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You are here: Home / Archives for Breaking News

Police: Social media ploy lured youth

March 27, 2019 By Stephanie Spyropoulos, Express Correspondent

Matthew Murphy. (Photo courtesy United States Marshals Service)

WHITMAN — A Whitman man has been arrested and is facing allegations that he sexually exploited children after he created a fake social media account.

Matthew Murphy, 22, of Temple Street in Whitman, was charged in federal court on Tuesday on two counts of sexual exploitation of children.

Murphy posed as a teen girl using a Snapchat account to extort nude photographs from a Massachusetts middle school boy. The investigation of the alleged incidents was detailed in the charging documents, according to a press release from the United States Attorney Andrew E. Lelling and Peter C. Fitzhugh, Special Agent in charge.

Federal agents obtained portions of the Snapchat account Murphy had created in the fake identity and uncovered evidence of similar extortion of other minors in the area, according to the press release.

Murphy was detained pending a detention hearing scheduled for Wednesday at 3:30 p.m.,

Agents and Whitman police executed a search warrant of Murphy’s home where he was placed under arrest.

 “It is a reminder that these predators are out there,” said Whitman Police Chief Scott Benton. “They want to prey on and take advantage of the innocence of children.”

Law enforcement is actively working to identify additional victims. Members of the public with questions or information about this matter should call 617-748-3274 or Whitman police at 781-447-1212.

“During the execution of the search warrant at his home, Murphy admitted that the fake account was his, and investigators found forensic evidence of the account on some of his electronic devices. Murphy was subsequently arrested,” according to the press release.

The charges of sexual exploitation of children each provide for a minimum mandatory sentence of 15 years and no greater than 30 years in prison, a minimum of five years and up to a lifetime of supervised release and a fine of $250,000. Sentences are imposed by a federal district court judge based upon the U.S. Sentencing Guidelines and other statutory factors.

United States Attorney Andrew E. Lelling and Peter C. Fitzhugh, Special Agent in Charge of Homeland Security Investigations in Boston, made the announcement Wednesday. The Whitman Police Department provided valuable assistance with the investigation. Assistant U.S. Attorney Anne Paruti, Lelling’s Project Safe Childhood Coordinator and a member of his Major Crimes Unit, is prosecuting the case.

The case was brought as part of Project Safe Childhood. In 2006, the Department of Justice created Project Safe Childhood, a nationwide initiative designed to protect children from exploitation and abuse. Led by the U.S. Attorneys’ Offices and the DOJ’s Child Exploitation and Obscenity Section, Project Safe Childhood marshals federal, state, and local resources to locate, apprehend, and prosecute individuals who exploit children, as well as identify and rescue victims. For more information about Project Safe Childhood, visit projectsafechildhood.gov/.

Filed Under: Breaking News, News

Planning ahead for new WMS

March 21, 2019 By Tracy F. Seelye, Express Editor

Emphasizing it could be years before a shovel breaks ground, the School Committee on Wednesday, March 13 approved the drafting of a statement of interest (SOI) to the Massachusetts School Building Authority for a new Whitman Middle School.

Superintendent of Schools Jeffrey Szymaniak said he has asked Facilities Director Ernest Sandland to begin work on the SOI for a grade five through eight school to address structural problems and place a new school in alignment with programs now in place at Hanson Middle School.

“This is just the process [of] what we have to do to get in the queue for MSBA,” Szymaniak said.

Sandland said all documents would have to be in by April 12, but  said he has been asked why the district is taking that route while it is facing budget problems.

“There is a process we have to go through and there’s a time frame we’ve got to go through and this is the beginning of it,” he said. “We’re trying to meet all those time frames.”

It could be two years before MSBA gives an indication that the district would be considered for funding, with eight possible categories for a district to apply under. WHRSD would be seeking funds for replacement/modernization of school facilities, one of eight possible categories. The school opened in 1972 and was last renovated in 1997. Boilers were replaced in 2007.

“We’re good stewards in trying to identify what’s going on at Whitman Middle,” he said. “It’s the story that we’re writing on the history of [the school].”

A past facilities survey on the WMS renovation outlined that the work was supposed to include replacement of the roof, a lot of the exterior façade and of lockers throughout the building — none of which was done.

“We’re going to tell that story and, once it gets to the state they’re going to read it and they’ll say, ‘OK, this is what we’re going to do, we’re going to put you off for two more years, we’re going to put you off for a year,’” Sandland said. “But at least we start the process.”

Szymaniak said the facilities subcommittee has expressed concern with mold issues at the school.

“I’d like to see where we stand,” he said. “There’s no harm, no foul at this point.”

School Committee Chairman Bob Hayes said his experience with similar projects has shown the approval process for an SOI could take as long as five years.

“We don’t even know where the list is — what they are accepting, what they aren’t accepting,” Hayes said. “This is a first step. The commitment comes way down the road when you have to do a feasibility study. … This is not committing any dollars and cents.”

School Committee member Fred Small stressed that an SOI should make clear WMS has only had a partial renovation done.

Sandland said the MSBA has noted that W-H has an excellent capital plan, something 40 to 60 percent of school districts do not have.

The debt exclusion for the high school comes off the books in seven years, Hayes said.

Budget committee

In other business, Small suggested a separate subcommittee charged with reviewing the strategic plan as part of an effort to align them with small goals to begin working on the budget in August or September and obtain a clear idea from the towns about where the schools stand on the goal of developing a sustainable budget.

“I know we have to get through today first,” he said, suggesting it might be a way to determine what programs might be funded a year or so in advance through a debt exclusion.

Hayes agreed that the budget is difficult for other town departments at well.

“It costs more, it demands more, and everybody’s in this budget crisis,” he said. “Nobody’s putting the blame here. I think everybody wants better education for every student.”

Business Services Director Christine Suckow said year to-date expenditures are up by just over $13,000 for recovery high school tuition, and unexpected retirements have increased the salary reserve line. Special education accounts have increased by just over $600,000 in the current budget year due to contracted services, legal costs, transportation and out-of-district tuition costs.

Szymaniak attributed the special ed increase to a few movements of students already committed to a collaborative and transportation costs from $250 to $400 per day, depending on the company used.

The fiscal 2019 budget is currently frozen except for emergency expenses, which generally includes special education changes.

Superindendent goals

The committee also discussed Szymaniak’s midyear goals, part of the process of evaluating his job performance.

The goals involve ensuring a cohesive pre-k to grade 12 system of teaching and learning; keeping visible throughout the district to support teachers and staff; ensuring school safety and security; and a workable budget to deliver services to district students to prepare them for career or college.

“It’s out there right now,” he said of the budget. “I appreciate the support of what we’re looking at for level services … How do we progress through? I think, looking at a realistic budget that will maintain the level of services and add — without adding to the budget — a curriculum and curriculum leadership that we so desperately need.”

Szymaniak said the first goal involves reviewing which math pilot program the district would purchase as well as different programs to highlight for English classes next year. Changes in curriculum leadership are also being investigated. All changes being considered within the goal are budget-dependent, he noted.

Being more visible is a favorite part of the job for Szymaniak.

“We’re out and about looking at teachers that make a difference and celebrating that,” he said. “I’ve had several visits with principals formally to discuss things, and informally I pop into buildings to see [what’s going on]. … It’s important for me to be out, visible to teachers and staff and students know who I am.”

He said he and Ferro have both been seeing evidence of teachers doing a good job — in the absence, Assistant Superintendent George Ferro said, of an elementary English Language Arts curriculum and an expiring 7-year-old math program that is obsolete for today’s standards and cuts to the elementary science program.

Safety continues to be a priority, Szymaniak said, by keeping in communication via text with police and fire chiefs in both towns and the establishment of a district communication weather team to have the latest information in any emergency. He is also reviewing the “relatively antiquated radio system” for internal school communications. He is also exploring the expansion of the ALICE program to elementary schools.

School Committee member Christopher Howard said it would be very helpful for committee members to observe classes and programs for themselves without getting in the way.

“I think it would be really helpful,” he said. “We spend a lot of time talking about dollars and cents, we spend a lot of time talking about buildings, but the reason we’re here is for the education of children…. It would be very helpful to all of us and I think it allows us to think about how we can share that message back to the public.”

Szymaniak said there is an open invitation to all committee members to visit schools and classrooms.

“You get so much out of it,” said Small who recalled an art class in which fifth-grade students were discussing what message different colors convey in a PowerPoint presentation. “To me art class was where you take a piece of paper and draw a picture. … School has changed so much.”

Filed Under: Breaking News, News

Hanson closes its TM warrant

March 13, 2019 By Tracy F. Seelye, Express Editor

HANSON — The Board of Selectmen has closed the warrants for the Monday, May 6 special and annual Town Meetings, including a proposed ban on plastic shopping bags and polystyrene beverage cups.

The bans, however, may be passed over at Town Meeting if there is evidence that residents are not ready for it. Selectmen will be meeting with the Board of Health to discuss the process of educating the public on, and implementing any ban, and Selectmen Matt Dyer and Wes Blauss plan to hold a public informational meeting on the proposal ahead of Town Meeting. Dyer said he would like to see the ban in effect by July 2020.

“There’s an appreciable amount of articles, both in the special and the annual that are financial — and we’re still working through the budget …and we’re going to hone down what we can do,” Town Administrator Michael McCue,   told the board at it’s Tuesday, March 12 meeting. “We can’t afford all the requests, so we’ll go back and give you an idea of where we are in terms of what’s affordable.”

The warrant review will continue at the Selectmen’s Tuesday, March 26 meeting and McCue said he and Town Accountant Todd Hassett will also be meeting with their Whitman counterparts as well as school officials on that budget.

An article seeking a $500 stipend for employees at the Treasurer/Collector’s Office who have recently earned a certification, similar to other Town Hall staff receive, was not yet on the warrant, McCue said, noting it must be discussed further with the union. He does intend to include it on the warrant, however.

Dyer said he has discussed the Board of Health’s concerns about Selectmen’s work on the plastic bag ban with Health Chairman Arlene Dias.

“They were concerned we were putting the cart before the horse in terms of putting the bylaw in place and then educating and transitioning to plastic bag-less stores,” Dyer said, suggesting a public forum be held in early April. “I didn’t think it would hurt to have a hearing this spring to kind of see where the public is with it and — if there is strong opposition implementing a by law this spring — maybe revisiting it in the fall.”

Dias, for her part, expressed concern to the Board of Selectmen that sponsoring the warrant article was the purview of her board.

“I don’t have a problem with the ban,” Dias said. “I would like for us to take time to really look at it, come up with a good policy, and implement it. Not backwards.”

She also asked if the town has funding to cover the person who will need to handle the implementation, public education and enforcement involved. The last time Dias met with Selectmen on the issue a couple of months ago, she said they were in agreement to meet jointly to plan and conduct community forums.

“That didn’t happen and now you’re talking about implementing a ban in a couple of months,” Dias said.

Selectmen Chairman Kenny Mitchell agreed, as did Selectman Laura FitzGerald-Kemmett, who stressed it was never the intention to step on any other board’s feet.

“We have people that were particularly impassioned about it,” FitzGerald-Kemmett said. “Maybe we just didn’t put two and two together that we should be working through you.”

She said the issue does need to be looked at, and said she was concerned with the timeline for a spring Town Meeting.

“If we can do the public forum and feel as though people’s concerns have been voiced and answered … we’ve got a place-holder [article],” FitzGerald-Kemmett said.

Where major retail chains such as Shaw’s are concerned, McCue said there are “fall back positions” in place for the possibility of such bans.

“It’s really the smaller ones that you’d really want to reach out to and give them considerations,” McCue said. “It’s a path that’s already been blazed.”

Dyer has already begun talking to business about the issue, as well.

“Everyone, for the most part, has said, ‘We knew it was coming and it’s just a matter of time before it becomes a state law,’ so there wasn’t any big push-back,” he said. “Let’s have a hearing … and if the town isn’t ready for it, I’m not going to force it on them, by any means.”

Green Hanson members attending the meeting also offered their view. Member Marianne DiMascio said the website massgreen.org can supply a lot of the information Selectmen were discussing.

“It may sound daunting that there’s so much to go over, but they have some really good resources,” she said.

Marah Burt, a WHRHS student, also attended the meeting to voice her support for the ban.

“Plastic bags are something that concerns me about the town,” she said.

Another resident said education is really important because of the size of the issue and the time involved in the decomposition process of plastics, especially in view of the fact that the United States produces more than 100 billion plastic bags per year.

“It takes a couple of hundred years for those to break down, and even that is not even the final process,” he said. “It then takes, literally forever, because these micro bits of plastic get into everything, including our bodies.”

Filed Under: Breaking News, News

More freezes are eyed in Whitman

March 7, 2019 By Tracy F. Seelye, Express Editor

WHITMAN — Hiring, overtime, or spending freezes “are things we have to start considering now,” according Selectman Scott Lambiase, who is heading up budget review meetings between town departments as budget liaison.

“We’re going to be going into some difficult times,” he said during the board’s Tuesday, Feb. 26 meeting on why the measures may have to be considered.

Town Administrator Frank Lynam said he is working on a Monday, March 4 date for a meeting with union representatives about a possible two-year wage freeze. Lynam said he would be meeting with the Finance Committee that same evening regarding the budget and warrants for the Town Meeting as they conduct the second round of meetings with department heads.

“Walking into this meeting, or subsequent meetings, we really do need — and hopefully that’ll come out tonight — the overall number to walk into Town Meeting,” Lambiase said. “We met with these unions originally and we, in good faith, came up with some contracts that we’re technically obligated under. So what is that number to us now — and that’s the number we’ve got to be pushing for now to fully fund this and make it sustainable.”

He said, without harder budget numbers and what they will mean to employees, “it’s going to difficult at best” walking into the meetings with union representatives. Lynam agreed with that characterization.

Selectman Randy LaMattina said they also need to discuss strategy on what the town will do if the wage freezes don’t happen.

“To be honest with you, I think we’re getting them a little late for that being a possibility,” he said. “It’s [important] getting this number and facing the cold, hard truth of what it’s going to be. It’s not going to be pretty — I think we all know that — and it has to come out and we have to start dealing with it, I think, in a little more timely fashion.”

Any override, LaMattina argued, would have to be no less than a level-service budget.

Lynam also said Dr. Melinda Tarsi of Bridgewater State University is working on an outline for a community presentation of the findings from the recent Community Assessment survey.

Tarsi is looking to schedule a meeting 7 p.m., Tuesday, March 19 in the Town Hall Auditorium. Selectmen will meet at 6 p.m. before the community presentation.

He also announced that the town recently completed its annual audit with only to “very minimal” comments of little concern. The audit report is viewable online at Whitman.ma.gov.

Lynam also announced that Assistant Town Administrator Lisa Green has earned and received the state designation of municipal certified procurement officer (MCPO), and has also embarked on a challenging course on human resource management and has received her first designation.

Filed Under: Breaking News, News

Milestone for Hanson PD

February 28, 2019 By Tracy F. Seelye, Express Editor

Hanson Police Sgt. Elisha (Sullivan) Durgin has her badge pinned by her husband, Bryan, as their daughter Ellie looks on. (Photo courtesy Hanson Police Department)

HANSON  — Little Ellie Durgin was likely the only one in the room unimpressed with her mother’s résumé.

As the toddler in pink skirt and flowered shirt played with a cell phone, Police Chief Michael Miksch listed the credentials and accomplishments that earned her mother, Sgt. Elisha (Sullivan) Durgin, that rank.

Durgin is the first woman to be promoted to sergeant in the Hanson Police Department and was sworn in by Town Clerk Elizabeth Sloan during the Tuesday, Feb. 26 Selectmen’s meeting.

She has been a Hanson Police Officer since 2013, serving with departments in Plympton, Scituate and within the Boston Housing Authority before that — an officer with more than 11 years’ experience. Durgin has extensive training in sexual assault investigations and drug overdose prevention, and is one of the Hanson Police Department’s coordinators with the Plymouth County Outreach program on overdose follow-ups and intervention.

Durgin holds a bachelor of science degree in biology from Simmons College.

“We have the swearing in of one of the toughest cops that I know — patrolman Elisha Sullivan to the rank of sergeant,” said Selectmen Chairman Kenny Mitchell in introducing the ceremony.

A combination of a written exam and assessment center, in which Durgin earned the highest score, saw all five officers who applied receive passing grades, according to Miksch, who expressed pride in all the officers. Assessment centers evaluate candidates’ knowledge and abilities based on how they would handle real-life scenarios.

“One of the most important jobs in a police department is a sergeant,” Miksch said. “They are a first-line supervisor. … We depend on them and they fill that gap [getting] done what we need done, making sure everybody’s safe. … They’re teachers, they’re mentors and leaders and to test that is very difficult.”

Miksch said he still scratches his head about why she is not a teacher.

“That’s OK, we’re happy she decided to come to us,” he said. “I’m proud to say she is our newest sergeant and I’m looking forward to having her in that leadership role.”

She fills a vacancy created when Lt. Michael Casey was promoted within the past year.

Durgin’s parents watched as she was sworn in before her husband Bryan and their daughter Ellie pinned on her new badge.

“Ellie’s busy right now. What’s she got, an electronic device?” Miksch said as she sat on her mom’s lap playing with a phone. “I think Ellie was going to try and pin Sgt. Sullivan, I’m not so sure that’s the smartest move,” he joked.

Mitchell joked that Sgt. Durgin passed the exam on a Monday and she and Bryan were married the following weekend.

Recreation fees

The Board of Selectmen tabled a recommendation by the Recreation Commission to increase fees for weddings at Camp Kiwanee, pending more information on conditions of the facility and market pricing, but approved increases in fees for swim passes at Cranberry Cove — so long as two family passes are made available for check-out at Hanson Public Library for residents who cannot afford the fees.

The latter was passed by a 4-0-1 vote with Selectman Jim Hickey abstaining.

Recreation Commission Chairman Diane Cohen and member John Zucco presented the fee increase proposals.

The proposed wedding price increases are $500 — up to $4,000 from $3,500 for Friday evening or Sunday day/evening weddings — and to $5,500 from $5,000 for Saturday weddings — during the peak season between May 1 and Oct. 31. Additional fees are charged for extra reception or set up hours, security deposits and other non-wedding events. The rates are available online at hanson.ma.gov.

Daily swim passes will remain at $5 per person, but a new single-person season pass has been introduced at $40 for residents, $55 for non-residents and a 10-percent discount for seniors and military/veterans with proof of service. Other current season passes have increased $5 — to $90 for resident families, $165 for non-resident families and a 10-percent discount for military/veterans with proof of service. Non-resident season passes with swim lessons are $115 with guests required to pay $5 each and swim lessons at $125 for the first child, $75 for the second, $65 for the third and the fourth free. Swim team fees are $65 each.

Selectman Laura FitzGerald-Kemmett was assured by Cohen and Zucco that a competitive analysis had been done.

“There really isn’t a whole lot that’s like Camp Kiwanee,” Cohen said. “But there are a few facilities … and it’s in that range.”

Selectmen were also concerned about the number of weddings booked, noting a decline for the coming June before the price increases were proposed.

“A lot of weddings recently … over the past few years I’ve seen a lot of last-minute [bookings],” said Zucco, who works as a DJ. “I just booked a wedding for June 21.”

He said people have just started booking for 2020.

“We don’t have a full-time wedding or event sales person and a lot of venues do,” he added. FitzGerald-Kemmett suggested the addition of a virtual wedding video on the website to give couples an idea of what a wedding at Camp Kiwanne would look like.

Hickey and Selectman Matt Dyer, the board’s liaison to the Recreation Commission, were concerned about the effect of a price increase on wedding bookings, however.

Hickey also took issue with the claim of bookings being last-minute, noting his own daughter has been planning her wedding for nearly a year already.

“The weddings have been on a decline since 2016, yet you want to raise the rates,” Hickey said. “The supply isn’t equal to the rates.”

Cohen said the Camp’s costs are also going up, noting several recent repairs, including an electrician called in to look at a light in the freezer, said it was “one flick of the switch away from setting this whole place in flames.”

“You want to make money like a private business, but you want to run it under a municipality system,” Cohen said of Camp Kiwanee. “The whole thing just flies in the face of each other. At some point we have to figure out what is the long-range plan.”

Dyer said he has friends who grew up in town and want to get married at Kiwanee, but say $5,000 is just too much for them to afford.

“They don’t even bother to look at the Camp because they know it’s out of their range,” Dyer said. “We’re walking out of school owing $50,000, $60,000, $70,000 in debt — we’re living in our parents’ basements. Do you think we’re going to go out and spend $10,000 on a wedding?”

Hickey suggested a review of conditions at Kiwanee before a decision is made on the lodge rates.

“Maybe Camp Kiwanee was a fad in 2014 when we peaked at weddings,” he said.

Cohen agreed rustic weddings were a trend earlier this decade, and Zucco said they still are, but offering a wedding showcase event to bring in wedding vendors who can market the venue can help.

Hickey and Dyer were also concerned about the cove swim pass fee increase, with Hickey arguing a 8-percent fee hike for town employees who receive a 2-percent raise is not fair. Dyer suggested the availability of free family passes at the library for struggling families could help.

Cohen said minimum wage also went up, meaning lifeguard costs are increasing as well.

Compared to anywhere else offering swim lessons, Camp Kiwanee, where swim lessons are scheduled every day, offers a better value, she argued.

Filed Under: Breaking News, News

Whitman aids fire victims

February 20, 2019 By Stephanie Spyropoulos, Express Correspondent

WHITMAN — The night of the fire heavy black smoke could be seen from Route 58 in Hanson — the sounds of sirens rang from all directions — as fire apparatus from all over the South Shore helped battle a raging house fire at 316-18 Commercial St., on Wednesday, Feb. 13.

Word spread quickly that the three-story wooden structure was crumbling to the ground, siding melted down to the foundation along with it — destroying personal processions and mementos of approximately a dozen residents.

Remarkably no one was injured in the fire, reported by a resident through 911 just before 8 p.m. The blaze drew 80 firefighters and 15 departments from around the south shore.

“Upon arrival heavy flames were coming from a second-story window. The fire was spreading to the third floor and simultaneously burning the wooden deck outside of the window,” said Whitman Fire Chief Timothy J. Grenno.
Deputy Chief Joe Feeney immediately struck a second alarm — a call for more assistance to the scene — due to the building structure and size.  Chief Grenno called for additional mutual aid from other towns, striking a fifth alarm at approximately 9:25 p.m.

Hundreds of onlookers and media flooded the street filming the flames as they seem to propel from every gap of the structure. Residents lined the doorways and lawns dressed in pajamas, some wore white face masks as they shook their heads to evade the gusts of smoke, that mixed with snowflakes as the night progressed.

They Lost everything

“People have been amazing,” said resident Hannah Fabian who has spent most of the last week in a daze filling out paperwork and trying to piece her life back together. Along with several other families in the building they have seen a vast amount of support as they start to rebuild.

Fabian, who was home when the fire started, had rented in the Whitman apartment building for less than six months with her boyfriend and two sons. Her cousin, David, and his daughter who is 11 and a middle school student in Whitman, rented an apartment on the lower level. Fabian had asked him to check her apartment when the boys, who were getting ready to visit their father, smelled burning plastic – within seconds smoke billowed from her bathroom. They all ran out of the building while the smoke alarms blared and called the fire department.

“When we got out of the house it was already completely covered in smoke. It went up in what seemed liked seconds,” said Fabian. “I tried to stay calm for the kids but I couldn’t help it we all were crying.”

She left the fire scene after her sons, who are ages 8 and 11, were picked up by their father. She wore a red hoodie over her face and had a friend, who like her also has severe asthma, give Fabian an inhaler as her own medicine was left behind in the burning building.

David was trying to gather his tools outside the building as he sprayed a fire extinguisher, she said.

Fabian has received monetary help through a GoFundMe account a friend has created, but there are things that can’t ever be replaced like baby books and photo albums, she said.

Battling the blaze

Firefighters battled the blaze and successfully prevented it from spreading to nearby homes. The heaviest flames were knocked down by approximately 9:30 p.m., said Grenno.

Several neighbors who viewed the intensity of the scene from parallel driveways used cell phones to document the fire, as they trained a watchful eye on their own homes.

Residents displaced by the fire were assisted by the American Red Cross — who responded to the scene.

The building, a total loss has since been demolished. Early estimates of the loss have totaled upwards of $1 million dollars in loss, according to Grenno.

The preliminary investigation indicated that the fire started in a second floor apartment. The cause of the fire is under investigation by Whitman Fire and investigators from the Massachusetts Department of Fire Services (DFS).

They were continuing their investigation Thursday Feb. 14, but at this time it does not appear to be suspicious. Grenno said that he did not know when the last fire inspection was done at the building, but that it had previously been up to code.

“This fire spread extremely fast and I want to commend our firefighters and those from our surrounding communities who responded to help put this fire out as quickly as they did,” Grenno said. “We are thankful that no one was hurt and that all residents were quickly able to be accounted for.”

As of Tuesday Feb. 19 the cause of the fire was still under investigation. 

Crews worked to overhaul the house and extinguish hot spots until approximately 12:30 a.m. Thursday Feb. 14. The scene was cleared later in the day and an engine from Whitman remained on fire watch over night.

Firefighters from the following communities responded to assist on the call: Hanson, Abington, East Bridgewater, West Bridgewater, Bridgewater, Rockland, Brockton, Norwell, Hanover, Halifax, Hingham, Holbrook, Randolph, Marshfield, Avon and Pembroke.
In addition, the Whitman Police Department, Whitman Community Emergency Response Team (CERT), DFS Rehabilitation Unit and Boston Sparks Association A-10 also responded to the scene.

Helping others

Austin Gould, a first grader at Conley School in Whitman, heard about the fire on Wednesday and when he arrived at school on Thursday he asked if he could talk to his school Principal Karen Downey.

“He came in to see me and said ‘Well did you know there was a big fire?’ My heart melted …” said Downey.

Gould explained that he remembered Downey telling them that they can help make a difference in other kids’ lives and that was his goal. He wanted to help the kids who lost everything in the fire.

Downey has always stood by the lessons of education for her students however she also wants them to become good citizens, she said.

Her reaction upon hearing his objective to benefit the victims was one of pride

“Wow! They are hearing me,” she said. “I was so impressed with the willingness and earnestness from such a wonderful little guy. Knowing they are absorbing all the lessons that are being taught by word and example is spreading pride through the Whitman schools.”

Also students at Conley School, James and Charlotte Kleinman planned a  lemonade stand to raise funds.

Filed Under: Breaking News, News

Murray family presses for answers

February 14, 2019 By Abram Neal, Express Correspondent

VIGIL: Organizers Adrienne McDougall, left, and Diane Ostranber take part in a candlelight vigil for Maura Murray in Hanson Saturday, Feb. 9, the 15th anniversary of her disappearance after a New Hampshire car crash. (Photo by Abram Neal/Express News)

HANSON — Maura Murray, then 21, a native of Hanson, vanished after she crashed her 1996 Saturn into a snowbank along a curve on Wild Ammonoosuc Road (Route 112) in Woodsville, New Hampshire, a village of Haverhill, 15 years ago. The UMass Amherst nursing student’s mysterious disappearance on Feb. 9, 2004 has sparked worldwide attention in the press, on the Internet and on social media over the course of the last decade and a half.

Family, friends and supporters of Maura Murray marked the somber anniversary Saturday in New Hampshire and here in Hanson by lighting candles in hopes that she will be found. Her father, Fred Murray, 76, had shared with the public new details of an investigation he has conducted into her disappearance with the hope that the public attention will put pressure on New Hampshire authorities to further look into the matter. Investigators, meanwhile, say the investigation is still active.

Fred Murray, who spoke to the Express Monday, Feb. 11, says that he is certain he has found a burial site in a house “astonishingly close” to the site of the accident. According to him, locals first tipped him off about suspicious activity at the house in the first year after his daughter’s disappearance, including rumors of new concrete being poured in the basement shortly after the accident, he says.

The Boston Globe reported last week what Murray said, based on those tips, “that a man who lived in the home at the time of the crash, as well as the man’s extended family members who lived nearby, were responsible for his daughter’s death.”

Although he told the Express that he is not positive that it’s his daughter who is buried in the house, he strongly believes that there are human remains in the house and that they are likely those of his daughter.

“I only need to be right once,” he pointed out.

The house, which he says police never searched, a point which officials don’t advertise unless pressed in statements, has come under new ownership since Maura Murray’s disappearance, and the new owners have been receptive to Fred Murray’s investigation. He says he is willing to pay to dig up their basement, although he’d rather New Hampshire authorities do it.

The New Hampshire Attorney’s General office said in a statement that they “searched the area with dogs at the time,” but never searched inside the house in question.

In November and December 2018, Fred Murray brought in two trained, accredited cadaver detecting dogs to the house, each one on separate occasions. They alerted, he says, by lying down in the same spot in the basement of the house. He says that video of the dogs alerting exists, and is available widely online from local television media outlets.

Later, ground-penetrating radar was used and indicated strong findings of an abnormality in the same spot in the concrete, he said. Much of Fred Murray’s investigation has been paid for by donations and through pro-bono work of those who support him, he says.

“It’s astounding that this [basement] wasn’t looked at before. I told the police about this in the first year … the State Police did an inadequate job when my daughter first went missing,” he added, adamantly.

Fred Murray said he has found the local police to have been less-than-helpful, and as for federal law enforcement, “The FBI has been dodging it [the case] for 15 years … they’re useless,” he said of the Boston office of the FBI.

He says that law enforcement’s response to his investigation, when he’s notified them of his findings, has been, “We looked at that, we looked at that, we looked at that.”

“Because of the institutional intransigence of the New Hampshire State Police the case is still alive 15 years later,” he said.

Fred Murray said that he thinks he’s been getting “the run around,” and that officials have been waiting for him to go away. “This time, the guy didn’t go away, and that guy was me.”

A representative for the New Hampshire Department of Safety, of which the New Hampshire State Police are a division, refused to comment because of the active nature of the investigation, but did refer the Express to the Office of the New Hampshire Attorney General.

“The case is still open and active.  We do receive tips and information periodically, as well as generate new information from investigative efforts,” said Jeffrey Streizin, Associate Attorney General and Director of the Division of Public Protection with the New Hampshire Attorney’s General office in an emailed statement.

He continued, “We are aware of the allegations regarding a home’s basement in that area and have considered and are considering next steps. That area was searched by law enforcement in the past, including with dogs, and nothing of significance was discovered.”

When asked to clarify whether the home itself was ever searched, Streizin said, “The State Police conducted a canvas of that area in 2004 and searched the area where that house is located with dogs. They did not go into the house at that time.”

“I need help. I’m asking for help,” Fred Murray said. “The people of northern New Hampshire have been wonderful. They are salt of the earth people … The goodness of people has really come to the forefront. Maura’s only friends in this have been the Massachusetts press, her friends and the great people of the area.”

Exactly where Maura Murray was headed, and why, has remained a mystery over the years. Moments after the crash, a good Samaritan stopped to assist her, but she waved him off and told him not to call the police, according to original police reports from 2004. The passerby called local police anyway, although he did drive off. A Haverhill police cruiser arrived within minutes, but the Saturn was locked, and Maura Murray was gone.

According to a four-part series reported by Maribeth Conway in this paper’s predecessor, the Hanson Express in 2007, Fred Murray had dinner with his daughter in Amherst two days before her disappearance.

She caused damage to her father’s car that night in a minor accident near UMass in Hadley, Massachusetts, and later friends reported she had been drinking that night, although no charges were filed in that incident.

The following day, she performed Internet searches for driving directions to Vermont and the Berkshires. She also called for a condominium rental reservation in Bartlett, New Hampshire, which she did not end up reserving. Her family often vacationed in Bartlett, a town in the White Mountains near the Attitash ski resort.

Her belongings were neatly packed up in boxes in her UMass dorm room before she left, according to reports, leading to speculation that she may have been considering leaving school permanently. But she had good grades, and her college textbooks were found in her car by investigators after the accident.

Maura Murray withdrew $280 from her bank account, leaving the account almost empty, and emailed professors and her boss at a local art gallery that she would be away from school because she was needed in Hanson due to a death in the family. Relatives later confirmed there was no death in the family.

No one is sure exactly why the college student made up the story.

A friend later suggested that Maura Murray may have been under a lot of pressure and wanted to get away to think about something important.

She grabbed some toiletries, a favorite stuffed animal — a monkey given to her by her father– and a necklace her boyfriend had given her. She then departed. Police say she next stopped at a liquor store, bought about $40 worth of alcohol — which police reports say some of which was found in plain sight in her car after the crash– and never returned to Massachusetts.

Fred Murray says his next step will be to try to enlist the help of senior New Hampshire State Police officials but that he continues to wait and marvel at the lack of help. He added, “We’re still going to win.”

When asked to clarify what a win for him would be, he hesitated and said, “There is no win. There is no satisfaction. I have to find her, bring her home and give her a proper burial. Every father who ever drew a breath on the planet should know what happens next.”

Filed Under: Breaking News, News

Growing Food for Thought

February 7, 2019 By Tracy F. Seelye, Express Editor

HANSON — When Troop 68 Life Scout Liam Keane began planning his Eagle Badge project, he was also looking for a way to make a difference in the world. His mom Patricia showed him the USA for Africa video of the Michael Jackson/Lionel Ritchie song “We Are the World” for some inspiration.

Dozens of music industry giants had left the Grammy Awards ceremony Jan. 21, 1985 and entered a recording studio to record the song — seven weeks after the Christmas 1984 record of UK Band Aid anthem “Do They Know It’s Christmas?” produced by Bob Geldof raised funds for African famine relief. The American recording, released in March 1985, also set aside funds for combatting hunger at home.

Fighting hunger at home was a concept that resonated with Keane, a junior at Whitman-Hanson Regional High School. WHRHS Guidance Counselor Courtney Selig thought a community garden at the school would be a good way to achieve both his goals.

“I wanted to change the world and help people,” Keane said. “Since we’ve been doing it, I realized so much about kids who you wouldn’t even think of going to the food pantry getting food or on free and reduced lunch.”

In some district elementary schools, nearly a quarter of students depend on free and reduced lunch programs, principals have reported at past School Committee meetings.

Keane’s idea was the beginning of what became Food for Thought, a school activity club of about 20 charter members working with Keane to bring awareness within the school about childhood hunger.

“School, community, home — we’re always looking for different ways to make that partnership and connection,” Selig said. “I think this was one great way to do that.”

The first project of the club was to build a garden out behind the school with produce going to the school’s culinary program as well as the pantries.

“We built it Memorial Day weekend, and club members have taken turns maintaining it, watering it, and harvesting it throughout the summer,” Keane said. “We have donated over 100 pounds of food to both Whitman and Hanson Food Pantries.”

He hopes the club keeps going long after he graduates and so long as there is a need in both communities. Members of Food for Thought have signed a meeting table they painted in hopes future members of the club will add their names for years to come.

“This project has become very personal for me and it has gone above and beyond my expectations,” he said.

Selig joked that the group thought they would be lucky to harvest a single tomato and it yielded 200 pounds of vegetables divided between both food pantries as well as tomatoes for the culinary program and salad fixings for the cafeteria. The carrot harvest was also impressive, Keane said.

“I wanted to do something different,” he said.

Bottle and can drive

To help fund his Eagle project, Keane is conducting a bottle and can drive from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m., Saturday, Feb. 9 at the Nathaniel Thomas Mill on Route 58/Liberty Street in Hanson. [See page 4]

“There’s a lot of beer bottles, beer cans — especially after the Super Bowl,” he said. His drive will not only recycle the containers but continue to help feed neighbors in need.

Throughout this school year, we have also held other events to help support these food pantries as well as letting people know the importance of ending hunger within our communities.

One event was World Food Day, on Oct. 16. The club sold bracelets and hung posters around the school stating facts about childhood hunger.

“We raised $300 which was split and donated to the food pantries,” Keane said. “We also have also started an indoor garden in the green house at Whitman-Hanson High School where we will begin our seedlings for the outdoor garden, but also develop it so that we can continue to grow fresh “salad” vegetables all year long for the food pantries.”

Hanson Food Pantry Director Christine Cameron said donations of fresh produce from the Greater Boston Food Bank, area farms such as Lipinski’s in Hanson and projects like Keane’s are vital for clients.

“Or goal is to have people eat healthy,” Cameron said. “We have great farmers in our communities that help us that are very generous. …  Anything we can get that’s fresh, we consider that much better.”

Youth involvement at the pantry has also included Hanson Girl Scout troops and the National Honor Society as well as the Boy Scouts.

“It’s great to see them involved because they are our future volunteers and they see what happens in their community,” she said. “We have some wonderful kids that come through and help.”

Last year the Hanson Food Pantry gave out more than 100,000 pounds of food last year, helping an average of 200 to 300 clients on a monthly basis.

“It is unfortunate, but we will always have people that need our help, and so we’re there,” Cameron said.

Two upcoming projects Food for Thought students are currently working on are a “Bagged Lunch” program for which they will be making 200 bagged lunches over February vacation and donating them to Main Spring House in Brockton and raising funds to enter a team into the Project Bread Walk for Hunger 5K in Boston which will take place in May.

To sponsor the group, contact Keane at lt.keane@icloud.com.

A Souper Bowl fundraiser also raised canned goods donations for the pantries.

Filed Under: Breaking News, News

Report: WHRHS students shared ‘inappropriate photos’ via cell phone

January 31, 2019 By Tracy F. Seelye, Express Editor

Police and school officials are investigating an incident at Whitman-Hanson Regional High School, in which students had been sharing what was described as “inappropriate photos” on their phones.

“Administration was notified of inappropriate pictures being circulated on student cell phones,” according to a statement from the office of Superintendent of Schools Jeffrey Szymaniak released on Thursday, Jan. 31.

No comment was offered on the nature of the images.

School administrators contacted the building School Resource Officer and the issue is being investigated by the Whitman Police Department, according to the statement.

“The District appreciates its strong working relationship with both the Whitman and Hanson Police Departments to ensure the safety and well-being of our students,” Szymaniak stated.

“It is an active investigation by Whitman Police, working closely with DA’s office,” Whitman Police Chief Scott Benton said Thursday afternoon. “Where it is an active, ongoing, investigation, no further info will be released.”

Benton referred inquiries into the matter to Plymouth County DA Timothy Cruz. A request for comment has not yet been returned from Cruz’s office.

*Steph Spyropoulous contributed to this report

Filed Under: Breaking News

Step toward ROCCC dispatch

January 31, 2019 By Tracy F. Seelye, Express Editor

HANSON — Selectmen gave the green light to talks aimed at a regional emergency dispatch agreement with Regional Old Colony Communications Center (ROCCC) and heard a preliminary budget presentation from Town Accountant Todd Hassett on Tuesday, Jan. 29.

Hassett said the town is looking a net reduction of $832,846 in total revenue, expecting $25,847,812 in combined levy, free cash, cherry sheet, fees, stabilization and other sources of revenue. Expenditures at this point are estimated to be at $26,333,328 or a $458,426 shortfall. Among those expenditures, Hassett said, he is working off calculations of a 6.5-percent increase in W-H assessment and a 6 percent South Shore Tech assessment increase.

SST released budget numbers last week forecasting a .92 percent — $9,167 — increase in fiscal 2020. [See story, page one].

“We still have some work to do on the budget to close a few gaps,” Hassett said. “Most of our budget is supported through property taxes, local receipts and state aid.”

The levy base is up by $2,029,740 to $25,263,740 with additional sources of revenue increased by $1,443,918; but expenses are up this year.

“The deficit might look a little daunting,” said Town Administrator Michael McCue. “It’s going to take a lot of work … a lot of cooperation on the parts of people that sit in this building and in the other town, but we’ve been able to come up with, in the last couple of years, a balanced budget that didn’t necessarily eviscerate either the schools or the municipalities. … We’ve got to live within our means.”

The budget was on Selectmen’s minds when it came to deciding whether to move forward with talks on joining the ROCCC. In a discussion spanning nearly an hour, board members hashed out concerns over the cost of a regional approach vs maintaining civilian dispatchers.

In the end, they approved a letter of intent to continue talks on a contract for the regional service center, funded by state 911 currently handling 911 calls, Police, Fire, and EMS dispatching for the Towns of Duxbury, Plympton, Halifax and Rochester.

Duxbury Fire Capt. Rob Reardon, however, assured Selectmen that the letter of intent had to be agreed to and signed before negotiations over the board’s concerns could begin. He oversaw the entry of Plympton, Halifax and Rochester into the ROCCC.

“We welcome the chiefs to come so we can negotiate that dollar figure,” he said. “I can tell you you’re going to get $200,000 [from state 911] … because I’ve done plenty of deals with other towns.”

But, he added, before that can be settled, it has to be determined what year is Hanson going to join and how long a contract the town is seeking.

“It’s not like we’re signing tonight and it’s a done deal,” Reardon said. “We have a ton of work to do.”

ROCCC Director Mike Mahoney, a Hanson native, also spoke at the meeting. He reminded Selectmen that 100 percent of current dispatchers who apply to be regional dispatchers are hired so long as they pass a required exam.

“We have to give Duxbury an answer,” said Selectmen Chairman Kenny Mitchell. “We’ve been — kicking the can’s probably not a good term — but we’ve been talking about this for awhile. Everyone’s been over to the ROCCC, and seen the facility over there. We’ve got to make some decisions.”

Mitchell said he felt the dispatch center is a “better product.”

“We have great dispatchers now, but when you get multiple calls, they can only do so much,” he said, noting that Police Chief Michael Miksch has concerns. Fire Chief Jerry Thompson, meanwhile, is a proponent of ROCCC.

“To be perfectly honest, I haven’t been a fan of this from the beginning, for a number of reasons,” Miksch said. “You have to understand that the communications [center] is in my building and falls under me. Fire has brought up some concerns, in this coming year’s budget we tried to address some of those concerns.”

He said he not only cares about the people who work for him, he does not need change.

Selectmen also wanted to see a spreadsheet on cost estimates before making a decision. But Reardon’s assurances over 911 reimbursements and Hassett said the proposal is relatively cost-neutral.

“The biggest thing is … I cannot shut the lights off in my station,” Miksch said. With no one in a station, other towns have an issue with officers on constant call-back to serve citizens at the station.

Civilian dispatchers also help keep an eye on prisoners and help with paperwork, according to Miksch. Also, people who stop in at the station during the night need real help.

“They don’t need directions, they’re not looking to use the bathroom,” Miksch said.

“I’ll be the first to say — I don’t know how the rest of the board feels — the station will never go dark. Ever,” Selectman Jim Hickey said.

“I am a proponent,” Thompson said of the program. “I think that it’s something that we need to look at.”

He pointed to some of the capital project benefits in the first year of a regional center would be tremendous and that, in the event of multiple calls overnight, especially, one person can’t do the work of a team of three. Mahoney stressed the letter of intent is a necessary first step toward that.

Thompson argued they are also hearing that, in coming years, the town could be forced to regionalize. Doing it now could mean the ability to bargain for benefits to Hanson.

“Whatever decision you make, I will support 100 percent,” he said.

Selectman Laura FitzGerald-Kemmett’s main concern is that Hanson get equal say — “an equal seat at the table” as she put it — as other member towns.

“It’s Duxbury that kind of runs the show,” she said. “We can give them feedback, but it’s not completely regionalized. … They’re not there yet.”

Mahoney said the intention is to go in that direction.

Both FitzGerald-Kemmett and Hickey characterized the vote as the most important decision they make as a selectman.

“There is going to be a cost and [Thompson] said once in a while, something’s going to happen at 2 a.m., I don’t want that once in a while to be in Hanson,” Hickey said. “I don’t want a dark station. … I want to be informed.”

Miksch also voiced concerns over the cost of negotiating contract issues with the clerical union that are not in police contracts if additional civilian dispatchers are needed.

Miksch said replacing the dispatchers with four additional police officers to avoid a dark station could cost $259,000 including a night shift differential for the first year.

Selectman Matt Dyer wanted to see an example of a contract to determine what the town is getting into and a spreadsheet of potential costs for each option on paper.

“I don’t think that’s much to ask for to make a decision on behalf of the town,” Dyer said.

FitzGerald-Kemmett strongly agreed.

Selectman Wes Blauss said he is an enthusiastic supporter of the regional dispatch center.

“Watching three dispatchers plus a shift supervisor talking a diabetic vomiting case through, while police and fire were responding — that in itself was impressive,” Blauss said of his tour of the ROCCC. “As an alarmist, I’ve been thinking ever since then, the big, big storm will come.”

Climate change almost guarantees such a scenario, according to Blauss, who can envision a situation in which a car vs truck accident with serious injuries happens.

“I will have a heart attack in my driveway shoveling snow within 15 minutes of [such an accident] and a house fire will start,” he said. “I could see where regional dispatch could handle that and even they would be [takes a deep breath] a little tense, but I could see where they could handle it, whereas we in Hanson … it would quickly be a crisis situation and I think life would be lost.”

He said he was a positive vote without question.

TA evaluation

The board also began McCue’s public evaluation, handing out copies of reviews of his judgment, leadership, communication, teamwork, organization, administrative, accountability, knowledge, task management and awareness.

“We haven’t looked at each others’ individual reviews,” Mitchell said.

While improvement was deemed necessary in several areas, based on written comments, Selectmen opted to wait until they can review each others’ comments before returning at the next meeting to set goals for an improved evaluation process.

“We could sit here in awkward silence and read through it and then  come back, but it is a lot to digest,” Dyer said.

“As an educator, I feel any evaluation should be a goal-driven evaluation, which this was not in any way,” Blauss said.

FitzGerald-Kemmett said stressing goals is the preferred method in the private sector.

“We all have things we need to work on, it’s just our job to tell you what yours are because that’s the way this is set up,” she said.

Administrative Assistant Meredith Marini compiled individual comments into a report without identification, as well as numeric scores.

“Some people were more detailed than others,” she said, noting some preferred to see the goals being evaluated before making a review. “Not everybody commented on every one of the 10 categories.”

At least three of five selectmen indicated they did not like the evaluation formula, that it needs work, according to Marini.

“It’s just redundant,” FitzGerald-Kemmett said.

McCue said he “certainly want to make sure that as I go along, I’m accomplishing what this board wants” him to achieve.

Filed Under: Breaking News, News

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