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Arrest made on charges of harassment, obstruction

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A 24-year-old Langmeyer Avenue man was arrested on charges of harassment and obstruction Sunday evening after he reportedly became verbally abusive to neighbors in a property dispute and then refused to cooperate with police called to the scene.

Alonzo Holloway was charged with second-degree harassment and obstructing governmental administration at about 8:45 p.m.


Woman takes plea deal in $534,000 IRS scheme

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A Buffalo woman admitted Monday to taking part in a scheme that cheated the Internal Revenue Service out of $534,000.

Destinee McBride, 22, one of five people charged in the case, pleaded guilty to wire fraud affecting a financial institution and now faces up to 51 months in federal prison.

McBride was part of a scheme that revolved around the filing of 88 false tax returns and fraudulent refunds that were then placed on prepaid debit cards, Assistant U.S. Attorney Trini E. Ross said.

“She was involved in an unfortunate situation in which she was taken advantage of,” said Fonda D. Kubiak, a federal public defender.

McBride is the second defendant to take a plea deal in the case. The three other defendants are Clifton Jackson, who is accused of being the ring leader of the scheme, as well as Sheri L. Becirovic and Amber Pawlak, all of Buffalo.

The case is the result of an investigation by the Criminal Investigation Division of the IRS and the United States Postal Inspection Service.

Deputies make two DWI arrests

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The Erie County Sheriff’s deputies reported two DWI arrests late Tuesday and early Wednesday.

Daniel Roberts, 32, of Elma was charged with felony DWI according to deputies responding to a complaint shortly after 10 p.m. Tuesday on North Blossom Road in the Town of Elma.

Deputies Richard O’Neil and John Szczepanski reported Roberts to be in an intoxicated state with his vehicle on North Blossom. Roberts, who was taken into custody after a brief scuffle, refused a chemical breath test and was charged with felony DWI because of a prior conviction in October 2005, deputies said.

Criminal charges are pending against Roberts, who also faces numerous vehicle and traffic charges.

Roberts was taken to Elma Town Court where he was arraigned and remanded to the Erie County Holding Center, deputies said.

Deputies on patrol around 12:30 a.m. Wednesday in the Town of Newstead said they stopped a car on Main Street after receiving a complaint the vehicle was being operated in a reckless fashion.

Deputy Gene Nati assisted by Akron police identified the driver as Tatiana Makarevic, 45, of the Town of Alabama.

Makarevic was taken into custody after failing field sobriety tests, reported deputies, who took her to the Clarence substation where a chemical breath test was administered.

Makarevic’s BAC was determined to be .17 percent and she was charged with DWI.

Makarevic was released to a third party and was issued an appearance ticket returnable to the Town of Newstead Court.

email: jkwiatkowski@buffnews.com

Lawnmower driver accused of DWI in Genesee County

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A 26-year-old man on a lawnmower was arrested late Tuesday in the Town of Oakfield and charged with DWI, reported the Genesee County Sheriff’s Office.

Scott McKenzie of South Main Street was stopped at 11:16 p.m. while riding a 2011 Troy-Bilt lawnmower on North Main Street, according to a Genesee County sheriff’s dispatcher.

Deputy Joseph Corona charged McKenzie with DWI, driving while impaired by drugs and unlawful possession of marijuana, according to the arrest report.

email: jkwiatkowski@buffnews.com

Lancaster man gets probation in crash that killed Depew High senior

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A Lancaster man who said he was asleep at the wheel when his sport utility vehicle struck and killed a Depew teenager last summer at a bus stop was sentenced today to probation for one year.

Today’s outcome was expected. Radames Candelaria, 35, had earlier received in Depew Village Court a sentencing commitment of probation for his guilty plea to the misdemeanor reckless driving charge.

The crash killed 18-year-old Ashley Creighton, a Depew High School senior. She was waiting for a bus on the north side of Broadway near South Kokomo Street.

Candelaria told police he lost control of his SUV shortly after 7 a.m. on July 30. The vehicle veered off Broadway, hit the young woman, and then struck Penora’s Pizza on the other side of the road, causing considerable damage to the building.

He said he fell asleep on his way home from work after an 11 and 1/2-hour overnight shift.

Candelaria apologized to Creighton’s legal guardian in court.

Depew Village Justice Gordon Willis sentenced Candelaria. The probationary term includes stipulations that he not be around anyone with alcohol or drugs and not attend parties.

The most jail time Candelaria could have faced was 30 days, said Kelley A. Omel, chief of the Erie County District Attorney’s Office Vehicular Crimes Bureau.

“It’s tragic,” Omel said of the case. “It’s the judge’s decision, and I certainly respect the judge’s decision.”

Gail Thompson, Creighton’s legal guardian, had mixed emotions following the sentencing.

“Some of me doesn’t think it’s right because you hit somebody and you just get probation. But I guess that’s the way the law is,” she told The Buffalo News. “In my head, I want to hate him. But in my heart, I want to forgive him, so I can move on from this.”

In addition to probation, Candelaria faces fines. He must also attend a state Department of Motor Vehicles hearing in June regarding the status of his driver’s license.

Thompson wants his license revoked.

Candelaria has a lengthy record of convictions for minor criminal offenses.

Erie County District Attorney Frank A. Sedita III submitted evidence in the case to a grand jury. But the grand jurors did not indict on a more serious charge, so the case was sent back to Depew Village Court.

Two plead guilty to grand larceny charges in extortion scheme

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An extortion scheme that preyed on men seeking dates through an adult chat line unraveled when one of the men alerted police that the two people who orchestrated the crime kept demanding more money, an Erie County prosecutor said Wednesday.

“The victim alerted police when he continued to be contacted,” Assistant District Attorney Ashley Morgan said. “They got too greedy.”

Amber Kwasniewski, 25, of Massachusetts Avenue, recently pleaded guilty in Erie County Court to four counts of fourth-degree grand larceny and Robert Wozniak, 59, of Poinciana Parkway, Cheektowaga, pleaded guilty to three counts of the same charge.

The District Attorney’s Office had enough evidence to pursue the felony charges in four incidents.

Kwasniewski solicited men for sexual encounters in exchange for money after first talking to them on a chat line between January and March. In three cases, Wozniak drove Kwasniewski to where she and the men had agreed to meet.

In one case, Kwasniewski acted alone.

During two of the four encounters, Kwasniewski had sex with the men, Morgan said.

Kwasniewski and Wozniak then demanded money from the men by falsely claiming to be undercover police officers or claiming Kwasniewski was a juvenile who intended to file statutory rape charges, according to the District Attorney’s Office.

Wozniak would use what West Seneca detectives described as his “imposing size” to either make threats of being a police undercover officer or an angry father of the supposedly “underaged” Kwasniewski.

The two had the victims’ contact information from the chat line, and they called the men repeatedly demanding more money, even after receiving money initially.

They typically demanded between $200 and $500, and they got the money, Morgan said.

In February, one of the men talked to police about what happened to him.

“This came down to a victim brave enough to come forward,” Morgan said.

Another man also cooperated with authorities, but two others refused to do so.

“People were panicking because they already gave them money,” Morgan said.

Prosecutors relied on statements and other evidence in the other cases in which the two men did not cooperate.

To Kwasniewski and Wozniak, who themselves met through the chat line, the men who met her seemed like ideal extortion targets. The two figured the men would be too afraid to alert police and prosecutors because of their own behavior, Morgan said. None of the men who were targeted in the extortion scheme face any criminal charges, she said.

Some of the men targeted by the pair live in Buffalo, West Seneca and the Town of Boston.

Wozniak and Kwasniewski were arrested in March following a two-month investigation by West Seneca police and state police.

Kwasniewski, who has a prior felony conviction, faces up to 16 years in prison when sentenced June 6 by Erie County Judge Michael D’Amico. Wozniak faces up to 12 years.



email: plakamp@buffnews.com

Public help sought in search for Buffalo bank robber

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Buffalo police today called for public help in locating a “person of interest” they want to talk to concerning the robbery of the M&T Bank branch May 6 in the 400 block of William Street.

The person was identified as Decarrio Sanders, 17, of Buffalo. He is suspected of handing a teller a note and then making off with an undisclosed amount of money.

Police believe Decarrio, who is black and about six feet, two inches tall and about 185 pounds, is armed. Anyone with information regarding his whereabouts is asked to call 911 immediately.

Falls roofer admits defrauding now-destitute elderly man out of $600,000

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LOCKPORT – A high-rolling roofer pleaded guilty Wednesday to defrauding a retired Lewiston businessman out of more than $600,000 over a six-year period and squandering it at Seneca Niagara Casino.

David L. Marsh, 52, of 10th Street, Niagara Falls, avoided prison in a plea deal that calls for him to make monthly payments to the now-destitute 73-year-old victim.

“He pulled on the heartstrings of a good, generous elderly victim and destroyed him emotionally and financially,” Assistant District Attorney Heather A. DeCastro said.

The deal also includes an agreement that Marsh’s fiancée, Tennille Pelfrey, 37, will be allowed to plead guilty to a misdemeanor in Lewiston Town Court.

DeCastro said Pelfrey allegedly forged what appeared to be legal documents that were used to convince the victim that Marsh’s reasons for needing money were honest.

When Niagara County Judge Sara Sheldon Farkas asked Marsh what he did with the money he stole, Marsh replied, “It was invested in a business.”

The judge pointed out that Marsh was a member of the “Chairman’s Club” at the Niagara Falls casino. DeCastro called it the “Biggest Losers Club.”

“I’m not a loser,” Marsh said.

“Oh, you only win,” Farkas said sarcastically.

“Everybody loses,” Marsh conceded.

According to the casino website, it takes $136,000 in wagers within six months to qualify for the Chairman’s Club. Seneca Gaming spokesman Tony Astran said the amount could vary depending on the games played and the player’s level of success.

Marsh, owner of D&L Roofing, Siding and Home Improvement, got to know the victim when he did work on his house in 2006, DeCastro said.

But soon, Marsh was tapping the till for more than what the retired business owner owed for home improvements. It was “one fabrication after another,” DeCastro said, citing information from a yearlong probe by Patrick G. Weidel of the Niagara County Sheriff’s Office.

The forged papers used to convince the victim of the need for help for the Marsh family included bail receipts, building inspection reports and a document that purported to show that Pelfrey’s children had $17 million coming from a settlement in a lead-poisoning lawsuit.

DeCastro said that was meant to “prove” that they could pay off all the money they had “borrowed” from the victim. However, publicly available court records show that Pelfrey’s lead lawsuit against a Falls landlord resulted in a settlement of $75,000, not $17 million.

After paying attorney’s fees, Pelfrey’s son ended up with $47,302 in the lead suit.

Public court files also reveal that in September 2006, the same month the thefts began, Marsh had lost a lawsuit to a Hamburg woman in a default judgment, and was ordered to pay her $192,320.

A spokeswoman for the Lipsitz Green law firm, which represented the Hamburg woman, said that it was a personal-injury action resulting from work Marsh did at the plaintiff’s home and that the damages have never been paid.

Other publicly available files show that Marsh has been hit with more than $22,000 in judgments for delinquent child support since 2001 and owes $1,558 in delinquent county property taxes on his home, dating from 2009. City and school tax figures were unavailable Wednesday.

Farkas said that in a conference with DeCastro and defense attorney Rodney A. Giove, a minimum restitution figure of $700 a month was discussed. But when Marsh talked about having a successful business, the judge reacted strongly.

“So you have a thriving business. Then you should be able to pay more than $700 a month. I’ll keep that in mind,” Farkas said.

She ordered Giove to bring a financial plan to the Aug. 1 sentencing, when Marsh is to be placed on five years’ probation for fourth-degree grand larceny.

The exact amount to be repaid is still undetermined, DeCastro said. Farkas put a limit of $800,000 on it. “You’re not going to be able to pay that in five years, but you put a small dent in it,” Farkas told Marsh. “You will owe that money until you pay it or until you die.”



email: tprohaska@buffnews.com

SUV crashes into Orchard Park spa; 2 in vehicle hurt

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A 41-year-old woman crashed her sport utility vehicle into “Spa At Falling Waters,” an Orchard Park business, and seriously injured an employee Thursday morning, authorities said.

The worker, Lisa Pivonka, 27, of Springville, was listed in stable condition late Thursday in the trauma intensive care unit at Erie County Medical Center after being removed from the building and flown by Mercy Flight to the Buffalo hospital, according to Orchard Park Police Chief Mark F. Pacholec.

Rebecca Sapio of Orchard Park was driving the SUV southbound on the 3300 block of Orchard Park Road when she veered into the northbound lane and drove into the front of the business, hitting Pivonka, before coming to a stop at about 10 a.m., police said.

Sapio was taken by ambulance to ECMC with minor injuries and was being treated in the emergency room.

Orchard Park Fire Company, Abbott Fire Company and the Erie County SMART Team responded to the scene and “extricated” Pivonka, the chief said.

An investigation into the crash is being conducted by Orchard Park police and the Erie County Sheriff’s Accident Investigation Unit.

Dehumidifier blamed for Cheektowaga house fire

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A faulty dehumidifier was blamed for a house fire this morning in Cheektowaga.

The fire at 10 Collette Ave. was reported at 9:47 a.m. According to Todd Roland, chief of the South Line Fire Co., a woman, her young son and a dog safely fled the structure.

Roland said damage was contained to the basement, where the dehumidifier was located. Damage was estimated at approximately $15,000 to $20,000.

Jamestown prisoner’s death ruled accidental; drugs blamed

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A man who died after Jamestown police used a stun gun to subdue him died as a result of acute intoxication from drugs, the Chautauqua County District Attorney’s Office announced Wednesday.

Charles A. “Ditty” Baker Jr., 30, was taken into custody shortly after noon Feb. 16, after the vehicle in which he was traveling was pulled over for a minor traffic violation and the driver gave police a false name. Baker allegedly tried to dispose of several bags of suspected cocaine while in custody.

Police said Baker was combative with officers while being booked and was subdued with a single shot from a Taser electrical stun gun.

Hours later, Baker suffered a seizure and was taken to WCA Hospital, Jamestown, where he suffered another seizure and died. An autopsy was performed two days later in the Erie County Medical Examiner’s Office.

According to District Attorney David W. Foley, the final autopsy report identified acute drug intoxication as the cause of death. The autopsy report noted “very high (toxic/lethal) levels of cocaine and the narcotic drug tramadol in the blood,” Foley said.

The death was ruled accidental, said Foley, adding that the investigation into Baker’s death has been closed.

The State Commission of Correction opened a routine, independent review of Baker’s death after being notified by Jamestown police. A commission spokeswoman said Thursday the review was continuing.



email: jhabuda@buffnews.com

Police seek Tonawanda Street bank robber

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A white male wearing a dark short sleeved shirt and a dark hat is being sought by Buffalo police for a holdup at the M&T Bank branch in the 700 block of Tonawanda Street about 11:30 a.m. today.

The suspect reportedly handed a teller a noted demanding money and fled with an undisclosed amount of cash. Buffalo police said anyone with information is asked to call or text the Confidential TIPCALL Line at (716)847-2255 or e-mail the department at www.bpdny.org

Public help sought in probe of Orchard Park home burglary

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Orchard Park police are seeking public help in their continuing investigation of the theft of $9,000 worth of jewelry during a residential burglary at 3894 Baker road sometime Wednesday morning.

Officials said the perpetrator or perpetrators gained entry by forcing open a side door. The theft included rings, chains, necklaces, bracelets, watches and earrings and a leather football signed by several of the Buffalo Bills players in the early 1990s that has personal sentimental value.

Detectives are asking anyone with information to call them at 716-662-6475, extension 4016.

Dunkirk drug court honors five graduates, others

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DUNKIRK – The Dunkirk City Treatment Court celebrated National Drug Court Month at a graduation this week in City Hall.

The ceremony honored the five graduates who completed their rigorous recovery program and recognized 16 current participants who advanced through the mandated phases.

The theme of this year’s national campaign is “Drug Courts: a Proven Budget Solution.”

Since the start of the treatment court in Dunkirk in 2002, more than 250 individuals have been enrolled in the program.

The drug court treatment model seeks to break the chains of abuse by providing a holistic team approach that enables individuals to change their lives.

Judge Walter Drag has presided over the local drug court since its beginning, offering an alternative handling of criminal cases not only for defendants in City Court but also all town and village courts in northern Chautauqua County and Chautauqua County Court in Mayville. In addition to the participants who graduated and moved into phase advancement, a “Beacon of Hope” award was presented to Marcia Kieffer, the director of the Chautauqua County Alcohol and Substance Abuse Clinic.

The award is given to a person who has shown a deep personal commitment to helping the participants work in a recovery program. A framed print of the Dunkirk Historical Lighthouse is presented to the recipient.

The guest speaker was Steven Wickmark, who is the assistant district attorney assigned to both the Dunkirk and Jamestown Treatment Court teams. He is the former commissioner of social services for Chautauqua County and has worked as an attorney on issues involving children and families for more than 28 years.

Flowers and cards were given to the four Fredonia State College students who interned in Dunkirk City Court this spring semester: Declan Gunovski, Carrie McCausland, Amanda Spagnuolo and Chrissy Woods.

“The good news is that people can and do change sometimes in spite of tremendous odds against them,” Drag said. “That is why we hold graduations and open houses to bear witness to the courage and success of those completing the program. It also offers encouragement to those in the program and to those considering it.”

2-year-old dies in backyard pool

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A two-year-old boy who wandered away from his Crane Place home drowned about 1 p.m. Thursday in a nearby backyard pool on Cowper Avenue in the Town of Tonawnanda.

Police withheld the name of the boy, but they said he was given emergency CPR when found in the pool.

The boy was pronounced dead at Kenmore Mercy Hospital.


Judge frustrated by further delay in case of strangled 5-year-old

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LOCKPORT – Niagara County Judge Matthew J. Murphy III, frustrated by the failure of an expert to deliver a report that could be used in defense of a murder suspect, began setting deadlines Thursday.

But the result was a further two-month delay in the case.

Murphy ordered the attorney for John R. Freeman Jr., the alleged killer of 5-year-old Isabella M. Tennant, to deliver a Williamsville doctor’s report to the prosecution by May 31.

The attorney, Robert Viola, has been saying since last October he intended to use a psychiatric defense for Freeman, 17, of Sixth Street, Niagara Falls.

He is accused of strangling the Cheektowaga child while he was baby-sitting her Aug. 26 in her great-grandparents’ home on Sixth Street, and dumping her body in a stolen garbage tote.

A friend who allegedly helped him do so, Tyler S. Best, 18, of Barnard Street, Buffalo, is charged with tampering with physical evidence.

The pediatric neuropsychologist Viola hired examined Freeman in February, but no report has been submitted. Two weeks ago, Viola asked for more time, but Thursday, he still had no report.

“I am extremely frustrated,” Murphy said. “I have to set deadlines to move this case along.”

After the May 31 defense doctor’s report, the prosecution will have six weeks to have its own expert interview Freeman. That report must be submitted by July 12, Murphy ordered. The sides will return to court July 26.

On that day, Best’s attorney, James J. Faso Jr., will argue his request to have the two defendants tried separately. At present, they are to be tried together starting Aug. 19.

If the cases are severed, “Our intention absolutely is to try Mr. Freeman first,” Deputy District Attorney Holly E. Sloma said.

In other cases Thursday in County Court:

• Lockport attorney David C. Douglas accepted a court assignment to defend David L. Alfonso, 28, the Lockport resident charged with attempted murder in a Dec. 31 attack on his girlfriend’s 7-year-old daughter. The Public Defender’s Office had to drop the case after learning that it had once defended a person who will be a prosecution witness against Alfonso. County Judge Sara Sheldon Farkas set a June 13 pretrial conference and a July 29 trial date.

• Also receiving a new attorney will be Jennifer R. Marchant, 23, of North Tonawanda, who stabbed her live-in boyfriend to death Feb. 6. Her previous attorneys, Glenn Pincus and Steven M. Cohen, argued that Marchant killed Ralph D. Stone Jr., 24, in self-defense. However, a grand jury charged Marchant with first-degree manslaughter. However, it appeared Thursday that Marchant’s family is financially overextended. Pincus said her parents and grandparents “are not in a position to assist her any further.”

Farkas ordered Marchant, who is free on $100,000 bail, to apply to the Public Defender’s Office and return to court Wednesday with a new lawyer.



email: tprohaska@buffnews.com

High-speed chase ends in crash, arrest of driver

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A man in his early 30s was arrested by Buffalo Police Strike Force officers when a high-speed chase ended with his crashing his pickup truck into a utility pole at Main and Utica streets after grazing an NFTA bus shortly after 6 p.m. Thursday.

Police said the chase began on the Kensington Expressway near Bailey Avenue. The suspect was not identified, but police said he was being held on a charge of criminal possession of a controlled substance and numerous vehicle and traffic violations.

Falls businessman accused of trying to murder rival in March shooting

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NIAGARA FALLS – When the president of a Niagara Falls engine parts manufacturer opened his office door at about 1:30 a.m. March 26, he encountered two men who said they were delivering a pizza.

But Sandro Viola hadn’t ordered a pizza, and when he said so, one of the men pulled a handgun and fired three shots, one of which struck Viola in the right shoulder.

Thursday, the owner of another Falls company appeared in Niagara County Court, charged with shooting Viola in the culmination of a long dispute over a machinery sale.

Timothy C. DePetris, 44, of Crestview Drive, Town of Niagara, the owner of Electro-Dyn Choke Corp., pleaded not guilty to attempted murder and assault and weapons charges.

Prosecutors and even his own defense attorney say DePetris’ problems appear to go deeper than a business dispute.

At the time of his arrest, he had been living at the Seneca Niagara Casino & Hotel, where he had racked up huge losses, and he was driving around the city with two loaded guns.

“He’s probably lost over $1 million at the casino,” defense attorney E. Earl Key said.

Deputy District Attorney Doreen M. Hoffmann said DePetris was arrested four days after the shooting, riding in a car with a loaded handgun in a homemade holster around his neck and an automatic rifle beside him.

Hoffmann said that the rifle was loaded with 31 bullets and that DePetris allegedly had 16 other ammunition magazines, six of them taped together in pairs for faster reloading.

“He has the ability to cause some serious damage to the community. He was driving around Niagara Falls with a fully automatic rifle and 200 rounds of ammunition. With one pull of the trigger, he could have taken out a lot of people,” the prosecutor told County Judge Sara Sheldon Farkas, who ordered DePetris held without bail.

Viola, 56, was released from Erie County Medical Center on the day of the shooting. A receptionist at Viola’s company, Integrated Controls USA, said Viola would not comment on the case.

Hoffmann told Farkas that for more than two months, DePetris “sat and brewed some anger” over a business deal with Integrated Controls. Apparently, the prosecutor said, DePetris was convinced he had been underpaid in a sale of machinery.

She said that last Jan. 15, DePetris allegedly went to Viola’s home. Viola wasn’t there, but DePetris grilled an adult daughter with questions that so flustered the woman that she filed a police report. Integrated Controls, according to its website, makes parts such as thermostats, coolant temperature sensors and temperature switches for auto, boat, heavy equipment and industrial engines in its Hyde Park Boulevard plant.

Electro-Dyn, whose phones have been disconnected, made engine blowers and fans, electronic coils and transformers and was located on 19th Street.

Information disclosed in court showed that DePetris allegedly had serious financial problems.

Hoffmann said DePetris was a member of the Chairman’s Club, the high-rolling VIP club at Seneca Niagara Casino. According to the casino’s website, it takes $136,000 in wagers in six months to qualify, though that can vary.

Hoffmann said that before DePetris’ arrest, he was living at the casino-hotel. Because of the weapons charges from March 30, he couldn’t go home because to do so might cause his wife to lose her license to operate a day care center. “As for living at the casino, that’s why he has no money,” Key said. Key told Farkas that DePetris has no prior criminal record, but Hoffmann said he has been arrested and charged with passing bad checks in the Town of Niagara, and she said a felony bad-check case against him is about to be presented to a Niagara County grand jury.

DePetris was never arrested in the Viola shooting. After his arrest on the gun-possession charges, Hoffmann presented evidence in the shooting to a grand jury, which issued the indictment.

DePetris is charged with attempted murder, first-degree assault, first-degree criminal use of a firearm, three counts of second-degree criminal possession of a weapon, six counts of third-degree criminal possession of a weapon and one count of second-degree criminal trespass, the last charge stemming from the Jan. 15 visit to Viola’s home.

DePetris is to return to court June 4, when Key is to report whether the defendant can afford to hire him.

No charges have been filed against the man who allegedly accompanied DePetris to Integrated Controls, pretending to be a pizza deliveryman. Asked whether he had testified against DePetris before the grand jury, a move that could bring him immunity from prosecution, Hoffmann declined to answer.

Key said DePetris was a passenger, not the driver, of the car that police stopped March 30, yet the driver wasn’t charged with weapons possession. Hoffmann said that was because DePetris allegedly admitted the guns were his.



email: tprohaska@buffnews.com

DNA blitz to continue Saturday at Erie Community College City Campus

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The effort to collect an estimated 1,100 DNA samples from criminal offenders living in Erie County will resume at Erie Community College City Campus on Saturday, county officials said Thursday.

No tallies were publicly released Thursday at the end of the first day of the county-promoted evidence collection blitz.

The collection blitz applies to criminal offenders who still owe court-ordered DNA samples that are permanently kept in the New York State DNA Bank.

Erie County District Attorney Frank A. Sedita III said offenders who still owe the state their DNA samples have received information about the blitz in the mail.

They have been told to bring photo identifications to expedite the process.

“The collection process is not invasive and consists merely of taking an oral buccal swab” Sedita said.

The blitz is being held by the District Attorney’s Office, Sheriff Timothy B. Howard and the Sheriff’s Office, the county Probation Department and the Central Police Services Laboratory with the cooperation of ECC President Jack Quinn, Sedita said.

Since the state DNA Bank was put into operation in 1996, DNA evidence has helped prosecutors statewide solve more than 2,700 previously unsolved crimes, including about 150 in Erie County.

It has led to the exoneration of 27 New Yorkers convicted of crimes they did not commit, including three from Erie County, Sedita said.

The state DNA Bank is part of a national DNA index system that provides DNA information to local, state and national law enforcement agencies.

The Erie County Department of Criminal Police Services Forensic Lab is one of eight local DNA labs that process forensic evidence at crime scenes and create DNA profiles, which are then compared against the state’s DNA Bank files.

Convicted felons, including sex offenders, are required to submit to DNA testing, and law enforcement agencies routinely get court orders to obtain DNA samples from crime suspects prior to trial, a practice the Erie County District Attorney’s Office has successfully practiced in recent years.

Misdemeanor offenders are not required to submit to DNA sampling.



email: mgryta@buffnews.com

Man who allegedly dropped bag of heroin is arrested

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A 28-year-old West Avenue man was arrested in the 400 block of 14th Street at about 10:15 p.m. Wednesday after he saw police watching him and allegedly dropped a bag of heroin to the ground.

Angel Casasnovas was charged with two counts of criminal possession of a controlled substance after officers said they found five bags of heroin in his pants pocket.

He was also charged with criminal possession of a controlled substance outside of its original container after he was found to be carrying an unmarked medicine bottle filled with various prescription drugs and two Oxcycodone pills.
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