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A battle for the streets

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Tariq “Reek” Brown from the Bailey Boys gang thought he spotted rival gangsters at a picnic in Martin Luther King Park last May. Holding his pistol-grip assault rifle, police say, he sprayed bullets at the crowd of more than 100 people, killing 26-year-old Marquay Lee and wounding four others.

Street justice demanded swift retaliation. Just hours later, as partygoers spilled out from a Minnesota Avenue house, a suspected associate from the rival LRGP gang fired into the crowd, killing Samantha Cothran, an aspiring 23-year-old pharmaceutical student who had nothing to do with gangs.

For years, the Bailey Boys and LRGP Crew carried out business at the end of a gun. When someone dared to encroach on turf where each felt they had exclusive rights to sell drugs and rob people, the result was terror and sometimes death.

Eleven months after the two shootings, police say the Bailey Boys and LRGP are in shambles, the result of an intense effort by Buffalo police, the FBI and federal prosecutors to break the gangs.

Eighteen members of LRGP and 10 of the Bailey Boys are in jail awaiting trial in U.S. District Court, including Tariq Brown, charged with murder last week in the Martin Luther King Park shooting.

The campaign against the Bailey Boys and LRGP is the latest front in a three-year war on gang violence in Buffalo. It started with targeting the notorious 10th Street and 7th Street gangs fighting each other on the West Side, then a West Side gang known as the Loiza Boys that attempted to fill the void, and now the Bailey Boys and LRGP.

In all, 160 Buffalo gang members have been put behind bars over the past three years. The top federal prosecutor calls them “the worst of the worst.”

Because they are charged or already have been convicted of federal felonies, these gang members face stiffer penalties than under state law. And, as with the Bailey Boys and LRGP, the government has swung its heaviest hammer designed to decimate organized crime – the Racketeering Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act.

No one believes the gangs are gone for good. Residents know that dismantling gangs is like a deadly carnival game of whack-a-mole. When one gang is taken down, another pops up.

But the focus on gangs has made neighborhoods safer. This is how the police took down the Bailey Boys and LRGP.When William J. Hochul Jr. became the U.S. attorney in 2010, he took his staff on a tour of the city’s worst neighborhoods.

“We took a bus tour with 15 assistant U.S. attorneys and the clergy. I wanted my staff to have a sense of urgency. It’s one thing to prosecute day in and day out, but it’s another thing to feel the urgency,” said Hochul, who grew up on the city’s East Side.

Hochul then took a second tour with Buffalo Police Commissioner Daniel Derenda, who had appealed to him for help and also grew up on the East Side.

“When I took the U.S. attorney on a tour,” Derenda recalled, “a drug dealer approached our unmarked vehicle thinking we were looking to make a buy. He ran when he saw my uniform.”

Those two also teamed up with the FBI’s Safe Streets Task Force.

They count their progress on the war against the gangs:

“We have solved 21 homicides to date involving gangs, including killers in the Bailey Boys and LRGP Crew,” Derenda said. “I can think of another 10 to 15 murders where there’s a high probability that they too will be solved.”

Out in the neighborhoods, there is gratitude that gang members are getting locked up, though it is tempered with reality. And to avoid becoming a crime statistic, they say you need to be viglilant.Consider the plight of Randy Zawadzski, who lives in the Broadway Fillmore neighborhood, home of LRGP, which stands for Lombard Street, Rother Avenue, Gibson Street and Playter Street, which roughly defines the boundaries of the gang’s turf.

“Three years ago, I got caught in the gunfire. I got shot in the left leg. Fragments from an AK-47 bullet hit me. It was a horrifying experience,” Zawadzski said. “It was a case of mistaken identity. After that, I wouldn’t ever go outside after dark.”

Another Broadway Fillmore resident said that when he sees a gang coming down the street, he heads indoors. And when gunfire breaks out, he takes added precautions.

“We have a family ritual in my house. I have four children, and if we hear gunshots, it’s routine to go to the back of the house and lie on the floor,” the father said.

Mary Chambers said she moved out of the Bailey Kensington neighborhood in 2011 because of gangsters’ warfare.

“The gangs drove me out. I couldn’t even let my grandkids play on the porch,” said Chambers, who now lives in Cheektowaga. “My house on Shirley Avenue had been shot at three times.”

It’s no wonder.Chambers lived on the 200 block of Shirley where Anthony Skinner, a member of LRGP, tempted fate by sometimes staying overnight at a house on that same block right in the heart of the Bailey Boys’ territory.

Skinner’s affront to the Bailey Boys went from bad to worse. In broad daylight on July 21, 2011, he allegedly shot Rayshod Washington of the Bailey Boys.

The attack was caught on a city surveillance camera. Mayor Byron W. Brown, who happened to be in the camera room at Buffalo Police Headquarters at that moment, watched the shooting in real time.

“I was shocked by the total disregard for whoever else was on the street and the fact that he started shooting with a surveillance camera right there,” Brown said. “There was a total lack of regard for human life.”

Eight days later, Skinner got some payback.

On July 29, Tariq Brown – the same man charged last week in the Martin Luther King Park shootings – spotted Skinner in a maroon car at the intersection of Kensington Avenue and Orleans Street and began shooting, police say. Skinner survived the attack but just barely. A bullet struck him in the chest.

That summer of 2011 was a busy one for Tariq Brown, authorities said. In addition to Skinner, Brown also was involved in shootings on Shirley Avenue and at a block club party on Dartmouth Avenue, police said. Residents on the side streets running off Bailey and Kensington avenues were beside themselves. Something needed to be done.A couple of fortuitous events occurred in the bloody summer of 2011. Buffalo police and the FBI’s Safe Streets Task Force began investigating the LRGP Crew, and Derenda had a meeting with a Bailey Kensington block club leader.

“I met in the evening with the block club president in the living room of Bonnie Russell’s home,” Derenda said of the meeting arranged by University Council Member Russell.

The block club official, who asked that her name be withheld, recalled telling the commissioner how gang members in Bailey Kensington had taken over street corners outside delis and sold drugs, committed shootings in broad daylight, and intimidated residents to the point that they were afraid to leave their homes.

“I gave that woman my word we would do something,” Derenda said, who was also worried about the Broadway Fillmore neighborhood.

He assigned two city homicide detectives to work with the FBI’s task force, which started gaining an inside view of the Bailey Boys and the LRGP Crew by developing sources, making undercover drug buys and receiving intelligence from city police patrol officers and district detectives. They also were listening in on gang members’ cellphone conversations.

Investigators got an earful, according to FBI supervisory Special Agent James A. Jancewicz.

They were able to identify an LRGP drug house at 42 Memorial Drive, not far from the historic Central Terminal. Gang member Franklin Richards supplied the house with cocaine, which was then sold to street dealers, police explained.

More digging determined that Richards obtained his drugs from Earl Brown of Houston, and Brown dealt directly with the drug cartels of Mexico, according to Jancewicz.

LRGP members, Jancewicz said, were covetous of their turf. If anyone dared to move in on them, they could expect retribution.

“It’s believed that the gang members made a pact that if anyone else sold drugs in the Lombard, Rother, Gibson and Playter area, they would be killed,” Jancewicz said.Early in the course of that investigation, he said, the task force also learned that LRGP and the Bailey Boys had been at war for a few years, which helped explain why there were so many shootings.

But to nail down who was responsible for pulling the trigger and make arrests that would stick in court, a methodical approach was needed.

“You take a retrospective look and start putting pieces together, dates of shootings, deconstructing piece by piece. The key is actually to have witnesses who will testify. Human beings who will say, ‘I shot that guy’ or ‘That guy was shot for this reason,’ ” Jancewicz explained.

One of the advantages of making arrests at the federal level as opposed to the state level, Hochul explained, is that individuals charged with serious crimes are usually detained until their charges are resolved, usually at trial.

In the long months leading up to a trial, time weighs heavy and investigators say there is a greater chance that the individual may end up assisting authorities by appearing before a grand jury and offering testimony that can lead to additional arrests and the solving of other crimes.

That scenario has played out over and over in the investigation into the LRGP Crew and Bailey Boys.

In fact, when Tariq Brown was charged last week with the murder of Lee and the attempted murder of four others picnickers, it was part of the fourth superseding indictment against the Bailey Boys gang. And Brown already was behind bars awaiting trial on three other attempted murder charges.

The same strategy was used in taking down the 10th Street and 7th Street gangs, according to Buffalo Chief of Detectives Dennis J. Richards, who said such an intense effort was needed because the gangs were so entrenched that they had become “generational.”Rooting out the gangs has resulted in improvements to West Side and East Side neighborhoods, which authorities say is the end game – to help these neighborhoods make a comeback.

But in these neighborhoods where the different gangs have flourished for so long, optimism among residents is guarded.

The Broadway Fillmore father who gathers his children into the back of his house when gunfire rings out says the coming warmer months will tell whether the joint police effort has made a difference.

“Come back in the summer when it gets hot and crazy,” he said, only identifying himself by his first name, Mark, for fear of making himself a target. “Come back in the summer, and I’ll let you know if there are less shootings.”



email: lmichel@buffnews.com

Motorcyclist remains in critical condition

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A motorcyclist riding without a helmet and in the wrong lane, remained in critical condition Sunday in Erie County Medical Center after a crash Saturday.

Philip J. Gaulin, 46, of Amherst, suffered serious head injuries when his cycle collided with a Subaru driven by Alan M. Schmitt, 26, also of Amherst, in the 2300 block of Dodge Road near Glen Oak Drive around 6:40 p.m., Amherst police said. Schmitt was not injured.

Man rescued from Whirlpool Gorge

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NIAGARA FALLS, Ont. – Emergency teams called in a helicopter to bring an unidentified man up from the Whirlpool Gorge about 4:45 p.m. Sunday after he suffered a leg injury, Niagara Parks Police reported.

The Niagara Parks Police High Angle River Team, the Niagara Falls Fire Department and Niagara Emergency Medical Services responded and stabilized the man. Niagara Helicopters Limited flew him out of the gorge to a waiting ambulance, where he was assessed by paramedics. His condition was not immediately available.

Rape of teenage girl reported to police

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A 15-year-old girl on her way to school last week was grabbed, pulled into a vehicle, punched into unconsciousness and raped, she and her mother told Buffalo police.

The girl was on her way to catch the bus to a city school Thursday when abducted at Edison and East Delavan avenues, she told officers. She said she remembered little about the attack but described the car as an older red vehicle with four doors, and that two men were involved.

Her mother said the girl awakened hours later somewhere on Eggert Road and called her father from the home of a person she met. They called police to report an abduction but did not initially report the rape because the girl did not recall all that occurred.

Her mother later saw the girl’s damaged undergarments and surmised she had been raped. Her mother said the girl was examined at St. Joseph Hospital, but she has not yet been told of the results. The girl was released Saturday from Children’s Hospital, her mother said.

Assault with vehicle leaves one teen hospitalized

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A 17-year-old Town of Tonawanda girl remained hospitalized Monday, following a weekend incident that left an 18-year-old Kenmore woman charged with assault, accused of running the other teen over twice with an SUV, Town of Tonawanda police say.

And it all started, police said, with an argument that began with Facebook postings and texts.

Madeline Silvia, the 17-year-old, remained in fair condition Monday morning in Erie County Medical Center, after police said she suffered pelvic and spinal injuries in the incident.

Following the attack, Town of Tonawanda and Kenmore police teamed up to arrest 18-year-old Liana Nieves in her Kenmore home. She is charged with first-degree assault and some traffic violations, town police said.

The incident occurred shortly after 10 p.m. Friday on Chaplin Drive in the town, where Silvia had gone to visit a friend. As the social-media dispute continued, Nieves drove an SUV to the Chaplin Drive address.

“The two of them, according to witnesses, get into a verbal argument in person outside the vehicle,” Lt. Nicholas A. Bado said, based on the police reports.

Then, as Nieves returned to her vehicle, Silvia began pounding on the driver’s side door and then walked out in front of the vehicle.

Witnesses have told police that Nieves intentionally struck Silvia with the vehicle, before striking her again.

Nieves drove away, before being arrested at her home. She later was taken to the Erie County Holding Center following her arraignment.



email: gwarner@buffnews.com

Lackawanna man charged with DWI after drifting between lanes

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State Police at Boston have arrested a Lackawanna man for driving while intoxicated after he allegedly drifted back and forth between traffic lanes on Abbott Road in Orchard Park.

Trooper James Lacki stopped the vehicle at about 2:15 a.m. Sunday and charged Michael W. Boyler, 49, of Ridgewood Circle, Lackawanna, with DWI.

A breath test later revealed that Boyler had a blood-alcohol level of 0.16 percent, according to police reports.

Three Buffalonians arrested in Syracuse drone protest

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Three Buffalonians were among 31 arrested Sunday at Hancock Field Air National Guard Base near Syracuse protesting the use of drones in Afghanistan, Pakistan and other countries.

Ruessell Brown, Bonnie Mahoney and Valerie Niederhoffer, members of the Upstate Coalition to Ground the Drones and End the Wars, were among an estimated 275 people who took part in the protest. The group has planned another protest against drones at 1 p.m. on Mother’s Day outside Niagara Falls Air Reserve Station.

Teen pleads guilty in puppy-burning case

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A 19-year-old Buffalo man accused of dousing a Jack Russell terrier puppy with lighter fluid and setting him on fire in October pleaded guilty Monday to felony aggravated cruelty to animals.

But Adell Ziegler denied lighting the puppy, since named Phoenix, on fire.

“My co-defendant lit the dog on fire, and I was present,” Ziegler told State Supreme Court Justice Russell P. Buscaglia.

Ziegler admitted to acting in concert with Diondre L. Brown, 17, the partner in the puppy-burning incident, so Ziegler is criminally liable for whatever Brown did.

Brown, who has claimed he acted as a lookout while Ziegler lit the puppy on fire, has already pleaded guilty to felony animal cruelty.

Ziegler pleaded guilty to the highest charge for which he could have been convicted had he gone to trial, said Erie County District Attorney Frank A. Sedita III.

Ziegler faces a maximum two-year prison sentence and $5,000 fine when sentenced June 14. Restitution for the care and treatment of the puppy also may be part of his sentence, the judge said, adding that Ziegler was not offered a sentencing commitment.

Ziegler’s defense lawyer, E. Earl Key, advised against the plea. “From a legal standpoint, it doesn’t make sense,” he said.

Key said he has told his client to expect the maximum sentence “with no benefit whatsoever.”

Before the plea, prosecutors Kristen A. St. Mary and Matthew A. Albert had prepared for a June 3 bench trial in which they planned to prosecute Ziegler for setting the puppy on fire.

Phoenix continues to recover from first-, second- and third-degree burns to more than half of his body.

Since the incident, Ziegler has admitted his actions to several family members and friends and boasted this case has made him famous, Sedita said. Ziegler was a parole violator at the time of his arrest in the animal-cruelty case, and he is expected to remain in custody on the parole charge through October.

Sedita credited the work of Dr. Rebecca Wagner and the staff at Buffalo Small Animal Hospital for taking care of the horrifically burned puppy.

“Because of the efforts of veterinary professionals like Dr. Wagner, the life of a helpless puppy was saved,” Sedita said in a news release. “Because of the efforts of law enforcement professionals like Ms. St. Mary, a demented and remorseless animal abuser was prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law.”

Assemblyman Sean Ryan has sponsored legislation that would toughen penalties against those who are convicted of aggravated animal cruelty.

In the Phoenix case, “the defendant, who pleaded guilty to a horrific act of animal cruelty, will only face a maximum of two years in prison and a $5,000 fine,” Ryan said. “If enacted, Phoenix’s Law would double penalties and, in addition, those convicted of aggravated animal cruelty would have to undergo psychiatric evaluation and treatment at their own expense.”

Many experts see a link between cruelty to animals and a propensity for future violence toward people, Ryan said.



email: plakamp@buffnews.com

Three drug suspects arrested on Grand Island

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Three Grand Island men have been arrested on drug charges by Erie County sheriff’s deputies, two of them during a routine traffic stop on Bedell road and the third as he was spotted trying to hide garbage bags allegedly full of marijuana plants,

Sheriff Timothy B. Howard said Korey Dimatteo, 21, of Continental Lane and Edward A. Bolton, 22, of Bedell Road, were arrested during a traffic stop about 10:30 a.m. Saturday on Bedell after Deputies Michael Okal and Angela Kopacz reported finding a quantity of a suspected white powder drug, pills, a drug scale and a quantify of alleged marijuana in their car.

Based on further investigation several hours later, Senior Detective Alan Rozansky, chief of the sheriff’s Narcotics Bureau, and Detective Tim Carney arrested an alleged cohort of the two earlier suspects, Justin M. Kopenski, 22, of Colonial Drive, as he was allegedly trying to hide two garbage bags full of marijuana plants in a dumpster in the parking lot of an apartment complex on Grand Island Boulevard, the sheriff said.

Kopenski is charged with a felony count of trying to conceal or destroy physical evidence and misdemeanor counts of unlawfully growing cannabis and criminal possession of marijuana, Howard said.

Lockport woman hurt in Friday crash dies

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The 19-year-old Lockport woman who was critically injured in a crash with a pickup truck in the Town of Lockport early Friday afternoon died at the Erie County Medical Center this morning, officials with the hospital and the Niagara County Sheriff’s office.

Laken B. Pearce had to be airlifted from the scene of the crash at Leete Road and Sunset Drive shortly after 2:30 p.m. Friday. According to law enforcement reports Pearce failed to yield the right of way at the intersection and crashed into a truck driven by Paul I. Lunick, 49, of Grand Island. The pickup truck driver was not injured.

Another thief joins the million-dollar club

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An Arcade woman joined an exclusive group of white-collar criminals Monday: the million-dollar-plus category for theft.

Debra A. Davis, 44, of Java Lake Road, tearfully admitted stealing $1.3 million from American Stainless Corp. in Buffalo, where she worked as a bookkeeper, by writing checks to take the money.

Davis became the sixth person prosecuted by the Erie County District Attorney’s Office in the past 25 years to be convicted of a theft of more than $1 million, prosecutors said. She is the third such offender to be prosecuted since Frank A. Sedita III became district attorney in 2009.

“A million is a real marker,” Sedita said. “Once you hit a million dollars, the punitive sanctions increase dramatically.”

Davis pleaded guilty to first-degree grand larceny, falsifying business records and offering a false instrument for filing. She faces up to 25 years in prison.

An executive for the company, a distributor of stainless steel, nickel, aluminum and other metals with offices at 1374 Clinton St., declined to comment on her guilty plea.

Sedita said Davis spent the stolen money on gambling and also to buy a company, named Triple Star Towing, for her husband.

“The company was named after her favorite slot machine,” Sedita said.

At her plea hearing, Davis hesitated when State Supreme Court Justice Penny M. Wolfgang asked Davis if she was guilty.

“I was doing my job,” Davis replied.

Did that mean taking money she was not entitled to? Wolfgang asked.

“There’s a lot more,” Davis said, looking ready to explain. But she pleaded guilty to the charges without offering additional information.

Davis pleaded guilty to the highest charge for which she could have been prosecuted.

During the hearing, prosecutors Candace K. Vogel and Gary M. Ertel said she wrote checks to herself and to cash between October 2010 and September 2012.

“We tell companies all the time, you should have a regular, independent audit done by an outside auditing agency,” Sedita said.

“Number one, if anyone’s stealing from you, they’ll catch it. Number two, it’s the best insurance they can buy because it has such a deterrent effect.”

One check mentioned in court – for $9,790 – was for paying Erie County taxes.

But a company record for the same check indicated it was for payment to a steel company.

“This was done to cover up a larceny,” Vogel said.

Prosecutors filed the “offering false instrument for filing” count because she did not report the stolen money on her 2011 state income tax return. She remains free on her own recognizance.

Wolfgang did not make Davis any promises about a sentence but indicated restitution, if any, would affect the sentence, scheduled for July 22. The five others whose thefts exceeded $1 million received jail time.

• Joseph V. Raymond, a medical supplies salesman from Orchard Park, in 2011 stole almost $1.8 million worth of implants and other surgical devices destined for Buffalo’s Mercy Hospital and cheated his employer. He’s the only one among the five sentenced offenders who made full restitution.

• Kenneth P. Bernas in 2011 was sentenced to 2-1/3 to 7 years in prison for swindling 53 law clients out of $3.1 million.

• Lee D. Burns, chief financial officer of Servotronics Inc., in 2006 was sentenced to 4½ to 13½ years in prison for corporate thefts amounting to almost $4 million. He has been released from prison.

• Accountant Edward J. Jarosz Jr. in 1993 became the first local person to plead guilty to a first-degree grand larceny charge, which covers thefts of at least $1 million. He was sentenced to four to 12 years in prison for stealing more than $1.5 million from a construction company.

• Anthony Franjoine, a comptroller, pleaded guilty in December 1991 to embezzling almost $1.5 million from the Catholic Diocese of Buffalo. He paid back all but $274,040 before being sentenced to 2-2/3 to eight years in prison.



email: plakamp@buffnews.com

Bank robbed on Buffalo’s West Side

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Buffalo police are seeking a suspect, possibly in his teens, who robbed the First Niagara Bank branch in the 500 block of Elmwood Avenue near West Utica Street just before 12:30 p.m.

He ran out with an undisclosed amount of money.

Police spokesmen said the suspect, described as a black male about 6 feet, 1 inch tall and weighing about 180 pounds, was wearing a white and blue Yankees baseball cap and shirt.

The suspect handed a teller a note threatening to use a weapon that was never displayed before he ran out. Anyone with information is asked to call or text the Police Confidential TIPCALL Line at (716) 847-2255 or email the department through its website at www.bpdny.org

Buffalo man charged in tax return fraud

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A federal grand jury has indicted a Buffalo man on 66 counts stemming from a fraudulent tax return scheme, U.S. Attorney William J. Hochul Jr. announced Monday.

Prosecutors said that Clifton Jackson, 44, used the names and Social Security numbers of several people to file phony income tax returns for 2011.

He will be charged with conspiracy to unlawfully use Social Security numbers, conspiracy and the filing of false tax returns and aggravated identity theft when he is arraigned today before U.S. Magistrate Judge H. Kenneth Schroeder Jr. The charges carry a maximum penalty of 10 years in prison and a $250,000 fine upon conviction.

Unattended cooking blamed for Falls fire

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NIAGARA FALLS – Investigators said a kitchen fire caused $30,000 in damages to two-story home on LaSalle Avenue early Wednesday morning.

City fire crews responded at 4:26 a.m. to 1137 LaSalle Avenue and were able to bring the fire under control in about two hours, according to Niagara Falls Fire Prevention Chief Daniel M. Ciszek. He said the fire was contained to the kitchen although there was smoke damage to the upstairs.

Both the owner of the house, Celia M. Esteireiro, 37, and her boyfriend, Joseph Williams, were able to escape without injury.

Williams, who had been cooking, told fire investigators he heard something, turned around and saw the stove was on fire, then knocked the pan off the stove and onto the counter, further spreading the fire.



email: nfischer@buffnews.com

Teen arrested after bank robbery on Broadway

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A juvenile offender lost the $2,000 he robbed Tuesday afternoon from the Key Bank branch at 1017 Broadway as police took him into custody moments after the 2:50 P.M. heist.

The name of the suspect, who is being held on felony robbery charges, was not released by police. The juvenile allegedly handed a teller a threatening note before running out of the bank literally into the arms of uniformed police officers who had rushed to the scene while the robbery still was under way. The police confiscated the stolen money.

Woman hurt in motorcycle accident

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A 32-year-old Dunkirk woman was taken to Brooks Memorial Hospital for treatment of injuries suffered when she lost control of her motorcycle on a patch of loose gravel on Newell Road in the Chautauqua County Town of Sheridan and was thrown off her cycle about 4:10 p.m. Wednesday.

The Chautauqua County Sheriff’s Office said Kristy Bly, of Middle Road, Dunkirk, was taken to the hospital by an Alstar EMS crew. A Sheridan EMS crew assisted at the scent of the accident.

New cars for Buffalo police fleet to be addressed

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Complaints that Buffalo police cars are showing their age and that sometimes not enough are ready to go at shift changes because of repairs will be addressed in city budget discussions.

And there is the possibility that some new ones will be purchased, according to Common Council President Richard A. Fontana.

The Buffalo Police Department has a fleet of about 200 marked patrol cars, and no new vehicles have been added since 2010, which goes against a standard national practice in law enforcement to replace one-third of the fleet annually so that patrol cars are never more than three years old.

“We have been lean on purchases of police vehicles in the last few years,” Fontana said.

Tight fiscal conditions have been cited for the slowdown in buying new police cars. Mayor Byron W. Brown’s proposed budget, released Wednesday, includes $1 million for 25 to 30 new patrol cars.

Some members of the Police Department do not think that’s enough. Others have expressed concerns to Fontana that many of the current Ford Crown Victoria patrol cars have more than 100,000 miles.

“In budget deliberations, I’m going to be taking a close look at what is being proposed. We’re lucky the Crown Victorias are dependable, but once a patrol car starts to get near the 150,000-mile mark, it is a lot different than a civilian vehicle. Patrol cars are on all the time,” Fontana said.

Police Commissioner Daniel Derenda said he hopes to rotate new police vehicles into the fleet at the start of the new budget year, July 1.

“We’re in the process of putting together a purchase of new vehicles, and we may get some before the new fiscal year,” he said.

Police who have voiced concern say that the police repair garage on Seneca Street is often packed with cars awaiting repairs and that at the start of each shift, officers will alert the police dispatcher that they are awaiting an available patrol car.

Some of that, though, is because officers prefer a certain patrol car and are waiting for it to return to the district headquarters. But Fontana says there is no question the fleet needs to be updated. In the past, he said, the Brown administration faithfully replaced a third of the patrol cars each year.

“We achieved that for many years, and you have to commend the mayor for that,” Fontana said, adding that he understands public funds are limited. “Even if it was a quarter of the fleet replaced each year, that would be OK. You can’t go without police cars, and if you do not do a turnover, then you have to buy a whole bunch at once. It is either pay now or pay later.”

He credited mechanics at the police garage for their diligence in keeping the fleet road worthy.

As for what the Buffalo patrol car of the future will be, that depends on upcoming budget discussions.

Ford no longer makes the Crown Victoria and has switched to the Taurus as its patrol vehicle, while Chevrolet manufactures a Caprice patrol vehicle, and Dodge has a Charger police car.



email: lmichel@buffnews.com

Buffalo police warning about dangerous water bottle bombs

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For the second time recently, Buffalo police and Canisius College public security officers issued warnings Wednesday about dangerous water bottle bombs left on city streets near the college’s Main Street campus.

Two such explosive devices were found in the 100 block of Hughes Avenue on April 14 and reportedly caused property damage to a house.

On Monday, a similar device was found on Meech Street, just around the corner from Hughes.

Police reported the Meech Street device exploded but no injuries or property damage resulted. Both incidents remain under investigation by Buffalo police.

Canisius College security and Buffalo police again alerted students and residents on Wednesday in the area of the danger. If further such devices or other suspicious objects are found, officials want everyone to stay clear of the devices and to call authorities immediately.

Character reference becomes an issue for Walker

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City Councilman Charles A. Walker of Niagara Falls never thought twice about writing a letter of support for Wally Reynolds.

Or about putting his letter on behalf of Reynolds, a family friend awaiting sentencing on drug charges, on official Niagara Falls city letterhead.

“I never thought it was an issue,” Walker told The Buffalo News.

A federal prosecutor suggested otherwise Wednesday, noting that government employees are prohibited from using their official position to influence a pending court case.

He also indicated his office will have more to say about Walker’s letter when Reynolds is sentenced next week.

“Our comments regarding this specific local official will need to wait until the day of the defendant’s sentencing," U.S. Attorney William J. Hochul Jr. said in a statement.

Hochul stopped well short of criticizing Walker’s use of city letterhead but made a point of noting that, as a federal official, Hochul himself is prohibited from doing the same type of thing.

“As a general rule federal employees are forbidden from using their official title or position in order to attempt to influence an official criminal proceeding,” he said.

Reynolds, who was accused of running a cross-border marijuana ring, pleaded guilty earlier this year to conspiracy to possess and distribute marijuana and now faces nearly six years in prison.

At the time of his guilty plea, Assistant U.S. Attorney Mary Catherine Baumgarten said Reynolds supervised other individuals in a drug conspiracy that imported marijuana from Canada for distribution to his customers in the United States.

Walker, in his letter to U.S. District Judge Richard J. Arcara, acknowledges Reynolds’ wrongdoing but chalks much of it up to bad choices.

“He made a bad one here,” Walker said in his letter to Arcara. “But I believe there is enough foundation there to get him back on track as a law-abiding citizen and family man.”

In an interview with The News, Walker said he never intended the letter as an attempt to use his public position to influence Reynolds’ case and suggested it was simply a well-intentioned effort to help a family friend.

Walker said he has known Reynolds for years and thinks he deserves a second chance.

“Wrong is wrong,” he said of Reynolds’ conduct. “My character letter is basically about who I know he is. There are some core values there, and I think the judge should know about them."

Arcara will sentence Reynolds on Monday.



email: pfairbanks@buffnews.com

Cattaraugus sheriff urges public’s help in solving woman’s death

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LITTLE VALLEY – After more than five years and more than 400 leads, investigators in the Cattaraugus County Sheriff’s Office are still looking for answers in the death of Salamanca resident Traci Douglass.

Wednesday, they issued a new appeal for the public’s help.

The prospects for solving the case were low at the outset, according to Sheriff Timothy Whitcomb, but, with advances in investigation and examination of leads, that has changed.

Douglass’ remains, discovered by a fisherman along the west shore of the Allegany Reservoir in September 2009, have been analyzed, and DNA has been taken. Douglass, a native of Maryland, was last seen around January 2007.

The remains were not identified until February 2012.

Now, progress in the case is dependent on help from the community, Whitcomb said Wednesday.

“Some of the leads that have matriculated into this office have come in through other agencies,” he said. “I want to make clear that the Cattaraugus County Sheriff’s Office is the lead agency in this death investigation. All leads should be coming in through one source here at the Sheriff’s Office.”

One of the problems investigators have encountered is missing call-back information when tips come in from other agencies, he said. For the investigators to do their job, they need to get in touch with the people who provided the tips.

Progress has been made, but some of the current roadblocks Investigators John Ensell and Joe Magiera have encountered could be removed if they were able to talk to those who have come forward, the sheriff said.

Whitcomb said investigators also want to hear from people who know something and still have not come forward.

“The investigation, at this point, leads us to believe that there are people in the public that have information that will assist us in closing this investigation,” he said. “For whatever reason, some people seem to be reluctant or scared. I want to make a very clear point. If you have info on Ms. Douglass’ death, and you have chosen, for whatever reason, to not come forward to law enforcement, I would ask you to reconsider your decision. You are in a position to come forward and be part of a solution and assist us in answering questions, or you are in a position to be part of the problem.”

He added, “There are people here in the community of Cattaraugus County, specifically Salamanca, that have information that can help us answer questions surrounding her death, specifically why we found her where we did,” he continued. “We need those people to re-examine their moral compass and come forward.”

Those with information are asked to contact Joe Magiera by calling (716) 938-2205, texting (716) 498-3245 or emailing jlmagiera@cattco.org; or contact John Ensell by calling (716) 938-2261, texting (716) 597-4298 or emailing jcensell@cattco.org.
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