefinitely following a criminal sentence if they are deemed to have a mental problem that makes them predisposed to offend again. More than 200 sex offenders in New York have been civilly confined since the law was enacted in 2007.

Williams’ civil confinement trial, which began June 12 in a Chautauqua County courtroom, was closed to the public until the reading of the jury’s verdict.

The case had the makings of a dramatic trial when attorney John R. Nuchereno made the stunning claim, during a pretrial hearing in May, that Williams never had HIV and thus was not capable of spreading the disease.

The Office of Medical and Scientific Justice, a nonprofit group based in Studio City, Calif., which assisted with Williams’ case, had his blood examined under an electron microscope, and it showed no evidence of the disease, according to a report by Gregory Hendricks, a University of Massachusetts Medical School cell biologist.

The state was not allowed to conduct a separate blood analysis, but Assistant Attorneys General Wendy R. Whiting and Joseph Muia Jr. called the electron microscope analysis junk science.

The state also relied on a state psychiatric examiner’s diagnosis that Williams, who now goes by the name Shyteek Johnson, has antisocial personality disorder and psychopathy, as well as a preoccupation with sex.

The examiner, Jacob Hadden, concluded that Williams was prone to further sexual contact with underage girls and was likely to engage in reckless sexual contact, including unprotected sex.

Nuchereno argued Hadden based her report on rumor and innuendo. His expert witness, Charles Ewing, concluded Williams has a personality disorder, a common diagnosis for prisoners, but one that has nothing to do with sex offenses.

State Supreme Court Justice John L. Michalski, who presided at the trial, will determine whether the state moves Williams to a secure treatment facility or puts him under strict and intensive supervision and treatment.

email: jtokasz@buffnews.com

Sanborn Family Mart robbed for second time this week

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For the second time this week, the Sanborn Family Mart was targeted by robbers in the wee hours of the morning.

A clerk called Niagara County Sheriff’s deputies about 3 a.m. Friday to report an armed robbery at the store at 2939 Saunders Settlement Road. A handgun was displayed as two men entered the store, deputies were told.

The robbers fled with an unspecified amount of cash and other merchandise, the clerk reported. A description of the robbers wasn’t provided by deputies.

A perimeter was established to search the area but deputies came up empty. Lewiston and State Police are helping.

The store also was robbed at knifepoint Wednesday morning.

Deputies located the getaway car on Lockport Road and a store clerk identified its driver as the robber.

Danny Merritt, 32, of Lockport, was charged with robbery and, after arraignment, sent to the county jail in lieu of $10,000 bail.

email: jhabuda@buffnews.com

Two portraits of Alessi emerge as supporters counter police claims

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Two portraits of Donald A. Alessi Jr. emerged Friday, one day after the well-known exercise guru was charged by state police with spiking an energy drink with a date-rape drug and giving it to a college intern working at his family’s Clarence fitness center.

Those close to him say Alessi, 44, of Orchard Park, would never endanger a young woman.

Alessi resigned from Alessi Personal Fitness on Transit Road – the business he and his brother started two decades ago – when the allegations first surfaced in April 2012 to avoid putting the business at risk.

“He is an incredibly talented young man who would never do something like this. There would be no reason for him to compromise a young lady,” a spokesman for the business said.

The other and more troubling view includes a date-rape drug and criminal charges.

State police said solid evidence supports felony charges of second-degree assault and facilitating a sex offense with a controlled substance.

“We took our time and did a very thorough investigation, and once we had the sufficient evidence to make the arrest, we did so,” said Lt. Kurt Schmitt of the State Police Bureau of Criminal Investigation.

The evidence includes laboratory results that show the woman was given a disabling drug, authorities said. Alessi is accused of adding GHB, short for gamma hydroxybutyric acid, into the energy drink to act as “an intoxicant or as a date rape drug,” according to the charges.

Buffalo defense attorney Paul J. Cambria Jr., who is representing Alessi, said there are no allegations his client carried out any sexual activity against the woman.

“There is no claim of touching inappropriate areas or performing any lewd act that I am aware of. The claim is simply that an energy drink was consumed and the allegation is that there is something in it that should not have been,” Cambria said. “Mr. Alessi vehemently denies that.”

State police said giving another person a drug without his or her consent is a form of assault.

Schmitt said the charge of facilitating a sex offense with a controlled substance would not have been lodged if investigators had not found “a sexual component” in the crime.

State police found Alessi with GHB during a traffic stop last year.

On the night of April 26, 2012, a state trooper from the Boston Station stopped a vehicle driven by Alessi on Southwestern Boulevard in Orchard Park after observing an unsafe lane change. Further investigation by the trooper and an Orchard Park police officer determined Alessi appeared to be allegedly driving under the influence of drugs.

Police then found he had GHB and charged him with seventh-degree criminal possession of a controlled substance and driving while ability impaired. The outcome of those charges could not be determined late Friday.

At Alessi Personal Fitness, on the 6200 block of Transit Road, the facility’s spokesman confirmed Alessi had some minor charges involving a traffic incident but said he has never been arrested for doing anything against other individuals.

Customers and others have reached out to the family after learning of the charges in media reports, the spokesman for the business said.

“Our phone has been ringing off the hook all day. People have been very supportive. It’s gratifying to know people care,” he said.

Alessi, released on his own recognizance, is scheduled to return to Clarence Town Court on Aug. 1.

email: lmichel@buffnews.com

Man accused of violently shaking his baby son pleads not guilty

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LOCKPORT – A Lockport man whose 3-month-old son was shaken and left permanently brain-damaged, including blindness in at least one eye, was arraigned Friday on an indictment that could land him behind bars for as long as 25 years.

Kenneth S. Lathrop Jr., 26, of Ruhlman Road, pleaded not guilty to first-degree assault and two counts of reckless assault on a child.

Deputy District Attorney Holly E. Sloma said Lathrop admitted in a recorded police interview that he shook the victim, Nathan Lathrop, on Jan. 8.

“This defendant, and we have it in his own words on audio, admits to shaking his 3-month-old son,” Sloma told State Supreme Court Justice Richard C. Kloch Sr. “The prognosis for this little boy is dire. He is now permanently blind in at least one eye and has suffered massive global brain mass loss. He will never lead a normal life, according to all the experts.”

Since the shaken-baby incident, Lathrop also was arrested in the Genesee County Town of Oakfield on a charge of second-degree aggravated unlicensed operation. That played a role in Kloch’s decision to increase Lathrop’s bail from $5,000 to $20,000 and have him jailed in the meantime.

“Aggravated unlicensed operation indicates to me a disregard for the legal process,” Kloch said. The charge is filed against drivers whose licenses have already been suspended or revoked.

email: tprohaska@buffnews.com

Grand jury indicts Buffalo man accused of burglarizing Poloncarz’s home.

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An Erie County grand jury has indicted a Buffalo man accused of burglarizing the Delaware Avenue home of County Executive Mark C. Poloncarz, according to the Erie County District Attorney’s Office.

Avello Pena, 22, of Richmond Avenue, faces second-degree burglary and petit larceny charges for the early morning June 17 break-in of Poloncarz’ home.

Pena is accused of breaking into Poloncarz’s parked vehicle and taking money and a baseball bat. Then he allegedly entered Poloncarz’s residence, armed with the bat, according to the District Attorney’s Office.

Police arrested Pena a short time later after a foot chase and struggle. If convicted, Pena could face a prison term of 7 to 15 years if sentenced as a second violent felony offender. His arraignment is scheduled for July 8.

20-year-old Buffalo man convicted of raping 15-year-old girl

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An Erie County jury has convicted a 20-year-old Buffalo man of first-degree rape.

Rudell Jemes, 20, of Berkshire Street, was convicted of raping a 15-year-old girl who had been locked inside the basement of his home on March 28, 2012, the Erie County District Attorney’s Office announced on Friday.

“A child rapist has been brought to justice,” District Attorney Frank A. Sedita III said.

Jemes pinned the victim against a clothes dryer and assaulted her as she screamed for him to stop, according to a release from Sedita’s office. Jemes grabbed the victim by the hair, pulled her up the stairs, hit her in the face and threw her out the front door, according to the release.

Genetic evidence collected during the victim’s treatment at Women and Children’s Hospital matched Jemes’ DNA profile, according to the District Attorney’s Office.

When detectives questioned Jemes, he laughed as he denied having sexual contact with the victim, Sedita said in a statement.

Jemes faces a prison sentence of up to 25 years when sentenced on Aug. 9 by Erie County Judge Kenneth Case.
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