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A Lockport man is charged with trying to sell a stolen ATV

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CAMBRIA – A Niagara Falls man alerted Niagara County sheriff’s deputies Tuesday after he learned that a man was trying to sell his all-terrain vehicle which had been reported stolen in Niagara Falls.

Jedidiah J. Aikin, 28, of Ellicott Road, Lockport was charged with fourth-degree criminal possession of stolen property.

The victim said he was told that Aikin had possession of his $3,000 ATV and was trying to sell it to a man on Ridge Road in Cambria for $1,500. Deputies went to the address and charged Aikin after he admitted he did not have the proper paperwork regarding the purchase.

Electronics are stolen in the burglary of a motor home in the Falls

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NIAGARA FALLS – A 71-year-old man said someone removed a windshield to climb into his 2004 motor home while it was parked in an alley in the 2700 block of Woodlawn Avenue, sometime between 6 p.m. Monday and 8 a.m. Tuesday.

The victim said a DVD/VCR was removed, damaging the wooden cupboards; and a stereo that was in the dashboard was stolen. The suspects also damaged the wooden paneling when they tried unsuccessfully to remove the TV

Total loss and damage amunted to $1,050, according to police.

Two houses on adjoining streets are hit by gunfire in Falls

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NIAGARA FALLS – Police investigating calls of shots fired at 20th Street and Woodlawn Avenue just after 3 a.m. Tuesday found two houses on 22nd Street and Woodlawn Avenue damaged by gunfire.

Police checking the area went to a home in the 1000 block of 22nd Street which had numerous calls for reports of fighting in the past few months.

Residents said they heard 4 to 5 shots and saw a man run east on Woodlawn Avenue. Police checking the house located a hole in the front window of the house and found that a bullet had entered the house and grazed the couch - stopping in the wall.

Several people were in the house and told police they were unaware that the house had been struck, had no idea what happened and did not see anything. One person in the house told police he was having issues with a person, but offered little information to police.

Police checking the area for crossfire located a projectile hole in a house across the street in the 2200 block of Woodlawn Avenue - as if gunfire had been exchanged, according to police.

Niagara Falls woman jumps to her death

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NIAGARA FALLS – A 61-year-old woman jumped to her death Wednesday from a 15th floor window at the apartment tower at 901 Cedar Ave., according to Police Lt. Michael Trane. The woman died at the scene before police or medical help could arrive. The death is considered a suicide, and no further information will be released, Lt. Trane said.

Two Buffalo police officers hurt in Kensington Expressway accident

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Two Buffalo police officers suffered injuries just after 10 a.m. today when their patrol vehicle was involved in an accident with a second car on the westbound Kensington Expressway near the Grider Street overpass.

The Northeast District officers were transported to Erie County Medical Center to be examined, according to police spokesman Michael J. DeGeorge.

For a short time, the entrance way onto the nearby westbound Scajaquada Expressway from the Kensington was shut down, but has since reopened, DeGeorge said.

In addition, another crash this morning on the Scajaquada resulted in the closure of the westbound entrance ramp at Nottingham Terrace, near Delaware Avenue. Authorities said there did not appear to be serious injuries in that accident.

email: lmichel@buffnews.com

Cowlesville man, 30, killed in snowmobile accident

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BENNINGTON – A Cowlesville man died sometime overnight after the snowmobile he was riding southbound on Folsomdale Road in the Town of Bennington traveled off the east shoulder of the road and struck a road sign, Wyoming County sheriff’s officials said today.

Jeffery J. Kirsch, 30, was discovered early this morning by a town plow truck operator and pronounced dead at the scene just south of Bear Road, sheriff’s officials said.

Sheriff’s deputies were assisted by the Strykersville Fire Department, Harris Corners Fire Department and Wyoming County Emergency Services. The investigation is continuing.

Alleged serial burglar given minimum sentence

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LOCKPORT – A man who was suspected in as many as 13 Lewiston burglaries drew the minimum sentence Thursday from Niagara County Judge Matthew J. Murphy III.

Michael T. Nolfi, 27, of Cherry Lane, Lewiston, was sentenced to 3 1/2 years in prison and five years of post-release supervision for his Dec. 18 guilty plea to second-degree burglary.

Defense attorney James J. Faso Jr. said Nolfi is a drug addict who “wasn’t in his right mind at the time.”

When he pleaded guilty, Deputy District Attorney Holly E. Sloma said she was prepared to obtain grand jury indictments against Nolfi in three burglaries, two in which the homeowners caught Nolfi in the act and one in which his fingerprint was found on a jewelry box in a bedroom. She said Nolfi was a suspect in as many as 10 other Lewiston break-ins.

Nolfi and Kevin M. Gibson, 32, of Lewiston, were arrested Aug. 12 at a home on Autumn Lane, where the resident interrupted the crime. Gibson pleaded guilty to a misdemeanor in Town Court.

Lockport woman pleads guilty in meth case

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LOCKPORT – A woman whose boyfriend pleaded guilty two weeks ago to making methamphetamine in a parked car accepted the same plea offer herself Thursday.

Niagara County Judge Matthew J. Murphy III scheduled sentencing May 29 for Barbara J. Dickenson, 22, of Spruce Street, Lockport, who admitted to fourth-degree criminal possession of a controlled substance and third-degree unlawful manufacture of meth. Matthew C. Brown, 29, of Prentice Street, Lockport, admitted to the same charges.

A third defendant, Leeanne E. Ferris of Lancaster, is mulling a plea offer, Assistant District Attorney Peter M. Wydysh said. The three were arrested about 1:30 a.m. Nov. 10 by an officer who checked out a car parked under the Day Road Bridge over the Erie Canal in the Town of Lockport and seized more than two ounces of meth oil and materials and equipment to make more of the drug.

Falls man draws 7 years for robbery and burglary

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LOCKPORT – Tyrell J. Jordan, a Niagara Falls man whose attorney called him “a young man who is desperate to obtain property to sell for drugs,” was sentenced Thursday to seven years in prison and five years of post-release supervision for a burglary and a strongarm robbery.

“You deserve to be punished. The public deserves to be protected,” Niagara County Judge Matthew J. Murphy III told Jordan, 21, of 18th Street.

He had pleaded guilty to attempted second-degree burglary for an Oct. 23, 2012, break-in at a home on Seneca Avenue in the Falls, and to third-degree robbery for the theft of $286 from a man with whom he was allegedly trying to make a drug deal June 20 in a car on Cleveland Avenue.

In the burglary, defense attorney James J. Faso Jr. said, Jordan “was caught red-handed” trying to steal a TV and an Xbox unit.

“I was born to lose,” Jordan said. “It’s like my era’s kids are all strung out on drugs.”

Pomfret business building destroyed by accidental fire

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MAYVILLE – A Halogen utility light that accidentally was left too close to combustible material was blamed Thursday for a fire about 8:30 p.m. Wednesday that destroyed a Town of Pomfret business building that housed both the West Wind Archery and a pet grooming business that was being remodeled.

The Chautauqua County Fire Investigation Team said the fire started in the east end of the building at 4893 Route 20. Nobody was in the building at the time, and there were no injuries, but the building was declared a total loss.

Indictment accuses woman of possessing a wide range of drugs

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LOCKPORT – A Town of Niagara woman pleaded not guilty Thursday in State Supreme Court to a six-count indictment accusing her of possessing five different drugs when the car in which she was riding was stopped by police Oct. 15 in Wheatfield.

Amanda M. Camidge, 18, of Panama Avenue, is charged with single counts of third- and fourth-degree criminal possession of a controlled substance and four counts of seventh-degree possession. The driver of the car, Sean M. Reed Jr. 26, of Amy Drive, Wheatfield, is to be arraigned next week on the same charges.

Assistant District Attorney Peter M. Wydysh said the pair are accused of having heroin, cocaine, Suboxone, Valium and opanas. A deputy pulled the car over after he saw the pair allegedly smoking marijuana as they drove along River Road. The resulting drug seizure included 43 packets of alleged heroin and 19 assorted pills.

Falls man to try treatment after cocaine plea

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LOCKPORT – A Niagara Falls man risked up to nine years in prison Thursday as he entered the judicial diversion program of court-supervised drug treatment following his guilty plea to cocaine possession.

Eric D. Jones, 19, of 22nd Street, pleaded guilty before State Supreme Court Justice Richard C. Kloch Sr. to third-degree criminal possession of a controlled substance. He admitted having cocaine he intended to sell when Falls police pulled his car over June 17.

If Jones fails in the treatment program, Kloch could send him to prison for as long as nine years. However, successful treatment means his charge will be reduced to a misdemeanor with a probation sentence.

Auction of swindler’s property postponed because of tax lien

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LOCKPORT – Concerns over a state tax lien caused a postponement Thursday of the auction of property owned by a criminal who was ordered to pay restitution for stealing about $600,000 from an elderly man who suffered from dementia.

Sgt. Cory Diez, chief of the civil division of the Niagara County Sheriff’s Office, said the auction of the property owned by Kenneth C. Heitzenrater on Ridge Road in Newfane has been rescheduled for 10:30 a.m. April 23 at Diez’ office.

The state Tax Department filed a lien against Heitzenrater Oct. 10 for $57,084 in unpaid income taxes, interest and penalties. Diez said attorneys in the case are working to avoid having the buyer of the 5.6-acre property being stuck with that lien. The buyer already would be expected to pay the delinquent property taxes of more than $9,200.

Heitzenrater owned a snack bar and his wife a quilt store on the property. He pleaded guilty in October 2012 to fourth-degree grand larceny and agreed to sell the business property and his own home in Somerset to raise money for restitution to the now-deceased victim’s estate.

Woman says she is a victim of fraud from a caller who claims to be from Microsoft

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WHEATFIELD – A 74-year-old woman told Niagara County sheriff’s deputies Thursday that she got a call at her Nash Road home Wednesday evening from someone claiming to be from Microsoft who talked her into buying an unneeded $149 security system for her computer.

She said a woman caller told her there were errors on her computer and it would crash if she did not fix the problem. She said the woman told her to log on to her computer and gave her an ID number that made her think the call was legitimate. She said a manager was put on the phone, who identified himself as Kevin Williams, and said she could purchase a one year or lifetime protection for her computer, but must do it immediately.

She agreed to purchase a one year subscription for $149 on her Discover card, but realized after looking into it further that she had been the victim of a fraud. The woman said she was able to cancel the purchase, but was advised by Discover that other accounts may be compromised and said she needed to lock her bank accounts and contact all credit reporting agencies.

Man stabbed in a Maryland Street home

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The stabbing of a man in a Maryland Street home about 6:25 p.m. was under investigation Thursday night by Buffalo police. Initial reports said the victim was stabbed in the hand, and an “older” male suspect reportedly was seen running toward Virginia Street. No further information was available at the scene.

Jury begins deliberations in murder trial of Buffalo man accused of killing 13-year-old girl

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Jurors on Thursday began deliberating the fate of a man accused of killing a 13-year-old girl after they heard two contrasting portrayals of what happened.

But both the defense and prosecution agreed the slaying of Lanasha Rollerson last year – after a sex party, according to the defense – was an especially disturbing case.

Defense attorney Emily Trott called her death gruesome.

Prosecutor James F. Bargnesi called it heinous and horrific.

Lanasha was killed Sept. 1 after the party in Darshawn Morris’ apartment on Hagen Street. Her body was found Sept. 3 in a garage on the property behind his apartment.

Authorities on Sept. 4 charged Morris, 21, with murder, rape and criminal sexual act after he gave police two statements admitting he killed her.

Her attacker inflicted more than 60 stab wounds, one so deep that it penetrated a lung and others with such force that four of her ribs were damaged. Her neck was slit and her upper arm had been cut to the bone during an attempt to dismember her. Her body was set on fire, with burns on her chest.

The medical examiner described her face as “one big bruise.”

The State Supreme Court jury began deliberating after hearing closing statements in the trial before Justice M. William Boller. Deliberations resume Friday.

Trott told the jury that her client did not kill Lanasha. She cited his testimony this week in which he said he lied when he told police he killed Lanasha. He testified that he was covering up for the real killer – a man he identified as his cousin.

He said he had sex with Lanasha in his bedroom. And then after her death, he tried to clean two blood stains on the carpet and cut a bloody section from a mattress. He said he hid the mattress behind a house across the street and disposed other evidence in a garbage bag. He said he helped carry her body to the garage and later tried to cut it up using a saw. Then he tried to burn it at his cousin’s direction.

DNA analysis showed that the blood on the carpet and mattress was Lanasha’s.

Bargnesi, chief homicide prosecutor for the Erie County District Attorney’s Office, said the evidence points to Morris’ guilt and not to the cousin, whom the prosecutor called “the phantom killer.”

He cited Morris’ two statements to the police, two witnesses who saw Morris with Lanasha outside just before she was killed, the presence of his DNA under her fingernails, and his efforts to dispose the body among other evidence.

In the first statement to police, Morris said he fought with Lanasha after she refused his request to leave his apartment before his wife returned home. He said she fell and hit her head, and that he got a knife from the kitchen and stabbed her when she still wouldn’t leave. He then put her body in the garage.

In the second statement, Morris said they struggled over the knife. She fell down, hit her head and lost consciousness, he said. He said she tried to stab him when she regained consciousness. He said he then accidentally stabbed her.

Morris said she got up and ran into the backyard, where he grabbed her foot as she climbed a gate and he cut her neck. He said she fell into a hole in the neighbor’s garage and he left her there.

Bargnesi said the first statement was as close to the truth as Morris got. Then he came up with the second statement to make it look like self-defense, Bargnesi said. After the second statement, Morris called his mother and told her he was going to jail and that he committed the crime, the prosecutor said.

This week, Morris came up with another version of what happened, Bargnesi said. Morris testified his cousin killed Lanasha. Morris testified that he took the blame because the slaying happened at his apartment and he thought his cousin would eventually “man up” and admit that he, not Morris, killed her.

“That doesn’t make any sense,” Bargnesi said.

Bargnesi told jurors the testimony came from a man “who thought he could cut up a body like they do in the movies.”

Bargnesi noted that the cousin’s DNA was not found on the victim, that witnesses saw the cousin leave the party before Lanasha and Morris went outside and then back inside, and that no one saw “the phantom killer” return.

Once Morris and Lanasha were inside, witnesses testified that Lanasha went out on the porch and that they heard Morris order her to come back in. Then they heard her say, “I’m sorry. I’m sorry. I won’t do it again,” followed by the sounds of things falling, then silence.

Morris testified his cousin ordered Lanasha to come in from the porch and that he took her into the bedroom where he killed her before dropping her out the second-floor bedroom window.

Bargnesi said no blood was found on the window or the back of the house.

Trott told jurors that Morris’ police statements do not match the evidence or the injuries found on Lanasha’s body. But his testimony that he heard his cousin hit Lanasha with a barbell is consistent with a large circular bruise on her head, she said.

“Darshawn Morris had no motive to stab her more than 60 times,” Trott said. “That is more likely the action of somebody who hit her with a weight and gave her a black eye.”

She said Morris failed in his efforts to dismember and burn her “because he is not a killer.”

email: jstaas@buffnews.com

Bills fan’s court appearance postponed to April 10

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A Buffalo Bills fan arrested after he fell from the top deck of Ralph Wilson Stadium into the stands below, injuring himself and another fan, will return to Orchard Park Town Court next month for further proceedings.

Robert A. Hopkins, 29, of Buffalo, had been due in court Thursday before Town Justice Edward A. Pace, but the case was adjourned to April 10. Hopkins has added another attorney, Patrick J. Brown, who will work with Jeffrey Bochiechio, according to court officials.

Hopkins pleaded not guilty in December to third-degree assault and second-degree reckless endangerment, both misdemeanors, in the incident at the Nov. 17 Bills game against the New York Jets.

A video shows Hopkins sliding in a seated position down a railing from the 300 level of the stadium, before toppling backward and falling 20 to 25 feet into the 200 section and landing on another fan.

Hopkins hurt his shoulder, while the man he struck suffered a head and neck injury.

Buffalo fire fighter and two civilians injured in crash

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Four firefighters and two women were taken to Erie County Medical Center with non-life threatening injuries suffered when a fire truck and the women’s car collided shortly before 7 p.m. Thursday at Bailey Avenue and Clinton Street as the firefighters were responding to a call.

The women’s car reportedly struck the fire truck in the rear at the icy intersection.

Police negotiating with woman with a gun in an apartment building

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Buffalo police this evening are reportedly negotiating with a disturbed woman with a loaded handgun in an apartment building at Ashland Avenue and Summer Street.

The Buffalo Police SWAT team has been called to the scene amid reports of a possible hostage situation that developed sometime after 8 p.m. No further details are currently being released by police.

Fireworks explode in Riverside house, one man hurt

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A 69-year-old Condon Avenue man was taken to Erie County Medical Center late this afternoon suffering from what Buffalo police described as a severe hand injury as a result of a small explosion in his home in the second block of that street.

Buffalo police, Erie County sheriff’s bomb squad members and federal agents were called to the home about 4 p.m. An investigation was conducted of the house and a smoke grenade was reportedly found. The cause of the explosion was not disclosed.

The injured man, reportedly a Vietnam War veteran, was alone in the house when police were called.

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