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Former postmaster admits thefts

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An Eden man pleaded guilty in federal court Thursday to stealing tens of thousands of dollars from the U.S. Postal Service.

Michael Kozina, the former postmaster at the Lawtons post office, pleaded guilty before U.S. Magistrate Judge Leslie G. Foschio to misappropriation of postal funds by a postal service employee, U.S. Attorney William J. Hochul Jr. said.

Kozina, 57, accepted cash payments for money order purchases from more than a dozen customers while serving as postmaster between April of 2005 and July of 2012, according to Assistant U.S. Attorney Russell T. Ippolito Jr.

Instead of depositing that cash, Kozina kept a portion of the money – totaling $13,760 – and falsified records to cover his tracks, prosecutors said.

Kozina also stole $13,585 in post office box rental payments between 2009 and July of last year.

“No person is above the law,” Hochul said in a prepared statement. “This office will not permit a representative or employee of any level of government to misuse their position for personal gain.”

Kozina faces a maximum of 10 years in prison and a fine of $250,000 when he is sentenced before Chief U.S. District Court Judge William M. Skretny.

Lockport police seek man who may need help

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LOCKPORT – City police were looking for a man whom they believe is in need of medical or psychiatric help, after a second pool of blood and suicide note were found Thursday morning near the Erie Canal.

Detective Capt. Richard L. Podgers said workers at the city parking ramp demolition site found more blood and a notebook about half a block from where hikers made a similar discovery Tuesday night. The later find caused police to search along the canal bank with a bloodhound and to launch the police boat to drag the canal for a body, but nothing was found.

Podgers said the handwriting in the Thursday note was compared to that in the Tuesday night note. “It appears it was the same,” he said. Other evidence has given police the name of the man, whom they are trying to locate.

“He’s definitely bled a lot in the last couple of days,” said Podgers, who added the man probably wouldn’t face charges.

Flordia man arrested on weapons charge at Buffalo-Niagara International Airport

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A Florida man carrying a loaded handgun at the Buffalo-Niagara International Airport was stopped by a TSA officer Thursday morning, marking the third firearms incident at the airport this year.



The officer spotted the handgun in the man’s-carry-on bag at a checkpoint X-ray machine, Transportation Security Administration officials said. The Niagara Frontier Transportation Authority was contacted and arrested the Tampa-bound man on a state weapons charge.



Firearms are not permitted in carry-on bags by the TSA. Properly packed and unloaded firearms are allowed in checked bags, if cleared by the airline.

Fredonia truck driver dies in multi-vehicle accident

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FREDONIA – A Fredonia man died after he lost control of the tractor-trailer he was driving on Thursday afternoon and struck several vehicles, police said.

Leland Johnson was traveling eastbound on Route 20 at the intersection of Route 60 in the Town of Pomfret at 2:04 p.m. when he lost consciousness and drifted into oncoming traffic, striking a 2002 Chevrolet Trail Blazer driven by Alicea Maysonet.

In an attempt to regain control of the tractor trailer, passenger Janice Johnson, tried to steer it off the south shoulder. The trailer then struck three vehicles parked at Guaranti Used Cars, continuing through the lot before entering a field and striking a tree.

Johnson was pronounced dead at Brooks Memorial Hospital in Dunkirk.

Trayvon’s father spoke of his son in visit to Buffalo

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Grown men had tears in their eyes after listening to Tracy Martin talk about his son and the outcome of George Zimmerman’s murder trial, according to those who heard him when Martin was in Buffalo this week to attend a Masonic convention.

The father of slain teen Trayvon Martin was honored with a proclamation, and he talked about his son during an emotional gathering as part of the International Free and Accepted Modern Masons and Order of the Eastern Star convention in the Hyatt Regency Buffalo.

Martin had arrived in Buffalo after a jury Saturday night acquitted Zimmerman of second-degree murder and manslaughter. He had been charged in the shooting death of the unarmed teenager whom he began following because he considered the youth suspicious.

Martin described an entirely different young man who would have gone on to do great things, according to those who heard him. He left Buffalo on Wednesday night for New York City to do a round of network television interview programs Thursday in which he similarly said he wished the jury “really knew Trayvon for who he was.”

He and Trayvon’s mother are waiting to see whether the U.S. Department of Justice charges Zimmerman with violating Trayvon’s civil rights, as the family contemplates filing a civil lawsuit.

Victim shot on Northumberland Avenue

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Buffalo police responded Thursday evening to a shooting on Northumberland Avenue that left a victim with a gunshot wound to the chest, authorities said.

Much of Northumberland Avenue, which runs between East Ferry and Scajaquada streets, was cordoned off by police crime-scene tape.

No other information was immediately available.

17-year-old seriously wounded on Northumberland

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A 17-year-old male was seriously wounded on Northumberland Avenue Thursday night. The teen, who was shot in the chest, is listed in serious condition at Erie County Medical Center Friday morning, police said.

Police responded to Northumberland just after 8 p.m. Thursday, officials said.

Much of the street, which runs between East Ferry and Scajaquada streets, was cordoned off by police crime scene tape.

Police are continuing to investigate, city spokesman Michael J. DeGeorge said Friday morning.

Driver injured in one-vehicle crash in Evans

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A driver was injured Friday morning when the vehicle went off Southwestern Boulevard near Eden Evans Center Road and struck a guardrail, police said.

The injured driver was taken by Mercy Flight to Erie County Medical Center following the crash about 7:30 a.m., officials said.

The Evans Police Department declined to release the driver’s name.

Boat passengers ejected in Small Boat Harbor crash

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A boat crashed into the breakwall at the Small Boat Harbor off of Fuhrmann Boulevard and some passengers were ejected into the water, one of them up against the breakwall with apparent injuries, Buffalo police said Friday afternoon.

The Coast Guard and Erie County Sheriff’s Office were also responding to the scene, authorities said.

No other information was immediately available.

Oswego woman charged with felony DWI in Wheatfield

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An Oswego woman on probation for a prior driving while intoxicated conviction was caught driving drunk in the Town of Wheatfield Friday, State Police reported.

Samanatha Wyman, 34, was charged with felony DWI, first-degree aggravated unlicensed operation of a motor vehicle, and operating a vehicle without the interlock device past DWI offenders are required to use, among other vehicle and traffic violations. Authorities said Wyman had been previously arrested for DWI within 10 years.

State troopers from Niagara County responding to a reckless vehicle 911 call from Amherst Police found Wyman in a store parking lot on Ward Road. Wyman smelled strongly of alcohol, and a breathalyzer test revealed that her blood alcohol content was at 0.15 percent, or nearly twice the legal limit.

Police seek help in finding man who robbed blind man

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Buffalo police are asking for the public’s help in catching a man who allegedly pushed a blind man from behind and stole items out of his pockets, authorities said Friday.

The incident occurred June 26 at the Stuyvesant Apartments, on Elmwood Avenue between North and Summer streets, officials said.

The alleged robber took a bank card and Medicare card from the man, according to police.

Anyone with information is asked to call or text the police’s confidential tip line at 847-2255 or email the department at bpdny.org.

Man sought in Garner Avenue arson

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A Buffalo man who allegedly drove by a Garner Avenue residence and threatened to “shoot everyone” late Thursday night returned early Friday morning, poured gasoline along the sides of the house and caused a fire, police said.

The victim, who has an active order of protection against the man, told police that the man told her she was going to “watch someone die right here,” authorities said.

The Buffalo Fire Department responded to the blaze, officials said.

The suspect has not been arrested, according to a city court official.

Niagara County park reports $15,000 damage in copper wire theft

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WHEATFIELD – Someone cut four 75-foot copper electrical lines to the maintenance building at Oppenheim Park on Niagara Falls Boulevard about 3:05 a.m. Friday.

Edward McDonald, a groundskeeper for the Niagara County Parks Department, told Sheriff’s Deputy Scott Milleville that the wires were connected to a power box on the south side of the building. After being cut, they were pulled through a conduit and removed from the side of the building.

The loss was estimated at $5,000 for the wires and $10,000 damage to the electrical box. Milleville reported that he informed the area’s major scrapyards of the incident, in case any of that type of wire is brought in for sale.

Woman charged with disorderly conduct in jail parking lot

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LOCKPORT – A Town of Lockport woman was charged with disorderly conduct in the parking lot of the Niagara County Jail Friday morning.

Deputy Raymond F. Tracy Jr. said he saw a vehicle driven by Kelly A. Wilson, 26, of Ruhlmann Road, enter the lot and park in an area marked as restricted. When he pointed this out to Wilson as she was preparing to remove her baby from the auto, Wilson angrily said Tracy was making her late for a visit to an inmate.

Tracy told Wilson to park in a visitor space and checked her driver’s license. As he gave it back, the woman allegedly started using obscene language, so Tracy told her to give back the license and get back into her car, because she was going to be arrested and receive a parking ticket. Wilson received an appearance ticket for the violations.

Pendleton man catches juvenile burglar in Lockport

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LOCKPORT – A juvenile was captured by a citizen Thursday night in the Town of Lockport after the boy allegedly stole his bicycle, along with a dirt bike from a Beattie Avenue woman’s garage.

William J. Nimetz, 21, of Pendleton, chased three males whom he believed were responsible for stealing his bicycle and the Kawasaki dirt bike sometime between 7:30 and 10:45 p.m. Nimetz said he was able to catch one of the three males on O’Connor Drive and held onto him until Niagara County Deputy Kevin Landrigan arrived.

The boy’s mother, who lives on Dysinger Road, was summoned to the scene, but in front of her, the boy denied being involved in any crimes, even though Nimetz’ bicycle was found in high grass behind the boy’s home. He did give Landrigan the names of the other two males. The Kawasaki dirt bike also was found in high grass south of the garage from which it was taken.

Six injured when taxi smashes into Heritage Centers building in Buffalo

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Six people – including three children – were injured Friday morning when a taxi driver apparently ran a red light, struck another car and then crashed into the Heritage Centers building on Oak Street, police said.

None of the injuries appeared to be life-threatening, police said.

But it could have been worse. The office of Executive Director Michael Gross was struck by the taxi and sprayed with shattered glass, but fortunately he was not in.

Gross got his first inkling that something had happened at 9:30 a.m., when he received a message from a co-worker at the agency at Oak and Clinton streets.

“She said, ‘You need to go to temple tonight and thank your God,’ ” Gross recalled. “I had no idea what she was talking about.”

When Gross called the office, he learned that a Broadway Taxi had smashed into the corner of the agency’s building where his office is located.

The taxi sheared off a 4-inch-thick cement and steel post and smashed his office window.

“My desk chair is right against the window,” Gross said.

Only the exterior cement wall of the long, low building stopped the taxi from plowing right into the office. Gross said.

“While the car would not have hit me, I would have been in bad shape from all the flying glass, because glass did fly across the entire room,” he said.

Witnesses told police that the driver of the Broadway Taxi was traveling south on Oak Street when he ran a red light and struck a 1999 Oldsmobile that was headed east on Clinton with a green light. The taxi then jumped the curb, mowed down a shrub and the post and smashed into the window of Gross’s office.

The taxi driver, whom police did not identify, was treated and released at Erie County Medical Center and then issued a summons for failing stop at a red light.

Five others, including three young children, were taken to Women & Children’s Hospital.

The post that was destroyed “was put in a couple of years ago when the building was hit closer to the corner,” said Gross, who added that it was at least the third time the building has been struck by a vehicle since it was built about 30 years ago.

“This is a bad intersection,” Gross said. “People try to run lights all the time.”

Gross said he is concerned that traffic will get worse when Catholic Health headquarters opens between Elm and Oak near Genesee Street next summer and there are “many, many, many more cars traveling down Oak Street and up Elm. Someone with some traffic sense is really going to have to put a plan together that is going to keep pedestrians, cars and buildings safe.”

On April 8, Marc Weinfeld, a beloved downtown character, was struck by a car on Oak just south of Clinton, just yards from the scene of Friday’s crash. He died nine days later. No charges were filed in that incident.

email: aneville@buffnews.com

Obama speaks on race in light of Trayvon case

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WASHINGTON – In a rare and public reflection on race, President Obama called on the nation Friday to do some soul searching over the death of Trayvon Martin and the acquittal of his shooter, saying the slain black teenager “could have been me 35 years ago.” Empathizing with the pain of many black Americans, Obama said the case conjured up a hard history of racial injustice “that doesn’t go away.”

Obama’s personal comments, in a surprise appearance in the White House press room, marked his most extensive discussion of race as president. For Obama, who has written about his own struggles with racial identity but often has shied away from the subject in office, the speech signaled an unusual embrace of his standing as the nation’s first black president and the longing of many African-Americans for him to give voice to their experiences.

“When you think about why, in the African-American community at least, there’s a lot of pain around what happened here, I think it’s important to recognize that the African-American community is looking at this issue through a set of experiences and a history that doesn’t go away,” Obama said during his 20-minute remarks.

A Florida jury last week acquitted George Zimmerman of all charges in the February 2012 shooting of Trayvon, an unarmed 17-year-old. The verdict was cheered by those who agreed that Zimmerman was acting in self-defense, while others protested the outcome, believing Zimmerman had targeted Trayvon because he was black.

Despite his emotional comments on the case, the president appeared to signal that the Justice Department was unlikely to file federal civil rights charges against Zimmerman. Traditionally, he said, “these are issues of state and local government,” and he warned that the public should have “clear expectations.”

Following the verdict, some civil rights leaders called on Obama to lead a national conversation on race. But the president has resisted. Before Friday, his only comment on the verdict had been a written statement in which he called Trayvon’s death a tragedy and appealed for calm.

But throughout the week, the president kept track of the national response to the verdict, particularly by black Americans, and had discussions with his family, aides said. He was ready to address the verdict earlier this week during a round of interviews with Spanish language television stations, but the matter never came up.

Thursday, he told his senior advisers that he felt the country needed to hear from him, not in an interview or speech, just a frank discussion of his views and experiences. He spoke from the podium in the White House briefing room with no notes.

Even as the president urged the public to accept the verdict – “once the jury’s spoken, that’s how our system works” – he gave voice to the feelings of many angered by the jury’s decisions.

There’s a sense, Obama said, “that if a white male teen was involved in the same kind of scenario, that, from top to bottom, both the outcome and the aftermath might have been different.”

The president spoke emotionally about Trayvon’s parents, Sybrina Fulton and Tracy Martin, saying they had displayed incredible grace and dignity. He did not mention the feelings of Zimmerman, whose brother has said the former defendant has faced numerous death threats.

Trayvon’s parents released a statement following the president’s remarks, saying, “President Obama sees himself in Trayvon and identifies with him. This is a beautiful tribute to our boy.”

Zimmerman’s brother, Robert, also welcomed the president’s remarks, telling Fox News that “the American people need to have some time to digest what really happened and to do that soul- searching the president spoke of.”

Despite the fact that Obama’s race has been central to the narrative of his political rise, he has rarely addressed the matter as a public figure.

He last spoke about race in a substantial way as a presidential candidate in 2008 in addressing criticism over incendiary comments made by his former pastor, the Rev. Jeremiah Wright.

In 2009, Obama stumbled when commenting on the arrest of a black Harvard professor in the professor’s home, saying the police “acted stupidly.” The president was forced to retract his statement, then held an awkward “beer summit” at the White House with the professor, Henry Louis Gates, and the white arresting officer.

But Friday, Obama spoke poignantly about the distrust that shadows many African-American men, saying they can draw nervous stares on elevators and hear car locks clicking when they walk down the street. “There are very few African-American men in this country who haven’t had the experience of being followed when they were shopping in a department store,” he said. “That includes me.”

In a departure from his typical caution on legal matters, the president also waded into the thorny debates on racial profiling and Florida’s “stand your ground” law, despite the fact that neither was formally raised during Zimmerman’s trial.

Obama said it would be useful “to examine some state and local laws to see if they are designed in such a way that they may encourage the kinds of confrontation” that led to Trayvon’s death.

He questioned whether a law that sends the message that someone who is armed “has the right to use those firearms even if there is a way for them to exit from a situation” promotes peace and security.

He also raised the question of whether Trayvon himself, if he had been armed and of age, “could he have stood his ground on that sidewalk” and shot Zimmerman if he felt threatened when being followed.

Seeking to inject a sense of hope into his remarks, the president said race relations in the United States have improved with each passing generation. He said his young daughters and their friends are “better than we were.”

Depew woman beaten and robbed on Buffalo bike path

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A Depew woman was beaten and robbed Saturday morning on a West Side bike path.

The woman told police that about 7:30 a.m., a teenager dragged her onto the bike path at Forest and Niagara streets, then punched and kicked her in the face and body.

Her attacker, who took her purse, which contained a cellphone and $80, threatened to kill her and reached into his waistband but did not display a handgun, according to police. The victim was treated in Erie County Medical Center.

The attacker was described as a slim, light-skinned black male with short hair, about 14 or 15, 5 feet, 9 inches tall, wearing a red shirt, blue track pants and riding a bicycle.

Dispute over downed limb escalates into attack with golf club

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NIAGARA FALLS – Thunderstorms that caused outages overnight Friday also managed to fray nerves, leading to one arrest, Niagara Falls police said.

Dennis C. Townsend, 50, of Ashland Avenue, was charged with second-degree assault, third-degree criminal mischief and harassment for striking a neighbor in the head with a golf club, police said.

Townsend is accused of attacking the neighbor during an argument over the placement of a limb downed by storm, police said. The victim, whose glasses were broken, received several stitches, police added.

$10,000 in damage left in wake of $5,000 copper theft

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WHEATFIELD – A thief caused an estimated $10,000 in damage while stealing $5,000 worth of copper from Oppenheim Park on Niagara Falls Boulevard early Friday, Niagara County sheriff’ deputies said.

A park groundskeeper told deputies the thief targeted the maintenance building area about 3 a.m. and cut four, 75-foot electrical lines at the power box and at a power pole. The thief made off with 150 feet of wire, deputies said.
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