Charles F. Bogues, a Dorchester man, who pled guilty to the 1993 murder of a 15-year-old teenager, is asking a Massachusetts appeals court to set aside his conviction. Bogues’s father, Boston police Officer Charles T. Bogues, says his son would like another chance to go to trial.

Bogues, 38, says he only pled guilty because prosecutors and his criminal defense attorney had convinced him that the stray bullet that struck the boy came from Bogues’s gun. Bogues has so far served 11 years in prison for the murder of Louis D. Brown during a Dorchester shoot-out. Brown had been going to a Teens Against Gang Violence Christmas party when he was killed by a bullet in the head.

Brown pled guilty to second-degree murder. He is eligible for parole in 15 years. As part of his plea agreement, prosecutors dropped an indictment for cocaine trafficking and weapons possession that came with a minimum mandatory 15 years in prison.

After pleading guilty, Bogues found out that witnesses had identified another person as the shooter. Ballistic evidence also revealed that someone else had been firing a .45-caliber gun at the time of the shooting.

Bogues’s current criminal defense team says that his old lawyer never examined this evidence before convincing the Dorchester man to make the plea agreement. Bogues has already lost one appeal. The three-judge appeals court panel is not sure about whether it can examine Bogues’s appeal because he had waived his right to look at all of the evidence when he agreed to a plea agreement instead of going to trial.

Suffolk Assistant District Attorney Paul B. Linn says that Bogues is guilty and that only he could have fired the deadly shot. Linn says that Bogues’s involvement in the shootout makes him responsible for Brown’s slaying even if there is was a question about who fired the gun with the fatal bullet.

Bogues says that he fired his gun because he and his friends had been shot at on Tonawanda Street by an unknown shooter. He says that he doesn’t think that his return fire could have killed Brown because the teenager was on Geneva Avenue. Prosecutors say that the bullet ricocheted.

Tina Chery, Brown’s mother, says she is now not sure if Bogues is guilty and wonders why others involved in the shooting weren’t arrested.

Man says he was tricked into plea, Boston Globe, March 19, 2008
Inmate wants guilty plea tossed in ’93 homicide, Boston.com, October 29, 2007

Related Web Resources:

Teens Against Gang Violence

Plea Agreements, Justia Continue reading

In Massachusetts, a former US Court of Appeals for the First Circuit records clerk was arrested for allegedly selling OxyContin.

Christopher Cook allegedly sold 200 OxyContin pills to someone working undercover with the FBI. Cook, 28, was to be given $7,600 for the pills.

The undercover witness agreed to work with FBI agents, who tape-recorded the sale, after being charged with drug trafficking outside the state. He had informed agents that he and Cook had been selling drugs for over a year.

Cook reportedly tried to flee before he was arrested at an undisclosed location. He faces one federal charge of selling OxyContin. The Pembroke native reportedly has a history of arrests for violence.

Prosecutors suggested that he be detained until a detention hearing that is scheduled fornext week because he is believed to be a flight risk.

Cook faces up to 20 years in prison if convicted for federal drug trafficking.

OxyContin is a prescription painkiller. Street names for OxyContin include Kicker, OC, Oxy, OX, Blue, Oxycotton, Hillybilly Heroin.

The WhiteHouseDrugPolicy.gov Web site says that prescription drugs are often illegally obtained via:

• Doctor shopping or other prescription fraud.
• Illegal online pharmacies.
• Theft and burglary.
• Receiving/purchasing from friends or family.
• Overprescribing.

If you have been arrested for a drug crime in the Boston area or anywhere else in Massachusetts, it is important that you hire a Boston, Massachusetts drug crimes law firm that is familiar with the different avenues of defense that are available to you. We have defended clients prosecuted at the state and federal levels.

Former court worker held in OxyContin sale, Boston.com, March 14, 2008
Prescription Drugs, Office of National Drug Control Policy

Related Web Resource:

OxyContine, DEA
Federal Trafficking Penalties, DEA Continue reading

A Hull, Massachusetts man was arrested on five counts of larceny and securities fraud.

According to the Massachusetts Attorney General’s office, Jeffrey Gruber, 44, misrepresented himself as a stockbroker and certified financial planner from October 2005 until March 2006. He gave a “client” advice about stocks, bonds, a real estate loan, and placed money into accounts under the name Gruber Financial Services Inc. The victim gave $187,000 to Gruber and asked him to invest the funds.

A complaint filed by the Secretary of State’s Security Division says that Gruber used the funds himself and did not invest them. He also allegedly failed to comply and honor the victim’s demand that he account for her investments and give her the money back.

In Brockton Superior Court on Wednesday, Gruber pled not guilty to the charges. Bail was set at $500,000.

In Massachusetts, the penalty for larceny over $250 is five years maximum in prison.

Our Boston, Massachusetts white collar crimes attorneys have represented many clients throughout Massachusetts in criminal cases.

White collar crimes can include:

• Mail fraud • Wire fraud • Investment adviser fraud • Medicare/Medicaid fraud • Real estate fraud • Tax fraud • Embezzlement • Pension fraud • Insider trading • Tax fraud • Computer crimes • Identity theft • Bankruptcy fraud
White collar crime fraud cases require the legal experience of a law firm that is experienced in handling such matters.

Former financial advisor arrested on charges of securities fraud and larceny, Boston.bizjournal.com, March 13, 2008

Related Web Resources:

White Collar Crimes, Justia
Massachusetts Securities Division
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New York Governor Eliot Spitzer says he is resigning from his position following allegations that he was involved with an international prostitution ring. Spitzer had once served as a prosecutor and New York Attorney General and had built his reputation on prosecuting high profile white collar criminal cases against Wall Street securities companies. He also went after prostitution rings. In 2006, 69% of New York voters elected Spitzer as their governor.

On March 10, the New York Times web site published an article saying that during a federal wiretap, Spitzer is heard making arrangements to meet a prostitute in Washington D.C. Referred to as “Client 9,” in the federal affidavit, Spitzer allegedly paid $4,300 for this sexual encounter with a hooker named “Kristen.”

 

 

Sources say that Spitzer may have spent tens of thousands of dollars to cover the costs of sexual meetings with prostitutes. He allegedly requested prostitutes from the international prostitution and money laundering ring, called the Emperors Club, at least eight times.

Federal prosecutors are not saying whether they plan to file criminal charges against Spitzer. His attorneys reportedly are trying to negotiate a plea agreement to avoid prosecution. Four people, linked to the “Emperors Club,” have already been arrested.

At a press conference today, Spitzer expressed remorse for his “private failings.” He said he was stepping down from politics for the “common good.”

Prostitution is illegal.

Under the General Laws of Massachusetts, Chapter 272: Section 53A:

Section 53A. (a) Whoever engages, agrees to engage, or offers to engage in sexual conduct with another person in return for a fee, or whoever pays, agrees to pay, or offers to pay another person to engage in sexual conduct, or to agree to engage in sexual conduct with another natural person, shall be punished by imprisonment in the house of correction for not more than 1 year or by a fine of not more than $500 or by both such imprisonment and fine, whether such sexual conduct occurs or not.

Spitzer Quits as New York Governor; Paterson Elevated, Bloomberg.com, March 12, 2008
Deeply sorry,’ Spitzer to step down by Monday, CNN.com, March 12, 2008
Massachusetts Law About Sex, Massachusetts Trial Court Law Libraries
Related Web Resources:

Read the Complaint (PDF)

Statement from Governor Eliot Spitzer , March 10, 2008
New York Governor, New York State Continue reading

In Boston, Massachusetts, the civil rights trial of Shawn Drumgold, the man wrongfully convicted of killing a 12-year-old girl, is under way. Drumgold, now 42, served 15 years in prison for the 1988 murder of Darlene Tiffany Moore who got caught in the middle of a gang fight in a Roxbury neighborhood.

Drumgold was released from prison in 2003 after prosecutors took another look at the case and realized that he did not get a fair trial. Witnesses had told the Boston Globe that they were bullied into testifying against Drumgold. One witness in his murder trial had even been suffering from a rare form of brain cancer that can impair his memory and perception. This fact was never revealed to the defense.

Drumgold filed a lawsuit against the city of Boston, Massachusetts in 2004. He also named two police detectives Detective Walsh and Detective Callahan, both now retired, that had investigated his murder case.

On Wednesday, Ricky Evans testified that he lied when he was a witness during Drumgold’s murder trial. He says Detective Callahan showed him several photos of suspects and refused to accept his response when he picked another man’s photo.

Evans said he didn’t have a permanent residence during the time of the shooting. Boston police paid for his food and lodging at a local Howard Johnson for eight months. He says that Detective Callahan told him several outstanding warrants against him would be ‘wiped out.”

Evans admits that he never saw Drumgold during the night of the shooting and that the testimony he provided was based on information that Callahan and another detective had given him. He says recanted his testimony because he felt guilty about lying.

Drumgold claims that Callahan and Walsh withheld key evidence that could have cleared his name and also manipulated key witnesses.

Witness in Drumgold case says he made up testimony, Boston.com, March 5, 2008
Jury hears opening statements in Drumgold case, Boston Herald, March 5, 2008

Related Web Resources:

Drumgold sues over wrongful conviction, Boston.com, June 4, 2004
Drumgold Says He Has No Anger, TruthInJustice.org, November 10, 2003 Continue reading

The Boston criminal defense team of a Massachusetts high school student accused of stabbing a classmate to death in a bathroom at Lincoln-Sudbury Regional High in Sudbury wants the charges against the boy dropped because he has Asperger syndrome (AS).

The defense says that a grand jury were improperly ordered to ignore the fact that John Odgren, 17, has Asperger syndrome, which makes him a special needs case. Odgren’s defense team is arguing that the disorder is responsible for his sometimes violent and bizarre actions. Odgren has been charged with first-degree murder.

Odgren is accused of killing James Alenson, 15, in January 2007. He allegedly approached the boy, slashed his throat with a 13-inch carving knife before stabbing his lung, stomach, liver, and heart.

Odgren’s defense team believes that he would have been charged with second-degree murder or a lesser crime if the grand jury had been given more information about the teenager’s condition.

Last March, Odgren was found competent to stand trial. He is in jail in the Cambridge courthouse.

Asperger Syndrome
Considered an autism spectrum disorder, Asperger Syndrome can involve odd speech patterns, obsessiveness, poor social interactions, and peculiar mannerisms. Symptoms can include motor delays, limited interest, and peculiar preoccupations.

Odgren’s criminal defense team says that the boy’s disorder affects his premeditation and intent and that obsessing with weapons and other morbid items is associated with AS.

Suspect in fatal L-S school stabbing seeks lesser charges, Boston Herald, March 6, 2008
Related Web Resources:

State report describes teen’s early aggression, Boston.com, January 23, 2007
Asperger Syndrome, KidsHealth.org
Asperger Syndrome Fact Sheet, National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke Continue reading

Woburn, Massachusetts resident Nicholas Chiaraluce has been cleared of the aggravated rape charge in an incident involving an unconscious woman in the bathroom of the Felt nightclub. In Boston Municipal Court today, the charges against him were formally withdrawn.

Boston police arrested Chiaraluce after the January 19 incident. Following the arrest, he pled not guilty to the rape charge and was released on bail. He says he was trying to help the woman and had even asked a friend to come to the club to assist them.

Suffolk District Attorney Daniel F. Conley’s office says that the Commonwealth has determined that it does not have evidence to prove that Chiaraluce committed the offense beyond a reasonable doubt.

Chiaraluce applauded his exoneration. He says that he and the woman had consensual sex. He also criticized police for arresting him without speaking to the woman.

Boston police maintain, however, that credible witnesses had said that the Woburn man was seen performing a sex act on a woman who was unconscious-which indicated that she might have not able to give her consent.

Tests showed the woman had alcohol in her system. Her friends have also said that Chiaraluce did not sexually assault her.

Chiaraluce reportedly lost a job opportunity because of the arrest.

Woburn man cleared of rape criticizes Boston police, Boston Globe, March 5, 2008

Related Web Resources:

Man is charged with raping unconscious woman at club, Boston Globe, January 24, 2008
Read Our Law Firm’s Blog About the Arrest and Charges, BostonInjuryLawyerblog.com Continue reading

Singer Bobby Brown, a Boston, Massachusetts native, will serve on year’s community service for cocaine possession in exchange for not being charged with possession of the drug.

Massachusetts police, responding to a call to break up a fight at a Brockton Holiday Inn last December, found Brown sitting in a car with a substance that they believe was cocaine.

No criminal charges were filed. This week, Brockton District Court Clerk Magistrate Kevin Creedon says there was no probable cause for a criminal complaint. He has ordered Brown, the ex-husband of singer Whitney Houston, to mentor young adults and children. The arrest will be erased form his criminal records if he avoids any arrests in the next year.

In Massachusetts, under Trial Court Rule XI: Uniform Rule for Probable Cause Determinations for Persons Arrested Without a Warrant:

A person who has been arrested for an offense for which no warrant has issued, if not released on bail or recognizance, shall be entitled prior to any extended pretrial detention to a determination by a judicial officer of whether there is probable cause to believe that such person has committed such offense, except where such person’s detention is otherwise authorized by a warrant or other judicial process.

Criminal penalties for cocaine possession conviction in Massachusetts include up to one year behind bars for a first offense and two years for a second offense.

Bobby Brown agrees to community service, Boston.com, February 26, 2008
Probable Cause Determinations, Massachusetts Trial Court Law Libraries

Related Web Resource:

Massachusetts Sentencing Guidelines
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Massachusetts lawmakers are assessing a number of bills aimed to place harsher restrictions on sex offenders. Today’s Judiciary Committee meeting comes just a few weeks after Cory Saunders, a high-level sex offender. raped a 6-year-old boy at a New Bedford public library. Saunders was charged with indecent assault and battery on a child under 14 and the rape of a child by force. In 2001, he was convicted of assault and battery on a child and child rape .

Issues tackled by the bills include:

• The Institution of mandatory prison sentences for sex offenders whose victims are younger than 12 years of age.
• The wider implementation of GPS monitoring devices to track sex offenders who are no longer in prison.
• Preventing sex offenders from working within 1,000 feet of a day care center, school, or childcare facility.
• Allowing prosecutors to request a jury trial when trying to hold a sex offender for longer than their original sentence.
• Providing sex offenders with the option of undergoing chemically castration so that t violent impulses are inhibited or eliminated.

Legislation that would recognize rape not only as an act of force but one that includes a lack of true consent is also being considered.

Another high-level sex offender, David Flavell, was recently arrested after he was caught allegedly peeping at a woman under a bathroom stall at a Quincy store. .

Opponents of imposing harsher restrictions for sex offenders question whether tougher laws will compel sex offenders to assault again.

There are three levels of sex offenders in Massachusetts:

Level 1 Sex Offender: The Sex Offender Registry Board considers these convicted offenders at low risk for reoffense.
Level 2 Sex Offender: Their degree of dangerousness is considered moderate.
Level 3 Sex Offender: Chance of reoffense is considered high.

Lawmakers weigh bills to tighten restrictions on sex offenders, Boston Herald, February 26, 2008
Suspect in rape at library was freed sex offender, Boston.com, February 1, 2008

Related Web Resources:

Levels of Sex Offenders, Mass.gov Continue reading

In Boston, Massachusetts, Damon Jamaal-Anthony Haley (The Boston Globe is reporting that his last name is Haley. The Boston Herald says his last name is Powell) has pled not guilty to assault and battery on a police officer and other charges related to a gang fight at Aria, a local hip-hop nightclub.

Boston police arrived at the club, hosting a “Girls Gone Wild Party,” before the shooting occurred because of a tip they received of a possible gang brawl that might happen.

A verbal argument after 1;30 am was followed by a brawl involving some 35 people, champagne bottles being smashed over people’s heads, and the sound of gun shots. Two people sustained gunshot wounds.

Police say they arrested Haley, a 24, because he had a 9mm Lugar in his hand. There was still one round in the chamber and five in the magazine. Haley reported told police that “They threw a drink so I had to come out with it.” One of the police officer that helped apprehend Haley sustained a broken arm.

Haley has no prior criminal convictions and his defense team says there was so much commotion during the shooting that positively identifying the gunman would have been impossible.

Haley is being held on $1 million cash bail-double the amount that prosecutors had recommended.

A conviction for assault and battery of a police officer in Massachusetts can be punishable by up to 2.5 years in prison. Any weapons-related charges are also considered serious criminal offenses in this state.

Boston nightclub melee ends in shooting, Boston.com, February 24, 2008
$1M bail for alleged shooter at ‘Girls Gone Wild’ Party, Boston Herald, February 25, 2008

Related Web Resources:

Aria Nightclub

Massachusetts Police Brutality
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