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Amherst boy, 11, struck by car

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An 11-year-old Amherst boy rode his bike into oncoming traffic Friday morning and was struck by a car on Burroughs Drive, Amherst police reported.

The young bicyclist, whose name was not released, was taken to Women & Children’s Hospital, where he was treated for left leg fractures, along with scrapes and bruises, authorities said.

At around 11:20 a.m., the boy was riding his bike on a sidewalk when he went into the road in front of a northbound car driven by Marie Krawczyk, 51, of Amherst, police said. A second vehicle travelling south on Burroughs saw Krawczyk’s car strike the bicyclist and stopped in time to avoid hitting him as well.

The boy’s parents were notified and responded to the hospital, police said.

No charges have been filed.

Postal carrier admits stealing $400,000 from elderly customer

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The man lived in a cluttered, battered Buffalo home and was in need of help when Peter Saraceno first met him years ago while delivering the mail.

So Saraceno befriended the man, a fellow veteran. He helped him move into a better house, he ran errands for him, he washed his clothes.

But Saraceno also embezzled hundreds of thousands of dollars from the man’s life savings to finance a gambling habit, according to the Erie County District Attorney’s Office.

Saraceno, 63, a retired postal carrier from West Seneca, is accused of stealing roughly $400,000 from a 78-year-old who uses a wheelchair over the last seven years, said Erie County District Attorney Frank A. Sedita III.

Saraceno pleaded guilty to second-degree grand larceny Friday before Erie County Judge Michael D’Amico and faces a maximum of 15 years behind bars when sentenced Sept. 27.

The relationship between the mail carrier and his customer goes back at least 20 years to when the man was a stop on Saraceno’s route in the Bailey-Delavan neighborhood, Sedita said.

“He delivers the mail and starts to strike up a relationship with him,” Sedita said Friday. “The victim becomes more and more dependent on this guy and starts to trust him.”

The friendship grew to the point where Saraceno eventually became a joint account holder on one of the victim’s bank accounts, said Assistant District Attorney Candace K. Vogel, who prosecutes financial elder abuse.

Saraceno made ATM withdrawals, wrote checks to himself and made wire transfers over a period between 2006 and February of this year, the prosecutors said.

He admitted to using the money to finance his casino gambling, prosecutors added.

In fact, statements made by Saraceno to authorities indicate he felt he was owed for all the help he gave the man over the years.

“It’s financial rape,” Sedita said, “and it’s becoming more and more prevalent.”

As more people live longer and the region’s population ages, the elderly – and their life savings – are becoming more of a target, Sedita said.

He cited several cases in the past year alone where people have been prosecuted for stealing hundreds of thousands of dollars from unsuspecting elderly victims.

“The number of cases that have been brought to our offices has swelled and the variety of crimes against the elderly has increased,” Vogel said.

“How many of our senior citizens do not have immediate family here locally and they’re willing to accept a friendly hand or someone who sounds like a friend?” Vogel said.

The District Attorney’s Office was eventually tipped off about the Saraceno case when the victim wrote out a $31 check that bounced.

“He knows what he did toward the end was not right, but I think he’s being cast in a bad light,” said Samuel P. Davis, Saraceno’s attorney. “Mr. Saraceno cared for this gentleman for well over two decades.”

Saraceno was essentially the man’s primary caregiver, and when their relationship began, the mail carrier had no idea the man had any money, considering his living conditions, Davis said.

Saraceno helped the man move to a better neighborhood, he visited him, he ran his errands and eventually got power of attorney to help him take care of his personal affairs while in a Batavia nursing home, Davis said.

Saraceno, though, had troubles. His wife got sick, he was in debt, he suffered from post-traumatic stress disorder and started gambling to relieve his depression, Davis said.

“I’m not justifying what he did, but I think his financial burdens got the better of him,” Davis said. “This is not some horrible person. The situation got the best of him and when things got too tough, he may have abused that relationship.”

email: jrey@buffnews.com

One arrest and 72 issued appearance tickets at Brad Paisley concert

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One person was arrested and 72 were issued appearance tickets Friday night at the Brad Paisley concert at the Darien Lake Performing Arts Center, the Genesee County Sheriff’s Office said.

Sixty-six of the tickets were for underage drinking, officials said.

The sole arrest happened after an Ontario man allegedly pushed a security guard, deputies said. He was charged with disorderly conduct.

Other offenses included harassment, criminal trespass, possession of another person’s driver’s license and possession of a fictitious driver’s license.

East Amherst man and son charged with attempted home break-in

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An East Amherst man and his son were charged with burglary overnight after an off-duty police officer saw them trying to break into a house on Transit Road, Amherst police said.

Michael Codelia Sr,, 46, of Berwick Lane, and his 16-year-old son were arrested after Officer Corey Brown, who was off duty, noticed a pickup truck backed into a Transit Road driveway near Muegel Road, according to officials.

Brown saw the 16-year-old trying to force open a door. The teen and his father left the scene to park at a gas station down the street, police said.

They returned, authorities said, while Brown waited for on-duty officers to arrive. Codelia Sr. then fled in his truck and his son fled on foot, while state police and Erie County Sheriff’s deputies and helicopters helped Amherst police search for the suspects, officials said.

They were found two hours later, and stolen property from the burglary was recovered, police said.

Woman, 60, dies after motorcycle crashes into Hamburg home

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A 60-year-old woman died after her she lost control of her three-wheeled motorcycle, which suddenly accelerated and crashed into a home in the Village of Hamburg Friday afternoon, village police said.

The woman, identified only as not being from the Buffalo area, was traveling with a group of motorcyclists and was turning onto Evans Street from Pearce Avenue when she crashed into the house and was ejected, authorities said. The woman, who suffered head and neck injuries, died about 6:30 p.m. in Erie County Medical Center, police said.

Heavy-metal caper is not music to Falls electrical business

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NIAGARA FALLS – A city man was arrested after being spotted pushing 200 pounds of “industrial-sized metal pieces” in a shopping cart Saturday morning, police said.

William Dussett, 31, of Ninth Street is charged with fourth-degree criminal possession of stolen property. Dussett, police said, was heading to a metal-recycling facility when stopped on Hyde Park Boulevard near Michal Court just before 10 a.m.

Police said he told them he picked up the scrap metal in various alleyways. But while he was being questioned, police said, a vehicle pulled up and the driver told officers the metal was stolen from MGM Electrical on Fairfield Avenue. In all, about 21 pieces of piping, foundation metal and pistons were recovered, with a value of $1,500.

Man charged with DWI accused of violating Leandra’s Law

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NIAGARA FALLS – A Wheatfield man is accused of violating Leandra’s Law after he was charged late Friday with driving drunk with three young children in his vehicle, police said.

Sean M. Robertson, 42, of Osprey Lane, was arrested at 11:05 p.m. after striking a parked car in the 8100 block of Lindbergh Avenue, police said. The three children, ages 10, 8 and 3, escaped injury, police said.

Robertson was charged with aggravated driving while intoxicated, third-degree aggravated unlicensed operation and three counts of endangering the welfare of a child.

Sheriff’s deputies arrest eight in spate of drunken driving stops

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From Newstead to Springville, Erie County sheriff’s deputies arrested eight people overnight on drunken driving charges, bringing the department’s total to 188 this year, authorities said.

The most serious arrests involved:

Mark T. Jones, of Buffalo, who was taken into custody about 7:30 p.m. Friday, after deputies responded to a call reporting a vehicle traveling recklessly on Main Road in Akron, according to deputies.

He was charged with felony DWI because of a prior conviction and refused to submit to a sobriety test, officials said.

Jones and a passenger, Nicholas J. Church, 27, of Rocky Point, were also charged with possession of heroin and marijuana, deputies said.

At about 1 a.m. Saturday, deputies investigated a two-car crash at Route 219 and Route 39 in Springville, and arrested Carla A. Infantino, 30, of Niagara Falls, on charges of DWI and failure to yield at a stop sign. A breath test showed Infantino’s blood alcohol level was 0.12, authorities said.

The occupant of the other vehicle involved in the Springville crash did not appear to have life-threatening injuries and was taken to Bertrand Chaffee Hospital, according to deputies.

Also at about 1 a.m., Philip D. Burke, 26, of Buffalo, was arrested in Alden after he was stopped for driving through a stoplight on Broadway, police said. He was charged with felony aggravated unlicensed operation and with felony DWI because of a previous DWI conviction, deputies said. Burke refused to submit to a breath test, according to officials.

At about 2:30 a.m., deputies arrested Kirk J. Zinermon, 44, of Tonawanda, and charged him with DWI, trespassing, unlicensed operation, failure to yield to an emergency vehicle and failure to take a breath-screening test after he was stopped in Ellicott Creek Park in Tonawanda after hours, officials said.

Other arrests were made in Marilla and Clarence, including one involving an 18-year-old driver.

email: jhammill@buffnews.com

Buffalo shooting suspect, 14, reportedly brought gun to school

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The 14-year-old boy accused of killing a 16-year-old in a fight last weekend had showed off a handgun on a school bus and brought it into the school during the spring, a Buffalo School Board member and a police official told The Buffalo News.

School authorities tried to suspend the boy, the police source said, but when his parents objected at a hearing and said he did not have access to a handgun, a school administrator allowed him to continue at the school.

Police were not notified of the gun incident in April involving Myles D. Taylor III until after the shooting death of Kelmyne Jones Jr. a week ago Saturday, the police source said.

The school district, however, said that a thorough investigation was completed, but no gun was discovered and police were, in fact, notified of the situation.

But that wasn’t the understanding of one of Buffalo’s School Board members.

“He brought the gun on the bus and was showing it to other students and then took it into school,” School Board member Carl Paladino said of Taylor. “This report is on a school district computer but only certain people had access to it.”

Paladino said he received the information about Taylor from a school district employee but would not identify the individual.

A police official confirmed that homicide investigators also have been told that Taylor displayed a gun on the bus and brought it into school. Investigators have received three separate reports of Taylor bringing the gun into the school, the police source said. The school is believed to be Waterfront Elementary School, the source added.

“You’d think that the school would have notified us,” the police official said. “There was a suspension hearing, and the parents said their son did not have access to a gun. Police are now looking into the allegation.”

When contacted by The Buffalo News on Saturday, the district released a statement with this account of what happened on April 10:

A teacher at Waterfront overheard students talking about a gun on a bus. Administrators and counselors conducted a thorough investigation and alerted police.

“Student reports varied by date as to when they allegedly saw the gun and multiple students interviewed reported no firearm,” the district statement read.

School officials searched the student, his locker, and the lockers of 10 other students at Waterfront. A bus video also was checked, but there was no evidence of a gun, the district said.

“To the fullest extent of his abilities and based on the allegations, the school principal pursued a formal district hearing in which all evidence was presented,” the statement from the district said.

“Based on the outcome, with no evidence whatsoever of a weapon, the student was allowed to return to school in accordance with education law.”

Efforts to reach the suspect’s family members have been unsuccessful.

Paladino said that he was told the district decided not to take further action because it lacked evidence.

“This is a perfect example of violence in the schools and how the policy in the district is to handle it without calling in police,” Paladino said.

If the district had called in the proper authorities, “this homicide might have not happened,” Paladino said.

“This is illustrative of what happens when the school district is covering up violence and not sending it through the system as it should have done. If the police were allowed to investigate, they might have taken the gun away from the kid, and he would have been placed in the juvenile justice system. He was a threat to other students.”

Taylor, who was arrested late Wednesday, was charged as an adult with second-degree murder in the shooting death during a street fight on Northland Avenue on July 6.

Taylor is accused of getting a handgun hidden beneath a bush on the 200 block of Northland and shooting Jones, who was fighting another youth.

Police have not said whether a handgun was recovered.

email: lmichel@buffnews.com

Former music teacher says police pressure led to false confession

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LOCKPORT – A former Lutheran school music teacher, whose conviction for sex crimes was overturned by the State Court of Appeals, testified last week that he falsely confessed under police pressure.

Michael J. Solomon took the witness stand in a Niagara County Court pretrial hearing in which defense attorney Glenn Pincus is attempting to invalidate the confession.

Solomon, now 48, was convicted in August 2005 on 23 counts of having sex with a girl younger than 11 between August 1999 and March 2004, and of using her in pornographic photos.

Solomon directed the fourth- through eighth-grade band at St. John and Holy Ghost Lutheran schools in Wheatfield and at night taught trumpet, trombone, saxophone, clarinet and drums at Matt’s Music in North Tonawanda. Police said his alleged victim was not one of his students.

He was sentenced to 32 years in prison, but last October, the Court of Appeals ordered a new trial on the grounds that his trial attorney, Assistant Public Defender Michele G. Bergevin, had a conflict of interest because she was representing North Tonawanda Detective Larry Kuebler, one of the investigating officers, in a private legal matter.

Even though the court acknowledged that Bergevin did a good job cross-examining Kuebler during the trial, such a conflict produced an automatic reversal of the conviction.

Besides discussion of the interview between Solomon and Detective Karen Smith, the hearing also featured a recording of two phone calls that the alleged victim made to Solomon on consecutive days in June 2004, under police guidance.

The girl, who is now 22, was attempting to obtain incriminating statements from Solomon. On the witness stand, Solomon said the tape reflects what the caller heard but not what he heard, because he was having poor cellphone reception.

He pointed to the pauses in his side of the conversation and the occasional repetition of what the girl was saying as proof of that.

But most of the hearing before County Judge Sara Sheldon Farkas was concerned with a 40-minute interrogation of Solomon by Smith, after a search warrant was brought to the suspect’s home by six or seven officers and a police dog.

“They basically circled me like a wagon train from a Western movie,” Solomon said.

Once he was taken to Police Headquarters, Solomon quoted Smith as saying, “We can make this easy. Just say you did this. It’ll be better for (the girl).”

“I said, ‘This is ridiculous. I did not do this,’ ” Solomon testified.

But he said Smith wore him down, and he said he was worried about his children, one of them autistic, whom he had left at home with no indication of when he might return.

“I wanted to get home to my kids,” Solomon told Farkas. So he told Smith, “If you say I did it once, I did it once. If you say I did it 100 times, I did it 100 times.”

Smith then left the room and came back with an attorney Solomon didn’t know, who told him not to sign anything. He didn’t, but he was arrested anyway.

“I would have said anything to get out of that room. They were making awful allegations,” Solomon said.

Assistant District Attorney Robert A. Zucco established that Solomon never said he wanted to leave, never asked for a lawyer and never asked for the questioning to stop.

“I was told I had the right to remain silent, but that’s not the impression I got,” Solomon told Zucco.

Solomon said he told Smith he might have molested the girl “once when I was very, very drunk.”

Solomon said Smith told him that police had a dress with DNA on it. “I said, ‘Great, that’ll clear me.’ It turned out that was fictitious,” Solomon testified.

As for the taped phone calls, Zucco noted that Solomon is never heard asking the girl to repeat anything.

The tape has Solomon telling the girl several times that he didn’t want to talk about these matters over the phone. Zucco accused Solomon of being tight-lipped because he suspected the call might be recorded; Solomon denied that.

The hearing was adjourned until late August, when Pincus may call another witness to the stand.

email: tprohaska@buffnews.com

Four men robbed at gunpoint

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Four men were robbed at gunpoint Saturday night near Orleans Street and Shirley Avenue, police reported Sunday.

The victims were in a car, authorities said, when a man yelled “Stop!” and approached the vehicle on the passenger’s side.

The suspect pointed a silver revolver at the victims and stole house keys, an iPhone, $120 in cash and other items, according to police.

The victims identified a suspect, officials said.

Three hurt in Cheektowaga accident

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Three people were taken to Women and Children’s Hospital after they were involved in a car accident Sunday on Walden Avenue near Harlem Road, Cheektowaga Police said.

The accident occurred around 3:30 p.m., according to officials. Police wouldn’t disclose the ages or conditions of the patients, but witnesses reported that they were children and that one of them was extricated from the car with “serious” injuries.

Walden Avenue’s eastbound lanes were closed, and there was a lane reduction on the westbound side while police cleared the accident scene, police said.

Salamanca woman arrested for DWI after hitting pole

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Erie County sheriff’s deputies charged a Salamanca woman with driving while intoxicated and other charges early Sunday following a one-car accident on the Cattaraugus Indian Reservation.

Deputy Ryan Rogers arrested Joni J. Jamison, 53, and charged her with aggravated driving while intoxicated, failure to keep right and failure to maintain the road.

According to the Sheriff’s Office, Jamison drove off the road on Route 438 and struck a utility pole, knocking down electrical wires. A breath test revealed her blood-alcohol content to be .18 percent, more than twice the legal limit, deputies said.

She was processed at the North Collins station and released on appearance tickets for North Collins Court. Rogers was assisted in the investigation by Deputy George Avery.

Somerset motorcycle crash with deer hospitalizes two

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Two people thrown from a motorcycle Sunday afternoon after striking a deer in the Town of Somerset were taken to a local hospital, Niagara County sheriff’s deputies said.

Deputies did not identify the two victims, but said they were thrown from the motorcycle at 7830 Lake Road, after hitting a deer.

The victims were talking and breathing and were transported to a hospital that was not identified by deputies.

Falls house fires damage two homes

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Three adults required housing assistance from the American Red Cross Sunday after fire ripped through the Niagara Falls home they were living in at 1967 Falls St.

Niagara Falls firefighters responded to a call at 1:22 a.m. Sunday for the two-and-a-half-story home that sustained $15,000 in damage - $10,000 to the home and $5,000 to its contents, fire officials said.

The cause of the blaze, which began in a second floor stairwell, is under investigation. No injuries were reported.

The Red Cross was notified to help and a building inspector had been dispatched to the home. Fire officials identified the home’s owner as George Sawyer, though he was not one of the three living there when the fire broke out. Fire officials brought the fire under control within an hour.

Falls firefighters also are investigating the cause of an early-morning fire at a vacant home at 1150-and-a-half Whitney Ave.

The 2:50 a.m. fire started on the second floor and caused $5,000 damage, firefighters said. The home is owned by the City of Niagara Falls. No injuries were reported.

Tennessee man pleads guilty to identity theft

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A Tennessee man who was found with numerous fraudulent credit cards has pleaded guilty to aggravated identity theft before U.S. District Judge Richard J. Arcara, U.S. Attorney William J. Hochul Jr. announced.

Omoruyi Ogbeide, of Knoxville, faces a mandatory penalty of two years in prison, a fine of $250,000, or both, when he appears for sentencing Nov. 20.

Prosecutors said the fake credit cards were discovered when Amherst police arrested Ogbeide in May 2012. Police said they searched his hotel room and found credit card-making equipment, along with a computer containing stolen personal information that was used to produce the phony cards.

Buffalo firefighters called out twice to fight fires at same Amherst Street house

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Buffalo firefighters returned Monday morning to the scene of a late Sunday night fire in the city’s Black Rock area, leading fire officials to request emergency demolition of the Amherst Street building that housed two apartments.

The first fire call came at 10:58 p.m. Sunday, when firefighters responded to 81 Amherst St., about three blocks east of Niagara Street. Fire officials listed $150,000 damage to the 2½-story double-occupied house.

At 5:30 a.m. Monday, firefighters were called back to the scene to battle a fire that left an additional $50,000 damage. Officials weren’t sure whether this was a new fire or a rekindling of the original blaze.

Witnesses reported that firefighters battled to keep flames from spreading to a church next door, apparently St. John’s United Church of Christ, at 85 Amherst St.

Lockport man takes plea deal in attack on 7-year-old girl

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LOCKPORT – David L. Alfonso accepted a plea offer today in connection with a Dec. 31 attack on his girlfriend’s 7-year-old daughter, rather than go to trial in two weeks on an attempted murder charge.

Alfonso, 29, of Lockport, pleaded guilty to a reduced charge of attempted first-degree assault, and did so without insisting on a sentencing commitment from Niagara County Judge Sara Sheldon Farkas.

Farkas could give Alfonso anything between five and 15 years in prison when he returns to court Sept. 30.

If he had been convicted of attempted murder, Alfonso could have been sentenced to as long as 25 years behind bars.

He admitted that he tried to strangle the girl in a house on Monroe Street in Lockport, showing “a depraved indifference to human life” and creating “a grave risk of death,” as Farkas said when she read the charge aloud.

Police said the girl’s mother stopped the attack by stabbing Alfonso in the back with a knife. She was not charged.

The mother was in court but left without comment. Defense attorney David C. Douglas, who said after a court appearance Thursday that Alfonso wanted a 10-year sentencing cap, also declined to be interviewed. He had said he didn’t know whether Alfonso would plead guilty without a sentencing promise from Farkas.

“The court has discussed sentencing parameters and still has not given him any commitment as to what the sentence will be,” Deputy District Attorney Holly E. Sloma said.

email: tprohaska@buffnews.com

Woman killed as car, pickup collide in Depew

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A woman died after her car crossed over the center line on Broadway in Depew and sideswiped a pickup truck on the other side of the street at about 8:30 a.m. today, Depew police said.

Police identified the victim as Linda K. Ward, 31.

The driver of the pickup, Brian D. Deberardinis, 22, was taken to Erie County Medical Center for treatment of minor injuries and was discharged.

The accident occurred in front of Twin Village Recycling, 4153 Broadway. Police did not release the addresses of the drivers.

Investigators said it was unknown why Ward’s car crossed the center line, and the investigation is continuing.

Coast Guard rescues 7 from Bird Island Reef

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Seven people who struck the Niagara River’s Bird Island Reef in a boat were rescued by the Coast Guard Tuesday evening, officials said.

Their boat had been taking on water very quickly, authorities reported. They were taken ashore by the Coast Guard, and the boat was pumped out and separately towed to the Erie Basin Marina, the Coast Guard said.

There were no injuries, officials said.
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