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Taglianetti on way to face charges in Clymer murder

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Chautauqua County sheriff’s deputies on Tuesday drove the Virginia man suspected of killing Clymer School Superintendent Keith L. Reed Jr. from Virginia to Mayville where he will face charges in the September homicide.

Anthony Taglianetti, 42, has been charged with second-degree murder. He was being held at a Virginia jail while extradition hearings took place.

Taglianetti was to be held in the Chautauqua County Jail and was scheduled to appear in Chautauqua County Court today.

Authorities say Taglianetti drove from Virginia to Clymer, near the Pennsylvania border, where he shot and killed Reed outside Reed’s house after discovering emails between the school official and his wife.

Medina man killed while walking in Route 31 roadway

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SHELBY – A 47-year-old Medina man was killed after apparently being struck by four vehicles before dawn Tuesday while walking in the road on a dimly lighted section of Route 31, Orleans County sheriff’s officials said.

Joseph L. Tillinghast was pronounced dead by County Coroner Charles Smith at the scene, on Route 31 in the Town of Shelby, following the accident that was reported at 5:51 a.m.

Tillinghast was struck by the first vehicle while walking in the eastbound lane of Route 31, between the Niagara County line and Hoffman Road, authorities said.

“Then it appears he was struck by three additional vehicles,” Undersheriff Steve Smith said.

Authorities believe Tillinghast was walking east on Route 31, from his brother’s home in Middleport to his own residence in Medina.

“He’s wearing dark clothing, he’s walking in an area of the roadway where there was no artificial lighting, and the speed limit is 55,” Smith added. “There is no indication that this is anything but a traffic accident.”

All four vehicles involved stopped at the scene.

Genesee County teen charged in two summer burglaries

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Genesee County sheriff’s investigators have arrested an 18-year-old Oakfield man on two felony burglary charges, after accusing him of stealing three ATVs in a pair of incidents in the Town of Oakfield over the summer.

Jamie R. Bachorski stands accused of taking two ATVs from a storage shed on Batavia-Oakfield Townline Road and another one from a pole barn on Fisher Road, sheriff’s officials said.

Following his arraignment, Bachorski was released on his own recognizance, before being sent to the Genesee County Jail on $10,000 bail for a probation violation, according to police reports.

Concord man arrested for Springville pharmacy robbery

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A Concord man was arrested last week for allegedly robbing a Springville pharmacy in the summer, the Erie County Sheriff’s Office reported Tuesday.

John C. Pasinski III, 30, was charged with third-degree robbery and petit larceny.

On July 25, a masked man claiming to have a gun entered the Springbrook Pharmacy on West Main Street. He demanded the pharmacist hand over all the Fentanyl patches in the store. The pharmacist complied, giving him about $328 worth of the patches.

The case was investigated by detectives Greg McCarthy, Jack Graham and Matt Noecker. Pasinski was arrested at his home without incident, officials said. He was arraigned in Springville Village Court. He was remanded to the Erie County Holding Center in lieu of $25,000 bond.

Anyone with more information about the incident is asked to call McCarthy at 667-5224.

Wanamaker ‘fall from grace’ means 3 years of probation

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Five years ago, he sat atop Buffalo’s economic-develop- ment world, a City Hall leader with a reputation for getting things done in a community known for gridlock and obstructionism.

Then came Timothy E. Wanamaker’s “fall from grace.”

Wanamaker’s tumble from power ended Tuesday with a sentence of three years’ probation for using a City Hall credit card to charge more than $27,000 in personal expenses.

He also must repay the money he stole to the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development.

“There is no excuse,” Wanamaker told U.S. District Judge Richard J. Arcara. “I’m not going to make any excuses.”

Arcara’s sentence – he could have given Wanamaker up to six months in prison – came just a year after the former top aide to Mayor Byron W. Brown and to Brown’s predecessor, Anthony M. Masiello, pleaded guilty to stealing government funds.

Wanamaker, once a rising star at City Hall, admitted billing the city for personal hotel and travel expenses on his city-issued credit card while serving as Buffalo’s economic-development chief from 2003 to 2008.

Arcara acknowledged that he was bewildered by Wanamaker’s thefts and at one point Tuesday referred to his own 40 years of public service.

“I just find it mind-boggling,” he said of Wanamaker’s actions. “I just can’t imagine – even for a minute – of violating that public trust. I just can’t understand why anyone would do that.”

In the end, Arcara gave Wanamaker probation and cited his remorse, his loss of reputation and his willingness to cooperate with investigators looking into how Buffalo uses its federal funding.

“The public humiliation he’s suffered is just horrible,” said James P. Harrington, Wanamaker’s lawyer. “He’s profoundly sorry for what he’s done.”

Harrington made several references during the sentencing to Wanamaker’s reputation as a City Hall outsider who came to be viewed as one of its most competent professionals.

“Mr. Wanamaker’s life is one that should have been looked up to and emulated,” Harrington told Arcara. “Tim was a guy who wanted to get things done. Unfortunately, he’s thrown a big black cloud over that.”

Wanamaker, who was hired in 2003 when Masiello was mayor, served as executive director of Buffalo’s Office of Strategic Planning and was widely viewed as the city’s top economic-development official.

He also headed Buffalo Economic Renaissance Corp, or BERC, a now-dormant City Hall development agency.

During his time at City Hall, Wanamaker earned a reputation as a development professional who, despite criticism that he was often inaccessible, came to be viewed as one of the city’s brightest administrators.

Then came the FBI’s investigation into One Sunset, an upscale restaurant that closed a year after it opened and left $160,000 in unpaid government grants and loans.

The investigation into the restaurant’s public subsidies never led to any charges – the investigation is still open – but it did result in two unrelated but high-profile prosecutions.

One was Wanamaker, and the other was former Common Council Member Brian C. Davis, who pleaded guilty in May to stealing $48,000 in public funds while representing the Ellicott District on the Council. Davis was sentenced to a year in prison.

Wanamaker told Arcara on Tuesday that his goal is to return at some point to his community-development work, a role Harrington said could involve a community group or nonprofit organization.

Since his conviction, Wanamaker has had trouble finding work in the field and instead has spent time stocking shelves at Kmart and selling cars.

“I do plan to continue to work and help communities rebuild,” he told Arcara. “That is what God put me on this earth to do. It’s what I love to do.”

The federal probe into Wanamaker’s travel resulted in allegations and an eventual admission that he had used his BERC credit card to pay for hotel, rental car and other travel expenses unrelated to city business. He admitted, for example, that after a work-related business trip to San Francisco in 2005, he stayed there after the conference ended and used his BERC card to charge $1,256 in expenses for himself and another person.

He also admitted attending a work-related conference in Miami in December 2007 and using the BERC card to charge $1,943 in hotel, meal and rental car costs in the two days that followed the conference.

“Mr. Wanamaker violated a trust,” said Assistant U.S. Attorney Joseph M. Guerra III. “But to a certain extent, he did try to make things right.”

Guerra was referring to Wanamaker’s cooperation with the FBI and HUD, a role that led to an offer of leniency from prosecutors. They say the information Wanamaker provided to federal agents led to substantial changes in how Buffalo and other cities across the country handle federal funding.

“The Wanamaker decision was based on the wisdom of the court but should not be perceived as a precedent for future leniency in public corruption matters,” said Christopher M. Piehota, special agent in charge of the FBI office in Buffalo. “The FBI and its law enforcement partners will continue to identify and disrupt corrupt practices at all levels of government to ensure the public’s continued faith in its elected officials and governmental processes.”

Harrington said he’s confident that Wanamaker will eventually bounce back from what he described in court papers as his “fall from grace.”

“He beats himself up about this all the time, but he’s not going to let this keep him down,” Harrington said. “It’s really sad it had to end this way.”



email: pfairbanks@buffnews.com

Albion police trying to locate missing man

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Albion police are seeking the public’s help in finding a 29-year-old man who suffers from mental-health issues and is wanted in connection with assault and other charges, police said Tuesday afternoon.

Lucas T. Williams was last seen in the Beaver Street area of Albion. He’s described as a white male, with brown hair and hazel eyes, who was last seen wearing a white jacket and dark blue sweat pants with the word “Harlem” written on a leg.

Police say he’s wanted in connection with incidents involving assault, criminal mischief and filing a false instrument. Officials added that they also want to locate him for his own health and safety.

Anyone with information about his whereabouts is asked to call Albion police, at (585) 589-5627, or 911.

Man found guilty of Amherst bank robbery

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A bank robbery suspect arrested by Amherst police a year ago after a seven-mile chase that ended in a three-car crash on Buffalo’s East Side was convicted Tuesday of second-degree robbery, grand larceny and reckless endangerment.

Mark Daniels, 48, of Cheektowaga was found guilty in a bench trial before Erie County Judge Michael L. D’Amico.

Prosecutor Brian P. McNamara said Daniels jumped over a counter and took money from the cashier’s drawer at Evans National Bank at 3388 Sheridan Drive near Bailey Avenue in Amherst at 5:36 p.m., on Dec. 16, 2011.

Daniels took about $4,340 and then ran to his car.

But the stacks of money stolen from the bank contained a GPS tracking device that allowed police to spot and pursue him within blocks of the bank, McNamara said.

Police tried to stop him at Bailey Avenue and Eggert Road. Daniels then proceeded into Buffalo with Amherst and University at Buffalo police cars in pursuit.

Police said Daniels apparently was trying to change his clothes in an effort to elude capture when he rammed two other cars at Jefferson Avenue and Best Street. He got out of the car but was quickly apprehended by Amherst police with the other police officers assisting.

The police found the money in the car.

“There is no doubt that this defendant is guilty,” McNamara told D’Amico.

Defense lawyer Daniel P. Grasso said the prosecution lacked evidence linking Daniels to the crime scene, and he also pointed out that the robber did not display a weapon nor hand the teller a threatening note.

Although Daniels, a seven-time prior felon, did not display a weapon when he confronted the bank teller, force was implied, McNamara said.

“From the moment he walked into that bank, he had one intent,” McNamara said.

The teller died from an unrelated cause before the trial started, but she testified at an earlier hearing.

When asked at that hearing if she felt threatened by Daniels, she replied, “definitely,” McNamara said.

Daniels and the drivers of the two vehicles he rammed at the intersection were taken to area hospitals and treated for injuries. One of the victims still suffers from an injury and is not working, McNamara said.

Daniels faced a higher robbery charge than he would have otherwise because of the injuries he inflicted on the other drivers as he sought to elude the police.

He faces a prison sentence of up to 15 years when sentenced by D’Amico. Daniels backed out of a plea deal last summer that would have put him in prison for about half of the time he now faces.



email: plakamp@buffnews.com

Prison for pill dealer who failed in treatment

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LOCKPORT – Romel L. Brundidge, an admitted drug dealer who washed out of the judicial diversion program of court-supervised drug treatment, was sentenced to 2 1/2 years in state prison Tuesday by Niagara County Judge Matthew J. Murphy III.

Brundidge, 26, of Forest Avenue, Niagara Falls, had pleaded guilty July 19, 2011, to fourth-degree criminal sale of a controlled substance and was admitted by Murphy to the court-supervised treatment program, whose rules he failed to obey.

Brundidge, who also faces 2 years of post-release supervision, sold hydrocodone in the Falls on July 2 and July 9, 2010.

Vehicles damaged in rash of vandalism in the Falls

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NIAGARA FALLS – Several vehicles were damaged in unrelated incidents over the weekend and on Monday, including a vehicle owned by a hotel security guard, city police reported.

The security guard at the Quality Inn told police that sometime between 11 p.m. Sunday and 6 a.m. Monday someone smashed a driver’s side window in his Dodge Nitro and threw his belongings around the car, while it was parked in a hotel lot on First Street. Nothing was reported missing. Damage was pegged at $250. The guard said he will check area surveillance video.

Between midnight and 6 a.m. Monday in the 100 block of 17th Street, a woman told police all four tires on her Buick Rendezvous were slashed. Damage was estimated at $400.

A woman in the 2400 block of Ontario Avenue told police Monday that sometime over the weekend someone poured a white substance, apparently sugar, in her gas tank, causing $300 worth of damage.

A woman in the 2900 block of Main Street said he heard the sound of breaking glass at 4:30 p.m. Monday and found that someone had smashed every window, except the front driver’s side window, on her cousin’s Pontiac Bonneville, while it was parked in a rear lot at her apartment. Damage was estimated $1,500. The woman said she saw a suspect in a maroon Chrysler Sebring with Virginia plates strike the vehicle and then leave the area.



email: nfischer@buffnews.com

Nigerian charged at Peace Bridge with using fake passport

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A Nigerian citizen was arrested over the weekend by U.S. Customs and Border Protection agents as he tried to enter the U.S. at the Peace Bridge.

Emmanuel Osagie, 41, was traveling on a commercial bus late Saturday and told agents he was returning the this country after a two-week visit to Toronto, prosecutors said Tuesday. Agents found a different name on the passport he was carrying and referred him for a secondary inspection.

During that inspection, Osagie’s fingerprints were taken and his true identify was revealed, prosecutors said. He was arraigned in U.S. District Court in Buffalo Monday and remains in custody on a charge of misuse of a passport.

Man shot in head at Falls intersection

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Niagara Falls police detectives continue to investigate the shooting this afternoon of a 25-year-old man as he was in his parked vehicle at Highland and Calumet avenues.

The victim told police two men he doesn’t know approached his car on foot shortly after noon and began shooting repeatedly at him, striking him once in the head.

Detective Lt. Michael Trane told The Buffalo News the injury is not considered life-threatening.

The victim, who Trane did not name, drove himself to Niagara Falls Memorial Medical Center for treatment but he was transferred to Erie County Medical Center, where he was listed in stable condition this evening.

Detectives ask that anyone with any information call them at 286-4553.

Fraud suspect admits offer of influence to Hochuls

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In the days leading up to the November election, James Lagona offered to lend his influence as a religious leader to the campaign of Rep. Kathleen C. Hochul.

In return, Lagona wanted Hochul’s husband, U.S. Attorney William J. Hochul Jr., to dismiss his fraud case.

Lagona, who still faces sentencing in the case, pleaded guilty Tuesday to a separate charge of obstruction of justice, a felony that could mean 10 years in prison on top of the 20 years he faces in the fraud case.

“He was concerned about the care of his family,” defense lawyer James DeMatteo said of his client’s motivations. “That’s the entire reason he did this, pure desperation.”

Lagona, as part of his plea deal, admitted approaching one of Kathleen Hochul’s campaign aides on Nov. 2 and offering what prosecutors called a “quid pro quo.”

He told the aide that he would campaign for the Hamburg Democrat and do his best to woo undecided Catholic voters – he’s a self-described Christian mystic and psychic and a leader in the Western Rite Orthodox Catholic Church – and in return Hochul’s husband would have to dismiss his upcoming sentencing for fraud.

A day later, he met with the campaign aide again and repeated his offer.

“This time, the campaign staffer was recording the conversation unbeknownst to Mr. Lagona and at the direction of the FBI,” said J.P. Cooney, a lawyer with the U.S. Department of Justice.

Cooney, who is based in Washington, D.C., appeared before Chief U.S. District Judge William M. Skretny because of William Hochul’s involvement in the case.

DeMatteo said Lagona acted out of concern for his wife and daughter – both are disabled – and his fear that a long prison sentence in the fraud case would leave them without proper care. Lagona was found guilty of taking part in a $5.8 million Ponzi scheme after a two-week federal court trial last year.

He and fellow defendant Ian Campbell Gent were convicted of fraud and conspiracy for their role in an Amherst-based scheme that cheated 90 victims, many of them retirees.

During the trial, Lagona and Gent portrayed themselves as victims and denied knowingly helping Guy Gane and his company, Watermark Financial Services of Amherst.

Gane, who many believe was the mastermind behind the scheme, eventually pleaded guilty to fraud and money-laundering charges and agreed to testify against Lagona and Gent. Gane was sentenced to 13 years in prison last year. Prosecutors say Gane cheated customers of Watermark Financial Services by telling them he was investing their money in valuable waterfront real estate in Maine.



email: pfairbanks@buffnews.com

Man acquitted in home invasion despite DNA sample

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LOCKPORT – Finding the alleged victim more suspicious than the defendant, a Niagara County Court jury acquitted a Buffalo man Tuesday on all charges in connection with a May 16, 2011, home invasion in Niagara Falls.

The jury deliberated for about 40 minutes before finding Brandon D. Green, 31, of Davison Avenue, not guilty of two counts each of first-degree burglary and first-degree robbery, and one count of second-degree kidnapping.

The verdict came despite the presence of Green’s DNA on handcuffs the victim said were placed on his wrists by one of three masked men, two of them armed, who entered his home on Parkview Avenue in Niagara Falls at about 2 a.m.

Keith Paul Meyers of the Niagara County forensic lab said the odds of that DNA coming from someone other than Green were one in 319.5 trillion.

The jury of six men and six women wasn’t overly impressed, adopting defense attorney Thomas J. Eoannou’s closing argument that DNA could come from someone else who had had contact with Green, perhaps years before, and thus the DNA reading didn’t prove Green was one of the three robbers.

“We just couldn’t place him in the house,” juror Laura Brick of North Tonawanda said.

Brick said the 60-year-old complainant wasn’t a convincing witness. He told police – but not until a month after the incident – that about $525,000 in cash had been stolen from his safe.

“There were too many inconsistencies in his story,” Brick said.

Eoannou had questioned whether the jury could be sure a crime had been committed at all. He questioned “The suspicious circumstances of this half-million-dollar loss.”

He told the jury he had a hard time believing that a man would stash a huge amount of cash in a safe concealed behind a gas-burning fireplace, as the alleged victim said he had done.

Assistant District Attorney Claudette S. Caldwell, who prosecuted the case along with colleague Laura T. Bittner, had told the jury that just because the victim was “careless” with his money didn’t mean his story was false.

Caldwell declined to comment on the outcome of the seven-day trial.

The complainant said two of three intruders were armed with handguns, and they handcuffed him and put a pillow over his face while rummaging through the house looking for his safe. After they found it, they forced him to give them the combination and shoved him into a closet, placing a shirt over his head and spraying him with pepper spray.

Green lurched backward in his chair when the jury foreman announced the first of the five “not guilty” verdicts. After County Judge Sara Sheldon Farkas adjourned court, he hugged Eoannou and law student Jillina Wallace, who assisted with the defense.

“An innocent man can easily be charged,” said Green, who has a previous robbery conviction that required him to give a DNA sample for the state database.

It was matched to the DNA on the handcuffs, and Green was arrested in February. No one else has been charged in the case.

When a reporter asked Green how his DNA got on the handcuffs, Eoannou leaned in and said, “He doesn’t know.”



email: tprohaska@buffnews.com

Amherst police crack burglary cases during domestic call

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Three Amherst apartment dwellers are being held on $10,000 bail each after a domestic call led to their arrest on felony charges linked to several recent house burglaries, police reported Tuesday.

While checking on a domestic complaint in the 6000 block of Sheridan Drive on Sunday, Amherst Police Officer Christopher Klein noticed property in the flat that had been reported stolen in a burglary at a Saber Lane home the previous day. Klein also handled that call.

He and other officers also noticed in the flat items stolen in a Fruitwood Terrace burglary that also took place on Saturday, police officials said.

After police obtained a search warrant, officials said, officers recovered numerous items of stolen property in the flat.

Brandon J. Longo, 23; Eric K. Smith, 28; and Courtney L. Masse, 20, all residents of the Sheridan Drive apartment, were arraigned before Amherst Town Justice Mark Farrell. Each was charged with burglary and possession of stolen property and ordered held in lieu of $10,000 bail.

United Cerebral Palsy Association of Niagara County hit with $11.1 million jury verdict

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A jury Tuesday awarded $11.1 million to a 59-year-old blind and developmentally disabled man who has lived for 26 years in a Niagara Falls group home run by the United Cerebral Palsy Association of Niagara County.

Robert Behringer – who is prone to seizures and unable to care for himself – has endured dozens of incidents at the group home since 2006 that stripped him of his dignity and jeopardized his safety, said his brother, Earl Behringer Jr., who brought the lawsuit as Robert’s guardian.

Earl Behringer testified earlier in the 17-day trial that for years he wanted to move Robert Behringer out of the Lockport Road group home to his home in Venice, Fla.

However, the 71-year-old jeweler, formerly of Amherst, said he could not afford to provide the around-the-clock care and supervision his brother requires, and group homes in Florida have years-long waiting lists.

Now, with the jury verdict, assuming it holds up to appeal, Behringer will be able to move his brother out of the 10-person group home.

“I’m going to get him out of here and get him to Florida,” Behringer said. “He deserves a better life. At least now I can provide him with one.”

Jurors deliberated slightly longer than two hours, a surprisingly short time, given the length of the trial and the conflicting testimony.

“We are very grateful for the attention paid by the jurors and the verdict they rendered,” said attorney Terrence M. Connors, who, with co-counsel Joseph D. Morath Jr., found former group home employees and persuaded them to testify against the association.

David C. Blaxill, a New York City lawyer who represented the association, declined to comment after the verdict.

During his closing argument, however, Blaxill defended the Niagara Cerebral Palsy employees assigned to Robert Behringer at the group home, referred to as the Niagara house.

“These people are heroes,” Blaxill said.

For Robert Behringer, “it has been a good life,” Blaxill told jurors. “He is surrounded by people who love him. He is happy.”

Witnesses for the defense and plaintiff described a pleasant man who likes drinking coffee in the morning, listening to Frank Sinatra tunes and sitting in his brown leather chair. He tends to keep to himself, but he opens up to employees and fellow residents who initiate conversations.

Employees who were not accused of any wrongdoing expressed fondness for him when they testified.

Ernestine Gayle has taken care of him for nearly 12 years at the group home. She called him “my dude.”

He kicks his legs out to the side when walking, so he needs two aides to assist him to walk. Because of his unsteadiness, he must wear a helmet when walking to keep from hurting himself.

It would be easier on the staff to keep him in a wheelchair, but “that wouldn’t be good for Robert,” Gayle said.

Earl Behringer acknowledged some employees truly cared for his brother’s well-being. But during the trial before State Supreme Court Justice Deborah A. Chimes, Earl Behringer said his brother was mistreated by some employees and neglected by others at times.

The incidents and accidents started in late 2007: broken bones, teeth knocked out and an uptick in seizures, among other problems.

Earl Behringer said he received phone calls and letters from the nonprofit organization alerting him about what has happening.

“There were so many phone calls like this,” he testified. “I wanted to get him out of there for his safety.”

Among the incidents:

• Robert Behringer suffered a seizure after the staff failed to give him his evening dose of medication, according to the lawsuit.

• He suffered a seizure after he was dropped and struck his head on the ground, breaking and loosening teeth, when a single aide tried to lift him from his chair, according to court papers.

• While unattended and unrestrained, he tried to stand up from his wheelchair and fell.

• Earl Behringer said he found his brother sitting in his own feces or urine during visits.

“I couldn’t believe the smell,” he said.

He also said he witnessed two employees smoking marijuana on the job. One report he received from the agency indicated two staffers were fired after a supervisor discovered them sleeping during their overnight shift.

Much of the time the ranch-style home for the residents was understaffed, with just two to three employees to keep watch over 10 residents, he said. The ideal ratio was one employee for every two residents.

Robert Behringer has echolalia, which means he repeats the words spoken to him by others.

In videotaped trial testimony, Michelle Adams said she quit working at the group home after only a short time because of what she called “horrific conditions.”

“One of Robert’s conditions also was that he parrots everything that he hears around him,” Adams testified. “So staff members thought it was funny to say things and have him repeat it back, whether it be foul language, whether it be a sexual connotation to one of the other staff members. Because he would repeat not only what you say, but also the name. He knew you, when you introduced yourself to him, by your voice and your name.

“I witnessed other employees saying things to Robert on purpose for him to repeat them, because they thought it was funny to hear him say foul language.”

The jury awarded almost everything Connors asked for: $600,000 in past damages, $1 million for future damages and $6 million over 20 years for future medical costs. Jurors added $3.5 million in punitive damages.

“This case is about a person who can’t speak for himself,” Connors told jurors. “That’s why this case is so important.”



email: plakamp@buffnews.com

2 shot inside convenient store on Broadway

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A man and woman were shot just outside a convenient store tonight on the East Side.

The shooting occurred about 6:45 p.m. in front of the Broadway Convenience Deli at Broadway and Mohr Street.

Both victims were taken to Erie County Medical Center, one of them with serious injuries, Buffalo police said, adding that neither victim appeared to have suffered life-threatening injuries.

The shooting started after a conflict inside the store, not a robbery attempt, police said.

An unmarked patrol car was involved in a minor traffic accident rushing to the scene of the Broadway shootings, police said. No injuries were reported, though the patrol car and other vehicle sustained minor damage in what was described as a two-car fender-bender.

At mid-evening, a dozen patrol cars were parked and police tape was stripped outside the deli, which is sandwiched between two vacant storefronts in a neighborhood flanked by Bailey and Fillmore avenues. A large dog barked outside as police interviewed a convenience store clerk.

“This is the worse section of Buffalo,” said Bill Ferro, a neighborhood resident. “They should put cameras on every street corner from Young Street to Miller Street along Broadway.”

An elderly man who would not give his name, and who lives near the shooting scene, told The Buffalo News, “Every day, drug sales, all in this area.”

Ferro also said he also would like to see more police foot and bike patrols in the neighborhood.

Anyone with information is asked to call or text the confidential police tip line at 847-2255 or go to www.bpdny.org.



email: mgryta@buffnews.com

Three injured in two-car crash in Hamburg

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Three people were taken to hospitals for treatment of minor injuries tonight after a two-car crash on Route 20, just east of Camp Road, in Hamburg.

The crash, which occurred about 6 p.m., remains under investigation by authorities.

Lockport teen charged with attacking school resource officer

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SANBORN – A Niagara Academy student was charged Tuesday morning with disorderly conduct.

The student was accused of swearing at staff and fighting with Niagara County sheriff’s deputies and a school resource officer, digging her nails into the resource officer’s hand as he tried to handcuff her and then jamming her high heel boot into his foot.

School officials said they were trying to prevent the 16-year-old Lockport girl from leaving the campus about 9:25 a.m.

The girl was arrested at the school on Saunders Settlement Road deputies and ordered held in the County Jail in lieu of $500 bail. She is scheduled to appear in Cambria Town Court on Jan. 8.

Driver shears utility pole, cutting Orchard Park power

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NYSEG crews worked for several hours restore power in the South Abbott and Armor Duells roads area of Orchard Park on Tuesday after a Hamburg woman driving north on South Abbott crossed the road at the intersection and sheared off a utility pole, according to police.

Sandra M. Kaney, 52, of Hamburg, was taken to Erie County Medical Center with a back injury after the 4 p.m. crash and charged with driving while impaired by drugs, failure to stop at a stop sign, driving at an imprudent speed and making an unsafe turn.

After the initial crash, Kaney kept driving north on Armor Duells Road before driving onto a lawn in the 5000 block and striking some bushes and a fence, Orchard Park police said. She was ordered to appear in Town Court Jan. 15. NYSEG crews told police they expected power to be restored by early today.

One officer suspended, one demoted over alleged dog theft

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A Ferry-Fillmore District police officer has been suspended and the chief of the district demoted in an investigation over allegations that the officer stole a dog from a Herman Street residence earlier this month, authorities said today.

Officer Kristen W. Russo allegedly went to the dog owner’s home on Herman at 6 p.m. Dec. 3 and demanded the dog from its owner, according to police sources. The owner first filed a complaint with the police department but later went to an area media outlet to complain about the theft and authorities began an investigation.

District Chief Michelle Kubala apparently heard of the incident, prior to the complaint, but took no action to rectify it and was demoted to her civil service rank of lieutenant earlier this week and has been assigned to the Northwest District, police sources said this morning.

Police spokesman Michael J. DeGeorge said the case remains under investigation by the department’s Internal Affairs Division.



email: lmichel@buffnews.com
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