Articles Posted in Murder

This was not supposed to happen! How could such a thing happen? You’ve lived your entire life without breaking the law. Well, okay, maybe there was that time many years ago… but that’s beside the point. Nobody knows about that. But, now, here in Boston, today, you are going to be arrested. You are being investigated. Now, as you have read so many times in this daily blog, you need one of those awful creatures, a criminal defense attorney. What now?

Well, lucky for you, there are many of us around. In fact, in the Boston area, you probably could not throw a rock without hitting one. Many people think that that would be a great idea. But let me suggest otherwise.

As is the case in most professions, there are good defense attorneys and not so good ones.

First of all, let’s establish that you actually want an actual criminal defense attorney. In other words, Attorney Iliketowritewills who has helped the family through the years in real estate and other probate matters is not necessarily someone who has any criminal defense experience other than that one drunk driving matter he helped Uncle Charlie with 20 years ago. Attorney Corporatelaw may be absolutely brilliant in mergers and acquisitions, but that does not mean she knows what to do in a drug or shooting matter.

Each type of criminal case is different. The approach to a murder is not the same as it is with a white collar case Certainly, someone who has not even practiced regularly in the criminal court sessions is going to be like the perverbial fish out of water even though dressed in the same kind of suit.
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Authorities are charging 14-year-old Raul Renato Castro as an adult in the murder of Alex Christopher Mercato. The 4-year-old disappeared on Friday afternoon while playing outside his home.

Police found Mercato’s body the next day. It was stuffed inside a clothes dryer in the house next door. Autopsy results indicate that he drowned.

Castro was the only one at his home on Friday. Prosecutors have charged him with special circumstances, including the sexual crime involving sodomy, kidnapping, murder during a child molestation, and murder of a witness to prevent testimony.

Castro’s mother, Elsa, says her son is a good boy who has never been in trouble. If convicted, Castro could end up serving 47-years-to life in prison. California law does not allow a youth offender to face life in prison without parole or the death penalty.

In court, today, an affidavit was released stating that the junior high school student has admitted to luring the 4-year-old into his home, sodomizing him, and drowning him in the bathtub after the victim threatened to tell his mother.

Castro’s arraignment, scheduled for yesterday, was rescheduled for Tuesday.

Getting arrested and charged with a crime is life changing for anyone. The best decision that you can make for your child is to contact an experienced Boston juvenile crimes lawyer right away.

Kids make mistakes. They can also be wrongly accused of crimes they did not commit. When a crime is committed, there may be reasons for the juvenile’s actions that must be brought to light in order to ensure a fair trail. There may be evidence that is inadmissible. There may be reasons why certain charges should be thrown out or reduced.

Affidavit: Teen says he killed boy found in dryer, AP/Google, November 4, 2009
Boy, 14, charged as adult in clothes-dryer murder of 4-year-old, CNN, November 3, 2009

Related Web Resources:
Assessing Juveniles Who Commit Murder, Psychiatric Times, May 1, 2005
Juveniles, The International Justice Project Continue reading

Felix G., 30, of Worcester (hereinafter, the “Defendant”) is no longer running from the law. That chase ended yesterday in New Jersey as law enforcement caught up with him and now prepare to bring him back to the Boston area, where he will be needing a very good criminal defense attorney.

Authorities say that he was hiding at a relative’s apartment. He was hiding from a fugitive from justice charge. In other words, there was an outstanding warrant for his arrest from which he had fled. Perhaps that family member would have been more reluctant to house him if it had been known why the Defendant was hiding.

According to the Commonwealth, the Defendant and a roommate had been watching a soccer game and drinking beer on Sunday night. Then they began arguing about the game. Then, the Defendant decided to have the final word by shooting his roommate repeatedly in the back, killing him.

Apparently, the Defendant’s first attempt to flee did not include another state. He was found Monday morning drunk in a hotel lobby. However, the warrant for his arrest for the murder had not yet been issued, so he was released by the police who disturbed his slumber to bring him into custody.
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As anyone feeling the weather this week can tell you, Fall is upon us. As we edge ever closer to the winter months, students around the Boston area are settling into their little piece of heaven in the Commonwealth – the campus. However, Heaven is not found here on Earth as two female Boston University students can now tell you. They were robbed at knifepoint and so now, the local police are searching for someone to introduce to defense attorneys.

It happened last Saturday while they were sitting on a bench in front of a university dorm early in the morning. The women told police that their assailant was a white male in his 20s. He approached them at around 4:15 a.m. and threatened them with a knife.

Neither woman was injured, but $50 and a pack of cigarettes was stolen.

It is unknown whether the assailant was also a BU student. University police are investigating with help from Brookline and Boston police.
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Aaron C., 30, of Attleboro (hereinafter, the “Defendant”) may be a bit angry today. As I write this, he may even be on the phone calling his attorney to look into suing the authorities for invading his privacy.

It appears that he was making a telephone call and the authorities listened to the conversation…and then they arrested him.

Well, perhaps the surrounding circumstances are worth noting. He was in a police station in Providence Rhode Island at the time. He was being questioned about the murder for which he was thereafter arrested.

You see, the Defendant has been accused of shooting and killing a 67 year-old woman in her Attleboro home.
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The parents of three of the six boys charged with severely beating a 30-year-old Guatemalan illegal immigrant are appealing school suspensions that have been imposed on their kids over the alleged Massachusetts assault incident. In Massachusetts, school principals are allowed to suspend a student who has been charged with a felony crime.

The boys, in addition to two others, are accused of throwing bricks, rocks, and bottles at Damian Merida while he slept near railroad tracks in Lynn last July. Merida sustained serious head injuries, including a traumatic brain injury.

The charges against the boys include attempted murder, civil rights violations, and assault with intent to maim. Five of the boys have been released from custody for now but are required to wear electronic monitoring bracelets. Police claim that the boys attacked Merida because of his ethnicity.

This past weekend was a bad one for 20-year-old Vernon C. of New Bedford (hereinafter, the “Defendant”). He was arrested on Sunday and charged with multiple felony charges which have brought him incarceration and a lawyer.

According to the Commonwealth, the Defendant was at a party late Friday night when he demanded a chain necklace from one of his fellow party-goers.

He did so at gunpoint.

21-year-old Scott M. (hereinafter, the “Deceased”) tried to intervene. He was shot for the attempt. He was pronounced dead Saturday afternoon. In a Boston-area hospital.
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On Monday, we began the week discussing a case out of Quincy in which we had a dead woman discovered on Saturday and a man arrested in connection therewith the same day. We talked about it being a potential domestic violence matter and it became a general posting about homicide investigations and the need to get an attorney right away.

Well, the case has remained in the news and has only gotten more grisly.

Relatives and friends are still offering support to the “neighbor who would shovel your walk”, 52-year-old Joseph B. (hereinafter, the “Defendant”). He has now pleaded not guilty to the assault and eventual murder of 33-year-old Mary B. (hereinafter, the “Deceased”). According to the prosecution, the Defendant choked the Deceased into unconsciousness, had sex with her, then killed her.

We have also learned a bit more about the Defendant’s background. Apparently, according to his supporters, he has a history of mental illness.

He has been held without bail for the crimes which are now alleged to have occurred last Friday.
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August 29th was my birthday; never mind which one. So, when it came time to write today’s blog, I decided to see how my fellow Bostonians had celebrated the day and find out if anyone used the occasion to produce the need for an experienced criminal defense attorney.

I shortly wished I hadn’t.

I came upon a sad story from Quincy. It involved 52 year-old Wollaston man, Joseph B. (hereinafter, the “Defendant”) who spent my birthday being arrested for murder.

The Defendant was arrested on Saturday in connection with the death of 33 year-old Mary B. (hereinafter, the “Deceased”), whose body was found on Saturday afternoon in the home she shared with her child. According to a press release from District Attorney William Keating’s office, the two knew each other well, but the nature of their relationship was not explained further.

Law enforcement has also declined to reveal how they believe the Deceased was killed.
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Today’s posting of the daily Boston Criminal Lawyer’s Blog takes us back in history. It is a history remembered, however, kept alive by Fall River’s Herald a day or so ago. Actually, in reprinting the article online, they even provided a You Tube video tape of the Fall River Public Library’s presentation of the story to the Fall River History Club introducing the story about the “bad family” involved.

The story fits with this week’s motif of alcohol and crime, so I figured I would treat you to a some Massachusetts history. No extra charge.

The elements of the event could well have been taken from newspaper heading of today. They included a teenager under the influence of a controlled substance, a robbery and a shotgun blast to the face.

The deceased was John Bullock. The year was June 19, 1862. The place was Freetown..

Obed Reynolds was the 17 year old lad (hereinafter, the “Defendant”) who apparently pulled the trigger. He was drunk on not only liquor, but gunpowder. No, not in the figurative sense such as in “he is drunk with power“. Reynolds was actually intoxicated on a concoction of alcohol and gunpowder. He told investigators that the combination helped to give him courage.
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