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Three taken into custody in SWAT team incident

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Three people were taken into custody Sunday night after an incident near Grant and Amherst streets in which the police SWAT team was called, Buffalo Police said.

Officers had been pursuing a warrant suspect just after 4:30 p.m. when the suspect fled to a home on Germain Street where police were told there may have been weapons.

The situation ended without incident at 8:50 p.m., Buffalo Police spokesman Michael J. DeGeorge said in an email.

A number of weapons were recovered from the home, including an AK-47 and a shotgun, police said.

No further details were immediately released.

Shots fired at East Side home

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A home near East Delavan and Bailey avenues was riddled with bullet holes on Sunday afternoon, with the shots believed to have come from a neighboring home.

An Ericson Avenue man told Buffalo Police that he heard several “pops” and noticed bullet holes in drywall, siding, windows and gutters of his home between about 2 and 5 p.m. Sunday.

Based on the trajectory of the holes, officers entered a neighboring home and found a loaded .22-caliber rifle, according to a police report.

A juvenile was the only person in the home from which the shots were fired, the report said.

Damage was estimated at $1,500.

Buffalo man admits sale of illegal immigration IDs

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A 37-year-old Buffalo man has pleaded guilty before U.S. District Judge Richard J. Arcara to criminal possession with intent to use or transfer unlawfully identification documents allegedly destined for use by undocumented immigrants. Jorge Garcia faces a prison term of up to 15 years and a fine of up to $250,000 or both when he is sentenced Sept. 19.

U.S. Attorney William J. Hochul Jr. said Garcia illegally sold nine sets of identification documents for $6,300 in cash in recent years to illegal immigrants locally.

The documents consisted of Puerto Rican birth certificates, New York State birth certificates, Michigan birth certificates and U.S. Social Security cards.

Man accused of selling counterfeit postage stamps

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A man accused of selling counterfeit postage stamps has been arraigned before U.S. Magistrate Judge Jeremiah J. McCarthy.

Alcides “Amigo” Marcelino is charged with possession and sale of counterfeit postage stamps, and he faces up to five years in prison if he is convicted.

Assistant U.S. Attorney Robert C. Moscati said Marcelino sold counterfeit Lady Liberty and U.S. flag forever postage stamps between the summer of 2010 and July of 2011.

Police investigate cashing of Falls man’s stolen $13,500 check

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NIAGARA FALLS – Police are trying to determine who forged and cashed a stolen check worth $13,500.

A 73rd Street man told police on Friday that he has been waiting for the check from the county treasurer, and called to inquire of its whereabouts when it had not arrived by Friday. He was told the check had indeed been cashed at a convenience store on 19th Street.

An investigation into the incident is continuing.

Unauthorized withdrawals made from Falls woman’s account

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NIAGARA FALLS – A 27th Street woman told police on Sunday that someone has been using her bank account information to make unauthorized withdrawals at area convenience stores.

The victim learned that $743 had been withdrawn from her account at 7-Eleven stores on Niagara Street and Pine Avenue in recent days. She said she was not missing any bank cards and did not know how anyone could have accessed her private information.

Buffalo’s crackdown on improper use of deadly force has officers crying foul

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Police Lt. Brian Strobele drew his service weapon and fired at a “mentally deranged” motorist, who had started backing up toward the lieutenant, who had gotten out of his patrol vehicle after a chase.

The bullet struck the driver of the pickup truck in the neck and shoulder, and Strobele believed he had saved not only himself but other South District officers.

Two years later, Strobele is one of a handful of Buffalo police officers facing departmental charges because of alleged improper use of deadly force.

Police brass say they are driving home the point that officers should not shoot at moving vehicles or put themselves in hazardous situations of their own making that cause them to shoot.

Department rules prohibit shooting at moving vehicles, except in extreme circumstances.

“Policies and procedures are in place for a reason. Officers must be held accountable and adhere to both,” a high-ranking police official said, explaining that the disciplinary crackdown will result in safer conditions for the public and officers.

Strobele has been departmentally charged with improper use of force and shooting at a moving vehicle. At least two other officers have been administratively charged with shooting at different vehicles, and others are expected to be cited.

“I just want to let everyone know … I was involved in a shooting a few years ago. … The mentally unstable man driving could have killed me and several other officers … and the city is bringing me up on charges for firing at a moving vehicle and other charges. … Maybe I should have let him run me over. … It would have been less painful than hearing that,” Strobele wrote several days ago on a social media site when he found out about the pending charges.

The suspect he shot recovered and ended up pleading guilty to a reduced charge of reckless endangerment. He was sentenced to the city’s Mental Health Court, where proceedings were completed earlier this year.

Taking officers to task on split-second decisions on whether to use deadly force, police officials say, might not be a popular move. But they say it is necessary, given a rash of police shootings involving vehicles in recent years.

Department policy on firing at vehicles states:

“The department members shall not discharge their firearms at or from a moving vehicle unless the member reasonably believes that the use of deadly physical force is necessary to protect the member or another person from the imminent use of deadly physical force by the suspect.”

In 2012, city police officers shot eight times at vehicles, and in half of those incidents, four suspects were injured. A fifth incident last December involved a traffic stop that ended up claiming the life not only of the mortally wounded driver, but a pedestrian on the East Side.

Isaac C. Parker had been stopped by police who partially entered his sport utility vehicle and detected the smell of alcohol. Sensing Parker was about to drive away, one of the officers shot Parker. The officers managed to tumble out of the vehicle, which traveled about four-tenths of a mile before hitting three light poles. One of poles crashed on top of Ida Murphy, 54, and killed her.

Parker’s blood-alcohol content was four times the legal limit, authorities later determined.

Attorney Thomas H. Burton, who represents police involved in deadly use-of-force cases, questions the department’s disciplinary actions against officers who shot at suspects in vehicles. The unpredictable nature of police work and the propensity for violence among suspects, he said, often results in officers’ having to set the rule book aside.

“In extreme cases of life-or-death situations, the procedures of the rules of defense trump procedures of the Police Department and any administrative policies,” said Burton, who represented Strobele in the shooting.

“Desperate suspects,” he said, will often try to use their vehicles as “deadly weapons,” placing officers in situations “where they have no other option than to shoot.”

Police officials, in arguing that gunfire against a moving vehicle is unnecessary, countered by saying it is unlikely that bullets will stop the motor vehicle and that officers should not have put themselves in the path of the vehicle.

“The theory is great, but traffic stops with a violent criminal can turn ugly in an instant,” Burton said. “The challenge to a street cop is to balance self-preservation against not being reckless toward innocent citizens.”

Police Officer Kevin M. Kennedy, president of the Buffalo Police Benevolent Association, the union representing officers, said he has yet to receive a copy of departmental charges in Strobele’s case and could not comment.

Police Commissioner Daniel Derenda declined to comment, saying that pending police disciplinary cases are internal personnel matters and he is prohibited from discussing them.

The Erie County District Attorney’s Office reviewed the Strobele case and to date has not presented it to the grand jury, Burton said.

The case involving the two officers in the deadly traffic stop last December, and the determination of whether criminal behavior occurred by the officers, is still under review by District Attorney Frank A. Sedita III.

Arlee Daniels Jr., program coordinator of the Stop the Violence Coalition in Buffalo, said the police force has generally done well in making sure officers follow safety procedures, though unfortunate situations have occurred.

“There have been some incidents where officers prematurely discharged their weapons while pursuing those they believed were in violation of the law, and that, in itself, is unacceptable, because it puts citizens and other pedestrians in harm’s way when a weapon is discharged at a moving target,” Daniels said.

Of the efforts to make sure officers follow department policies and procedures, he added, “It helps restore confidence between police and citizens that nothing will be swept under the rug to cover up misconduct of law enforcement.”

email: lmichel@buffnews.com

Wyoming County accident forces closing of Route 63

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An accident involving a truck pulling a cattle trailer forced authorities to close part of Route 63 in the Town of Covington in Wyoming County for about an hour and a half Monday morning, officials reported.

No serious injuries were reported in the crash, which occurred at about 7:15 a.m. on Route 63, near Peoria Road. Power-line issues forced authorities to close the road, in both directions, a short time later. It was reopened by 8:55 a.m.

Emergency personnel from both Genesee and Wyoming counties responded to the crash site, in the northeast corner of Wyoming County, bordering Genesee County.

Judge rules Hamburg blogger can remain anonymous

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State Supreme Court Justice Diane Y. Devlin on Monday morning quashed a subpoena that sought the identity of an anonymous blogger in Hamburg.

The decision, which was handed down from the bench, means that the Hamburg Central School District cannot compel Concerned Hamburger to say who he or she is.

The district had issued a subpoena to Google to identify the person who runs Hamburg Educational Ethics blog, which posts information and satire about the Hamburg Central School District.

“I think it’s good news for any blogger, any citizen journalist,” said Joseph M. Finnerty, the attorney for Concerned Hamburger.

He argued to quash the subpoena on several grounds, including that it violates the First Amendment right to anonymous speech.

Richard Sullivan, the attorney for the school district, said the decision would not affect the lawsuit filed against Sally Stephenson; Sally’s daughter, Lyndsey Stephenson; and teacher Martha Kavanaugh.

The district says the three secretly taped an executive session Sept. 21, 2010, and is seeking damages from them. The women deny the charge.

The lawsuit was filed in June 2012; Sally Stephenson has since taken a seat on the School Board.

Finnerty had asked that the district pay legal fees for Concerned Hamburger, but Devlin denied that motion.

email: bobrien@buffnews.com

Supreme Court rejects Kopp’s bid to have murder conviction overturned

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WASHINGTON – James C. Kopp, the anti-abortion zealot who fatally shot an Amherst physician nearly 15 years ago, lost his latest – and likely last – bid to have his convictions overturned at the U.S. Supreme Court on Monday.

Appealing a case that had been rejected by lower federal courts, Kopp asked the Supreme Court to hear his argument that he’d been denied his constitutional right to fair trials because of improper legal representation.

But the justices, without comment, rejected his request.

The decision comes as no surprise, given that the high court agrees to hear only a small fraction of the thousands of “petitions of certiorari” that it receives every year.

The court’s decision, though, appears to end Kopp’s long and tortured efforts to get his case retried.

Kopp shot Dr. Barnett Slepian on Oct. 23, 1998, taking aim through a kitchen window and striking the abortion provider in his back.

More than four years later, Kopp confessed to the shooting during an interview with The Buffalo News, saying he merely intended to wound Slepian to prevent him from performing more abortions.

After Kopp waived his right to a jury trial, an Erie County judge convicted him of second-degree murder after a one-day trial in March 2003.

Kopp was later tried and convicted in federal court on related charges, and he is currently serving consecutive life sentences at the U.S. Penitentiary in Waymart, Pa.

Kopp has been fighting his convictions on various grounds ever since, and Monday’s decision marked the second time the Supreme Court refused to hear one of his appeals.

This time, the justices, without comment, rejected Kopp’s request that they hear his appeal of two federal court decisions from 2011, in which federal judges in Rochester and Buffalo dismissed his claim that he had been denied his constitutional right to a fair trial in both state and federal court

Kopp had argued that the attorney he chose to represent him in his state court murder trial, Bruce Barket, had a conflict of interest because he also represented two people accused of harboring Kopp while he was a fugitive. In fact, Barket was barred from representing Kopp in federal court for that very reason, and Kopp ended up representing himself in that 2007 trial.

Nevertheless, U.S. District Court Judge Michael A. Telesca of Rochester noted that it was Kopp himself who insisted that Barket represent him in his murder trial.

That being the case, “the court finds his contrary protestations to be so disingenuous as to suggest bad faith,” Telesca wrote.

In addition, Kopp argued that his lawyer persuaded him to grant that interview to The Buffalo News.

But Telesca, conceding that the interview was “ill-advised,” noted that Barket was not to blame for it.

Kopp filed a separate but similar appeal of his conviction on federal charges, which U.S. District Court Judge Richard J. Arcara rejected in 2011.

Kopp originally appealed the Telesca and Arcara decisions to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit, which rejected the case in December 2011.

That didn’t stop Kopp’s current lawyer, Arthur L. Washburn Jr. of Dorset, Vt., from making one last try at the Supreme Court.

“In short, Kopp was represented in state court by a lawyer who was disqualified by the [federal] district court,” which meant his representation was improper, Washburn argued in his filing with the high court.

Told of the justices’ refusal to hear the case, Washburn said he had known Kopp for many years through the anti-abortion movement and that he had been pursuing the habeas corpus fair trial case on Kopp’s behalf since 2008

“I think most people would be of the opinion that this was the last opportunity” for Kopp to fight for new trials, Washburn said.

email: jzremski@buffnews.com

Niagara Falls man charged following melee at Ferry Avenue bar

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NIAGARA FALLS – A Niagara Falls man is accused of hitting the owner of a Ferry Avenue bar over the head with a beer bottle and breaking the glass entry door about 3 a.m. Sunday.

Robert J. Ferguson, 30, of Mackenna Avenue, was charged with second-degree assault with a weapon, resisting arrest and disorderly conduct following the disturbance at Unc’s Bar & Tavern, police said.

Ferguson kicked in the glass entry door as he was restrained from re-entering the bar, police said. Police added that Ferguson said he felt “really bad about” attacking the bar owner.

Ferguson was treated in Niagara Falls Memorial Medical Center and the he bar owner, at the scene, police said.

Police arrest suspect who lived at site of Germain Street raid

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A Germain Street man whose residence was the target of a Buffalo Police SWAT unit raid Sunday night is in custody and faces several charges, authorities said.

Michael Cohen, 27, was charged with violating probation and domestic assault in unrelated cases, police said. During the raid, police arrested three suspects and recovered weapons, including an AK47 and a shotgun.

Falls man gets jail for violating terms of probation in DWI case

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LOCKPORT – A Jerauld Avenue man was sentenced to a year in Niagara County Jail Monday for violating terms of probation in a felony case of driving while intoxicated.

Robert G. Minney, 36, who had pleaded guilty in Niagara County Court on April 9, was sentenced Monday by Judge Sara Sheldon Farkas Farkas. Minney’s attorney, David C. Douglas, said his client, who was serving 2½ years on probation, had successfully completed drug treatment programs and had used the car to drive to a construction job.

Douglas had urged that Minney serve weekends in jail.

Lockport woman pleads not guilty to April 10 credit union robbery

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LOCKPORT – A Lockport woman accused of holding up the Cornerstore Credit Union on April 10 pleaded not guilty Monday to a charge of third-degree robbery in Niagara County Court.

Dale L. Swain, 56, of Robinson Road, remains in Niagara County Jail in lieu of $10,000 bail. The bail was reduced from $50,000 by Niagara County Court Judge Sara Sheldon Farkas.

Swain, who was arrested in Buffalo by U.S. Marshals’ Violent Felony Task Force on April 15. was identified as a frequent customer of the credit union, at 6485 S. Transit Road.

She handed three notes to a teller demanding cash and no weapon was displayed, authorities said. She made her getaway as a passenger in a red Chevrolet Cavalier, found later on Robinson Road, where the driver was questioned, authorities added.

Assistant District Attorney Joel Grundy noted Swain – who works as a part-time home health-care aide – had a previous robbery charge.

Leader of counterfeit sneakers ring gets 27 months behind bars

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One of the leaders of a counterfeit sneaker ring that stretched from Buffalo to China was sentenced Monday by U.S. District Judge Richard J. Arcara to 27 months in prison.

Malik Bazzi of Montreal had previously admitted buying and selling nearly 240,000 pairs of fake Nike sneakers as part of conspiracy that started with a factory in China and ended with retailers in cities such as Buffalo, Chicago, Dallas and Atlanta.

Assistant U.S. Attorney John E. Rogowski said Bazzi, who pleaded guilty in 2008 to trafficking in counterfeit goods, cooperated with the government’s prosecution and provided valuable information for several other investigations involving counterfeit goods.

Bazzi’s sentencing is the result of an investigation by the Buffalo office of Immigration and Customs Enforcement, Homeland Security Investigations.

Suspect arrested in parking lot mugging of woman

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Buffalo police have arrested a suspect in the mugging of a woman returning to her car in a business parking lot at Bailey Avenue and Dingens Street about 4:30 p.m. Monday.

Barrie Woods, 31, no address listed, is charged with third-degree assault, criminal mischief and harassment. He also is accused of scratching the victim’s car with her keys.

Man accused of choking neighbor during argument

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A Berkshire Avenue man arrested Sunday is charged with third-degree assault for attacking ans choking a neighbor during an argument, police said.

Donald J. Frazier, 37, also is charged with criminal obstruction and harassment. Further details were unavailable.

Police corral man accused of Delaware Avenue break-in

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A Delaware Avenue man charged Monday with second-degree burglary is accused of breaking into a house in the 1500 block of Delaware and stealing a bat and loose change, then fighting with police who chased him to Elmwood Avenue.

Avelllo Pena, 22, also was charged with criminal possession of stolen property, petit larceny and resisting arrest. He was arrested about 5:30 a.m. Monday, police said.

Suspected cocaine trafficker arrested at Erie Basin Marina

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A Cheektowaga man suspected of trafficking cocaine in Buffalo, Cheektowaga, Elma and Marilla was arrested at Erie Basin Marina about 6:20 p.m. Monday, Erie County Sheriff’s Narcotics Unit detectives.

William Gonzalez, 38, of Carefree Lane is in Erie County Holding Center pending arraignment today on two felony counts each of criminal possession and sale of a controlled substance in the third degree.

Gonzalez, accused of selling cocaine twice to an undercover agent, also was charged with misdemeanor criminal possession of a controlled substance after cocaine was found on during the arrest, detectives said.

Baitz Avenue man linked to street mugging

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A Baitz Avenue man charged with assault is accused of participating in the mugging of a neighbor on Baitz about 2 a.m. Monday.

Pernell Hudson, 33, and an accomplice, who is still at-large, allegedly punched, kicked and stomped their victim.
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