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Lockport man admits to stealing jewelry to buy drugs

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LOCKPORT – A City of Lockport man pleaded guilty and was sentenced to diversion in the drug court program and two years interim probation Friday in State Supreme Court for his role in an East High Street burglary in December.

Patrick K. Claud, 20, of Price Street pleaded guilty to a reduced charge of attempted third-degree burglary and admitted that he stole $2,815 from a woman in the 800 block of East High Street on Dec. 10, then pawned the jewelry to buy marijuana. He originally was charged with grand larceny, second-degree burglary and criminal trespassing.

State Supreme Court Justice Richard C. Kloch Sr. said if Claud successfully completes the diversion program, the plea would be reduced to criminal trespassing and he very likely would be granted a conditional discharge. However, if he is unsuccessful, he could be sentenced to up to four years in prison, Kloch said. Claud also was ordered to make restitution and to abide by curfews set by probation and his mother, who he lives with.


Sardinia motorcyclist, hurt in crash, faces multiple charges

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A 43-year-old Sardinia motorcyclist who was injured in a three-vehicle crash at about 5 p.m. Friday on Genesee Road in Sardinia faces charges of driving while intoxicated and aggravated unlicensed driving.

Thomas J. Jett was flown to Erie County Medical Center by Mercy Flight for treatment of what Erie County sheriff’s deputies described as multiple injuries.

Deputies said Jett was westbound on Genesee Road when he struck the back of a pickup truck operated by Junior Meyers, 86, of Sardinia. Jett’s motorcycle then veered into the eastbound lane and struck a pickup truck driven by Christopher Roche, 49, of Holland. Jett was then ejected from his motorcycle, landing on the road.

The sheriff’s office said Jett’s driver’s license has been revoked for over 18 years because of a 1995 DWI conviction in the Town of Concord. His driver’s license also has been suspended four times for other offenses.

UB student faces arson, drug charges in dorm fire

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A University at Buffalo student faces arson and drug charges after police said he set himself on fire after dropping a butane torch while smoking marijuana from a bong in his North Campus dorm room Thursday evening.

Alec Seidenberg, 19, of Ardsley, Westchester County, suffered burns on his feet and face and was taken to Erie County Medical Center for treatment.

“Apparently he was done smoking, and dropped the butane torch on the floor,” said UB Police Chief Gerald W. Schoenle Jr. “It started him on fire. He brushed the fire off himself and the room caught fire.”

A woman identified as Seidenberg’s girlfriend also suffered minor burns, and was treated and released from ECMC.

The fire was reported at 6:17 p.m. in Seidenberg’s fourth-floor room at Spaulding Quad Building 1, police said.

Damage has been estimated at $250,000, police said.

Campus police arriving on the scene found a working fire with alarms sounding and about 200 students evacuating seven buildings, Schoenle said.

Students were allowed to return to their rooms at 9:30 p.m. Nineteen students who lived on the fourth floor of Spaulding Quad Building 1 are temporarily being housed in local hotels, said Schoenle.

A fourth-floor hallway in Building 1 suffered some smoke damage, police said. The alarms triggered by the fire automatically shut the building’s fire doors and helped confine the fire to Seidenberg’s room, Schoenle said.

“The fire was brought under control in 20 minutes,” Schoenle said.

The Getzville Fire Department responded to the alarm. Fire departments from Ellicott Creek and North Bailey served as back-up.

In addition to arson, police charged Seidenberg with possession of a small amount of marijuana and other charges.



email: jkwiatkowski@buffnews.com

SUV ends up balancing on a guy wire after crash

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The car crash was so strange, police didn’t believe it until they saw it.

But there it was Friday morning, a sport utility vehicle that veered off a Lockport city road, headed for a shopping plaza – and went up a telephone pole’s guy wires.

And the unconscious driver was still in the vehicle.

“We definitely don’t see something like that every day,” said Lockport Fire Capt. Patrick Brady. “The picture speaks for itself.”

Images show the vehicle balancing on the guy wires of the telephone pole, wheels still spinning, its front end completely lifted off the ground at the intersection of Lincoln Avenue and Davison Road.

First responders weren’t quite sure what to do, and the electric company even considered bringing in a crane to lift the vehicle back to the ground.

But fearing that the driver was in danger, the officers used a ladder to climb up into the car, where they saw the driver unconscious. She had passed out after suffering a seizure.

The Lockport woman, whom police declined to identify, was rushed to Eastern Niagara Hospital, Lockport, with minor injuries.

But then came the task of unhitching her vehicle from the wires – with the wheels still spinning.

“It was perfectly balanced on the wires,” said Assistant Chief Michael Seeloff. “Lucky enough, it was front-wheel drive.”

Police wedged pieces of wood on either side of the back tires to stabilize it before calling in a tow truck to ease the vehicle down.

“It came off the same as it went on,” said Brady. “Straight as an arrow, right off the guy wire, and it did almost no damage to the vehicle.”

The incident had almost the entire department amazed.

“I bet if you tried that 25 or 30 times, you wouldn’t get it that way again,” Brady said. “After 20-plus years on the job, I’ve never seen that particular one before. Just an oddity.”



email: cspecht@buffnews.com

Man, 21, stabbed twice in early-morning fracas on East Side

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Buffalo police are looking for suspects in the stabbing of a man early Saturday.

Police said Marcel Woods, 21, told them he was beaten and stabbed by several men in a parking lot near French and Moselle streets shortly after midnight. Police said Woods was treated in Erie County Medical Center for two stab wounds to his left shoulder.

Stolen car, wallet recovered at scene of Falls shooting

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NIAGARA FALLS – Police said a stolen car was left behind at the scene of a shooting late Friday in the 2400 block of Grand Avenue.

Investigators believe no one was injured.

Shortly after 11 a.m. police responding to the report of gunfire in an alley discovered an unregistered black Mercedes and a stolen silver Ford Focus. Police said they also recovered two baseball caps, a wallet containing identification, car keys and five spent shell casings.

An investigatiion is under way.

Gunshot tears through bed headboard of sleeping Falls couple

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NIAGARA FALLS – A Seneca Avenue couple escaped injury early Friday when a gunshot fired through their bedroom window tore through the headboard of the bed where they slept and lodged in a wall.

Police said the shooting, which occurred about 2:30 a.m., caused more than $500 in damage. Further information was unavailable.

LaSalle car “popper” makes $6,000 haul with garage door opener

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NIAGARA FALLS - Police said a thief who broke into a LaSalle man’s work van overnight Friday activated a garage door opener to make off with $6,000 in property.

Police said the door locks of the van, parked on 75th Street, were “popped” between 11 p.m. Friday and 7:30 a.m. Saturday. Among items stolen were hand and and power tools, saws, a snowblower, lawnmower, power washer and chain-saw.

Residents of Kenfield home robbed at gunpoint

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Two people were robbed at gunpoint in their Kenfield home, Buffalo police said Saturday.

The home invasion occurred about 11:45 p.m. Friday on Courtland Avenue, which runs off East Delavan Avenue.

Two men crashed through the door, forced the two occupants to the floor and put a gun to the back of their heads, according to police.

Money, a wallet, cellphone and keys were taken from one of the victims, and a cel phone and a pouch full of medication from the other, police said.

No date in sight for third Robie Drake murder trial

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LOCKPORT – The prosecution is trying to get rid of the defense attorneys.

The defense is trying to get rid of the judge.

And Robie J. Drake remains in his cell in the Niagara County Jail, awaiting a third attempt to convince a jury he didn’t mean to kill two of his fellow North Tonawanda High School students in 1981.

Drake, now 48, was 17 when he killed Amy Smith, 16, and her boyfriend, Steven Rosenthal, 18, as they kissed in Rosenthal’s rusty 1969 Chevrolet Nova in a dark factory parking lot off River Road in North Tonawanda on the night of Dec. 5, 1981.

Drake testified that, armed with a rifle, he went out looking for abandoned cars to vandalize, and he didn’t realize the Nova was occupied until it was too late.

However, juries in 1982 and 2010 rejected that version of events, concluding that Drake was close enough to see the victims and convicting him of two counts of second-degree murder.

As the third trial, ordered by an appellate court, is awaited, Assistant Public Defenders Christopher A. Privateer and Joseph G. Frazier are trying to get State Supreme Court Justice Richard C. Kloch Sr. to recuse himself from the case, which he presided over in 2010.

They raised many objections to Kloch’s continuing to handle the case, ranging from negative statements he made about Drake’s conduct at sentencing in 2010 to Kloch’s past employment as North Tonawanda city attorney. Also, the defense notes, Kloch’s law clerk, Ronald J. Winter, was an assistant district attorney. However, he was hired after the first trial and left before the second trial, said Assistant District Attorney Thomas H. Brandt.

Brandt argued that nothing Kloch or Winter has ever said or done constitutes a reason for them to leave the case.

Brandt, who prosecuted Drake in the 2010 trial, said the Public Defender’s Office should be taken off the case because two prosecution witnesses were represented by public defenders in their own criminal cases more than 20 years after the killings.

This creates a conflict of interest for the whole public defender staff, he argues. The matter didn’t come up before because Drake had private attorneys in his previous trials.

All of these issues are scheduled to be argued in person before Kloch on May 23. No date for the third trial has been set.The killings of the two teens in 1981 shocked the region.

Amy Smith was shot twice in the back of the head. Steven Rosenthal was shot 14 times and also was stabbed in the chest by Drake after the shooting.

Drake was arrested after driving the Nova to a nearby landfill, where police said they caught him trying to stuff Smith’s nude body into the trunk of the car.

Investigators noticed that every bullet Drake fired went through the passenger side window; not one struck a door or fender. And a forensic report concluded that the angle of impact of the bullets changed slightly during the attack, indicating Drake was walking toward the car as he fired.

The two juries that have heard the case had the option of convicting Drake of reckless manslaughter instead of murder, and they declined to do so.

A second-degree manslaughter conviction now would be a ticket home for Drake, who has long since served enough time to cover the 30-year maximum sentence for two counts of that crime.

After his 1982 conviction, Drake was sentenced by Niagara County Judge Aldo L. DiFlorio to 40 years to life. When that conviction was set aside by a federal court in 2009, Drake received a second trial, held in March 2010 before State Supreme Court Justice Richard C. Kloch Sr.

The result was the same as in 1982 except for the sentence. Kloch gave Drake 50 years to life in prison.

The first conviction was thrown out because of prosecutorial misconduct. Then-Niagara County District Attorney Peter L. Broderick Sr. used a bogus expert witness who exaggerated his credentials and sought to show Drake suffered from “picquerism,” a purported mental disorder that gives a person sexual pleasure from shooting or stabbing someone.

The U.S. Second Circuit Court of Appeals in New York City called that “quackery” and concluded that the purported expert committed perjury with Broderick’s knowledge.

The Appellate Division of State Supreme Court threw out Drake’s second conviction in April 2012 because of Kloch’s decision to allow the prosecution to introduce evidence of a bite mark on Smith’s breast, allegedly inflicted after her death. Drake was never charged with any sex crime, so the evidence was both irrelevant and prejudicial, the Rochester-based court found.

Another point raised by the Appellate Division pertained to a note from the jury, asking what would happen if they reached a verdict on one victim’s death but were divided regarding the other victim.

The appellate panel said that note never was shared with the attorneys, but its contents were known well enough that The Buffalo News reported them the next morning. However, a report of the note is absent from the stenographic record.

Brandt cited that article in his written argument to the court, submitted April 26. He also said that he and the defense attorney in the 2010 trial, Andrew C. LoTempio, were personally told by Kloch what was in the note.



email: tprohaska@buffnews.com

Wilson high student gets scholarship in memory of domestic violence victim

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LOCKPORT – Brianna O’Donnell, a Wilson High School senior, has been awarded a $250 scholarship by the Victim Assistance Unit of the Niagara County Sheriff’s Office, Sheriff James Voutour told The Buffalo News.

He said the scholarship money was donated by a former Niagara County resident in memory of the man’s daughter, who recently passed away and had been a victim of domestic violence. The sheriff said the donor wished to remain anonymous.

The Sheriff’s Office took part in ceremonies commemorating National Crime Victims’ Rights Week, which was observed April 21 to 27 this year.

The sheriff said nationwide ceremonies were conducted to acknowledge the 21 million Americans directly harmed by crime each year and to call attention to the impact crime has on the loved ones of victims. The week also celebrated the hard work of victim service providers who care for the needs of crime victims.

Voutour said he and his entire office remain committed to respecting and enforcing victims’ right and addressing their needs.

The sheriff said Niagara County crime victims or residents who know of crime victims can contact his Victim Assistance Unit at 438-3306.

Party lands ex-UB instructor in legal trouble

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Christmas parties are notorious for bringing out embarrassing behavior from some people.

But the office holiday party a group of dental school employees held at a Tonawanda tavern in 2010 had all the makings of a career-threatening debacle.

Bosses downed shots of liquor. A clerk was on her boss’s lap. The banter among some of the University at Buffalo employees was tinged with sexual innuendo. And then an associate dean tried to goad two women clerks into kissing each other.

One of the clerks has since filed a sexual harassment lawsuit in federal court.

And this holiday party has the rare distinction of being argued over in four levels of courts.

In the federal lawsuit, Lesley Shiner of Amherst accused Dr. Jude A. Fabiano of making unwelcome sexual advances toward her at the party and creating a hostile work environment. Fabiano was an associate dean of clinical affairs at the School of Dental Medicine at the time of the party, but he no longer works there. Shiner’s federal lawsuit also named the university as a defendant.

Fabiano was also prosecuted in Town of Tonawanda court on misdemeanor and violation charges. He successfully appealed the verdict in Erie County Court and was granted a new trial. And a State Supreme Court justice recently ordered the state to pay the former dean’s legal defense costs in the federal lawsuit.

An attorney for Fabiano said Fabiano has reached a settlement with Shiner in the federal case, but the agreement still must be drafted and then submitted to the court for approval. It is not clear who would pay the settlement.

Court filings, including partygoers’ statements and transcripts of interrogations, lay out what happened at the party.

Four partygoers said they watched and heard Fabiano encourage Shiner and the other clerk to kiss. Five others said they did not hear what he said but recalled seeing him put his arms around their necks and pull them together.

That was the first of four unpleasant encounters with Fabiano at the party that Shiner cited in her lawsuit.

“I went home and cried,” Shiner said in a statement to the Town of Tonawanda Police Department.

Several who attended the party and provided statements to the university acknowledged the unbecoming behavior.

“Everyone was drinking,” one clinical worker recalled. “I saw people sitting on people’s laps and touching each other. It was a weird party.”

“He was touchy. You could tell he had too many drinks,” the worker said of Fabiano.

A graduate student who attended said Shiner “seemed like she was joking around, but toward the end, she seemed like she’d had enough.”

Another clerk recalled Fabiano leaving his seat to approach Shiner and the other clerk.

“He was kind of on them, sort of sharing their seat, on their lap,” according to the clerk’s statement. “I saw Lesley’s face. She was laughing, but I knew it wasn’t from anything funny. Lesley was kind of trapped in a corner.”

One of Shiner’s bosses said he saw Shiner sit on a manager’s lap and “at some point after she got up from [his lap], she sat on Dr. Fabiano.”Another employee recalled laughter from Fabiano and the two clerks he grabbed.

“Everybody was laughing and having a good time. I know that there is some inappropriateness,” the employee said.

The State Attorney General’s Office has resisted paying for Fabiano’s defense in federal court. What happened at the tavern occurred outside the scope of his state university post, according to the state office.

Fabiano was “sued as an alleged intoxicated partygoer, based on improper statements, touching and harassment rather than as a professor or dean,” the Attorney General’s Office said in a court filing.

Fabiano maintained in his court papers that attending the party was part of his work. The university sponsored the party and the UB Foundation paid for it, he said.

Though the party was held off-campus with alcohol served, “this was the normal course for such parties,” Fabiano said in an affidavit.

“I saw it as part of my role at the dental school to socialize with staff members at these department parties,” Fabiano said. “The actions allegedly taken by me and others at the party, including the plaintiff, may have been silly, boorish or socially inappropriate at times, but they were part of the socializing which occurred at the party.”

Fabiano, 62, began working at the university in 1980 as a clinical instructor. He earned a promotion in 1985 and became full time in 1999.

“I categorically deny intending to discriminate against the plaintiff based on her sex,” he said in an affidavit. “I further categorically deny intending and/or creating a hostile work environment.”

State Supreme Court Justice John F. O’Donnell granted Fabiano’s petition to make the state cover his legal defense costs in the federal suit.

The State Attorney General’s Office has filed notice it will appeal O’Donnell’s order at the state Appellate Division.

District Judge Richard R. Arcara in November denied UB’s motion to dismiss Shiner’s federal lawsuit.Shiner, 64, of East Amherst, has worked as a clerk for the dental school’s instrument management services for 14 years.

In her federal lawsuit, she recounted hearing “blatantly inappropriate sexual remarks” at office holiday parties in 2008 and 2009.

Shiner attended the Dec. 21, 2010, party anyway, held between 11 a.m. and 3 p.m. at Neighbor’s Pub on Kenmore Avenue in Tonawanda.

She sat next to Fabiano and a clinical operations manager, both of whom were drinking alcohol and passing around a bottle of Crown Royal whiskey to the staff, according to her lawsuit.

She said Fabiano grabbed her and another clerk by their necks, in front of the others, calling them the “hottest” women at the party and urging “girl-on-girl” action, according to her lawsuit.

“He was holding my head tightly and slurring his words, telling us we were the hottest girls there,” she said in a police statement. “He kept saying he wanted the three of us to be together.”

The other clerk confirmed Shiner’s version.

“Dr. Fabiano came over and put his arms around us,” the clerk said in a statement to the university. “He made comments that we were both beautiful and that he wanted to see the two of us kiss.”

“He pushed our heads together. It did hurt a little,” according to her statement. “Dr. Fabiano did kiss my ear. I don’t know if it was tongue or slobber. My ear was wet.”

Shiner said Fabiano’s behavior “badly traumatized” her, according to her lawsuit.

Fabiano stuck his tongue in her ear and drooled, she said in her lawsuit.

After trying to get the two clerks to kiss, Fabiano got up from his seat and chased Shiner around the table while co-workers cheered him on, Shiner said in her lawsuit. When he caught up to her, he told her, “I want to meet you somewhere,” she said in her complaint.

Later at the party, he grabbed her and squeezed her ribs, she said.

Shiner said she mouthed the words “Please help me” to another partygoer, who came over and pulled her away from him, she said.

The clerk who is not suing said Fabiano apologized to her a couple of weeks after the party.

“He said he was completely embarrassed and did not realize that he did that,” the clerk said.

Fabiano’s behavior at the party made her uncomfortable, she said.

“It was completely out of character,” she said in her statement. “And I completely accepted Dr. Fabiano’s apology because I’ve never seen him behave like this before.”The day after the party, Shiner told a supervisor – her boss’ boss – that she wanted an apology. But the supervisor said it would not happen because Fabiano “did not remember anything,” according to Shiner’s police statement.

The supervisor denied to a university investigator that Shiner asked for an apology or that he told her she would not get one.

When questioned by the university, the supervisor said he talked to three women at the party who he thought might have been offended. Two of them laughed it off.

“Lesley seemed mildly upset but not grievously upset,” the supervisor said.

“She said she didn’t want anyone to know and that she didn’t want to embarrass Dr. Fabiano or his family.”

A couple of weeks after the party, however, Shiner told the supervisor she did not feel safe at work.

Then Shiner filed a complaint with the university’s employee relations office, according to her lawsuit.

In early March, about two months after the party, the university sent Fabiano a letter, advising him he was being suspended without pay because of the incidents at the holiday party. The dean of the dental school also informed him his current term appointment would end the following March, according to the lawsuit.

A second letter to Fabiano from the university’s employee relations office stated he engaged in “unwelcome and offensive behavior.”Fabiano was charged in Town of Tonawanda Court with forcible touching and unlawful imprisonment, both misdemeanors, and harassment, a violation.

Town Justice Daniel T. Cavarello granted defense attorney Kevin Spitler’s motion to dismiss the unlawful imprisonment charge. Cavarello also acquitted Fabiano of forcible touching. The judge convicted him of harassment and sentenced him to a conditional discharge.

Fabiano appealed the conviction.

Attorney Lawrence J. Vilardo, who handled his appeal, argued that the town judge erred in admitting evidence about the “sexually charged atmosphere” at the dental school while excluding evidence of the Amherst woman’s bias and motive to lie.

At the trial, Spitler tried to elicit statements from two witnesses that the clerk was using the sexual harassment claim “as her ticket out of the job” she did not like.

“The testimony should not have been disallowed, since it essentially denied the defendant the right to present his case,” said Erie County Judge Michael L. D’Amico, who ordered a new trial in his April 4 decision.



email: plakamp@buffnews.com

Coke, alcohol land driver in jail

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A 33-year-old Buffalo man was arrested Saturday night for possession of cocaine after Erie County sheriff’s deputies stopped his vehicle at 9 p.m. for erratic driving on Broadway near Rother Avenue.

Patrick J. Downey was charged with felony cocaine possession, aggravated driving while intoxicated, aggravated unlicensed operation of a vehicle and multiple traffic infractions. His license to drive had three current suspensions in effect, according to the sheriff’s deputies, and a breath test indicated his blood alcohol content was .18 percent – more than twice the legal limit.

Downey possessed about 2 grams of cocaine and admitted he snorted cocaine while he was driving, sheriff’s deputies reported.

He was taken to the Erie County Holding Center to await arraignment in City Court.

Driver charged with DWI after walking from crash

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An Ellicottville man was arrested Saturday morning for driving while intoxicated after a one-car accident on Route 430 in the Town of Ellery, Chautauqua County sheriff’s deputies reported.

Meryl A. Roush, 28, was located walking away from his car before being charged with DWI, according to sheriff’s deputies.

Junior firefighter, 17, dies when car hits tree

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A junior firefighter who was beloved by fellow volunteers at the Harris Hill Fire Company was killed Sunday morning in a one-vehicle crash in Clarence.

Authorities said Alexander E. Hemline, 17, of Clarence, died hours after his northbound Jeep struck a tree along Kraus Road.

Erie County Sheriff’s deputies were trying late Sunday to determine what caused Hemline, a student at Clarence High School, to lose control of his vehicle at about 9:45 a.m.

Hemline was a helpful and enthusiastic junior firefighter with the Harris Hill company, said the volunteer company’s chief, Nick Radlich.

“Alex was a wonderful kid,” Radlich said in an interview Sunday night. “He was extremely helpful, always willing to help out the guys in any way he could. He’s been with us for about a year and a half. He was recruited by one of the ladies in our ladies auxiliary who has known him since he was a baby.”

As a junior firefighter, Hemline could fight fires and take part in all the same activities as full-fledged firefighters, except he was restricted from going into a burning building, the chief said.

After the crash Sunday morning, Hemline was rushed by Mercy Flight to the Erie County Medical Center in Buffalo, where he was pronounced dead.

Radlich said he was at the hospital with Hemline’s family.

“We’re all grieving. He was a brother firefighter,” said Radlich, whose fire company has about 35 members.

The death prompted a number of Facebook posts about the popular teen.

“One of the hardest-working kids I’ve ever had the pleasure to work with,” one teacher wrote. “Your sweet smile and innocence will be missed. Rest in peace, little Alex.”



email: dherbeck@buffnews.com

Two suspects nabbed after gas-station robbery in Lockport

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Three police agencies investigating a gas-station robbery in the Town of Lockport late Sunday teamed up to arrest two suspects who also were accused of having a small amount of crack cocaine on them, State Police at Lockport reported.

One man entered the Sunoco station at Transit Road and Robinson Road and stole an undetermined amount of cash while threatening that he had a knife, police said. The thief fled the scene with another suspect who was waiting outside in a vehicle.

Armed with a description of one suspect and the vehicle, Lockport police and Niagara County sheriff’s deputies stopped a vehicle on Lincoln Avenue in Lockport. Both suspects then were turned over to State Police.

Troopers charged Danny P. Merritt, 33, of Union Street, Lockport, and Glenn L. Helwig, 63, of Garden Street, Lockport, with first-degree robbery and criminal possession of a controlled substance, according to police reports.

Mom arrested after toddler is found roaming street

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A 21-year-old mother from Cattaraugus was arrested Sunday and accused of allowing her 2-year-old son to walk around by himself for more than 30 minutes on Main Street in the village, Cattaraugus County sheriff’s officials said.

Deputies charged Brandi L. Calkins, of Main Street, with endangering the welfare of a child after the incident that started at 9:25 a.m. Sunday.

Driver charged with being three times over legal alcohol limit

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State Police at Jamestown have arrested a Randolph man for aggravated driving while intoxicated after accusing him of having a blood-alchol level more than three times the legal limit.

State police officials said Kasey Brown, age 29, of Torrence Road in the Town of Randolph, registered a blood-alcohol content of 0.27 percent.

Trooper Joseph H. Krywalski stopped Brown’s vehicle Sunday for failing to keep right on Route 241 in the Town of Randolph.

Son sought in death of West Seneca woman

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As West Seneca police investigated the suspicious death of Carol Quinn in her West Seneca apartment Saturday afternoon, one of her sons arrived for a visit, even though a court order of protection had been placed against him for allegedly harassing her a week earlier, police said.

Primitivo Cruz, 45, cooperated with police and answered their questions. He then left the Burch Avenue apartment building.

But Monday, he was described as “a person of interest” in his 77-year-old mother's death, which now has been labeled a homicide, following an autopsy in the Erie County Medical Examiner's Office.

“We didn't know what we had at the time,” West Seneca Police Chief Daniel M. Denz said Monday. “The son walked up the street after the first officers arrived at the scene. He was briefly interviewed and released. Since then, some things have come to light. We want to ask him some questions about items at the scene and whether anything is missing or if he would know a motive.”

Shortly after 3 p.m. Saturday, police responded to Quinn's first-floor apartment in a two-story brick building to check on her welfare. Relatives in Pennsylvania requested the check because they had been unable to reach her for a couple of days.

When Quinn did not answer the door, officers found another way into the locked residence and discovered the slain woman, Denz said in appealing for the public's assistance in locating Cruz. Authorities have said the woman was found in the living room.

A retired Buffalo school teacher's aide, Quinn was seen as a grandmother figure and neighbor who often sat outside in a wooden chair with her little white dog, Sabre, at her feet. She recently had opened her modest home to Cruz, “a drifter” who lived with her on and off, officials said.

But about a week ago, Quinn apparently could no longer tolerate her son's behavior. She called the police for help.

“He was arrested for harassment and removed from the scene,” Denz said. “There was an argument. It was minor in nature. An order of protection was issued.”

Cruz, who goes by the nicknames “Primo” and “Chico,” went to live with friends on the Kenmore-North Buffalo border, but he has since moved out, and police have been unable to locate him.

In the days after West Seneca police arrested Cruz, Quinn told a young neighbor who regarded her as a grandmother what had happened.

“Do you know why the police were here?” Quinn asked the young neighbor.

“No, why?” the boy answered.

“Because my son was drunk. He was loud and hiding in the basement,” Quinn responded, according to the boy's mother.

Police have not released a specific cause of death.

“At this point, we're looking at multiple causes,” said Capt. Michael Boehringer, West Seneca's chief of detectives. There is no evidence of a shooting, but police would not say anything more about the possible cause of death.

Besides losing their friend, neighbors talked about the shock of an apparent homicide in a neighborhood where the worst thing happening usually is somebody speeding down the street.

“This is just crazy,” neighbor Paul Schloerb said. “It's really a quiet neighborhood. Nothing like this happens here. ... If there's a maniac out there, I'd like to see him caught.”

Alishia Weikle, who lived in the other first-floor apartment across from Quinn's, said she called her “the gatekeeper” of their apartment building.

“She'd lived in each of the four apartments at one time or another. She knew everything that was going on. I would take her shopping to Tops, and my prize would be a can of Pepsi,” Weikle said. “When my boyfriend texted me that she was dead, I didn't believe him. I'm still in shock.”

A widow, Quinn also has a daughter, Cindy, and two other sons, Dave and Jim, according to Brian Russer, a close family friend who accompanied relatives to the West Seneca police station Monday.

“It's horrible for the family,” Russer said. “She was a phenomenal woman.”

When one of her sons arrived at her West Seneca apartment Saturday night and learned she had been found dead under suspicious circumstances, he tore off his muscle shirt and began a very public display of grief.

“Somebody's killed my mother! Somebody's killed my mother!” the son cried as neighbors watched.

Neighbors who gathered near the apartment building throughout the day Monday said it just didn't seem right that Quinn was missing from her chair.

“The chair is like a symbol of what used to be,” neighbor Debbie Bald said. “She should be sitting in it. They better leave that chair there.”

Anyone with information on Cruz's whereabouts or Quinn's death is asked to call the West Seneca Detective Bureau at 674-3154 or the Police Department's main number, 674-2280.



email: lmichel@buffnews.com and gwarner@buffnews.com

Fire breaks out at West Street Elementary School in Sanborn

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SANBORN – Students at West Street Elementary School are headed home early today after a fire broke out at the school this morning.

Students were taken to Niagara-Wheatfield High School and were allowed to be picked up by parents beginning at 11 a.m.

No injuries were reported, according to the district.

No further details about the blaze were immediately available.
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