January 22. 2014 12:10AM
Manchester to hire 5 more officers
You think, the state thinks they won't be spending money wisely prosecuting this Hinsdale murder case of a war hero in a low population area? Cherry pick the easy and winable cases...MANCHESTER — The police department will be hiring five additional officers in the coming weeks, a fraction of the number the city's police chief says are needed to deal with rising crime.
Mayor Ted Gatsas announced the plan at Tuesday's meeting of the Board of Mayor and Aldermen, following a presentation in which Police Chief David Mara outlined his request for additional officers.
Mara said, based on a recent workload assessment, that he believed the force needed 26 more officers in the patrol division and four more in the street crime unit, which consists of plainclothes officers who deal with quality of life issues.
At a projected cost of $84,000 per officer, for salary and benefits, funding the chief's maximum request would cost approximately $2.4 million.
The presentation marked the first time that Mara made his staffing request explicit since new numbers confirmed that crime has surged over the past year, increasing 24 percent in 2013 over the previous year, led by a 46 percent jump in robberies.
Gatsas and most of the aldermen at Tuesday's meeting were more concerned about how to pay for a smaller number of additional officers immediately than in dealing with Mara's maximum request, which likely could only be addressed through the budget process for the next fiscal year
Hometown prosecutor gets paid, and now awarded, for doing ‘the right thing’
For nearly a decade, Jeffery Strelzin has been the state’s legal point man on some of its most unsettling crimes. As the chief of the Department of Justice’s homicide unit, Strelzin, a senior assistant attorney general, is the first person police officials contact when investigating suspicious deaths. He has prosecuted several high-profile cases, including that of convicted cop killer Michael Addison and of Christopher Gribble and Steven Spader, the young pair found guilty of brutally murdering a Mont Vernon mother in her home in 2009.January 19. 2014 10:10PM
It’s a demanding job, made increasingly so in recent years as budgets have contracted. But Strelzin, who is the state’s longest-serving homicide chief, seems to find more pride than stress in the work.
Violent crime in Manchester up in 2013
By MICHAEL COUSINEAU
New Hampshire Union Leader
MANCHESTER — Violent crimes reported to police increased by 24 percent in Manchester in 2013 over the previous year, led by a 46 percent jump in robberies.
The 736 reported violent crimes — comprised of murder, rape, robbery and aggravated assault — topped the previous two years, each of which saw 593 such reported crimes, according to Manchester Police Department figures released to the New Hampshire Union Leader.
Police Chief David Mara said much of the city's crime is traced to the need for money to buy illegal drugs...
Just saying, bet you an enormous amount of the crime in NH is generated by the heroin and other opiates crisis. So the major crimes unit and the state prosecutors departments are terribly underfunded. Then we got a runaway addiction problem leading to major crimes overwhelming our courts, prosecutors and major crimes, beside the historic issues with the state policing. This is all driven by a penny pitching state ideology of limited state government....like I said; our 1921 route 119 dilapidated bridge is a symbol of the ideology of limited state government and out addiction to our generalized hatred of government. What does these institutions look when they become overwhelmed...
We are just putting this on the backs of our children and grandchildren who are mostly in deep financial trouble as it is. We are building up a generation of lost souls...this is going to be so costly in the future
I just think a number of our children see no hope in the
future...so why even have a good standard of behavior.
Originally posted on 1/12/2014By KATHRYN MARCHOCKINo one sets out to die a heroin junkie.
New Hampshire Union Leader
The highly addictive narcotic is a drug of last resort for addicts who can never be sure of its potency or purity, but either graduated to it after abusing other street drugs or turned to it as a cheap alternative to prescription painkillers they no longer can afford, according to law enforcers.
Its use is on the rise statewide, as seen when heroin for the first time became the top killer of all drug overdoses in 2012. It was responsible for 38 of the 164 drug deaths that year.
The number of people who died from heroin in 2013 already shows a 50 percent increase and could go higher once all pending cases are closed. So far, heroin is responsible for 57 drug deaths in 2013, a year when authorities expect the total deaths will reach 200.
"It's a huge problem," said Dr. Thomas Andrew, the state's chief medical examiner.
Andrew said the number of total unintended drug deaths rose 400 percent from the 53 recorded when he started as medical examiner in 1997.
Serious issue
Speaking from a personal point of view as a physician, Andrew described the situation as a "public health crisis," but isn't sure the "social will" exists to really attack it.
"Are we going to decide as citizens that it is worth going after this problem in an aggressive way, or are we willing to write off these people as not worth the effort?" he asked.
"Are these really acceptable losses to us? ... In the end, every one of these cases is someone's son or daughter or sister or brother.
By KATHRYN MARCHOCKI
New Hampshire Union Leader
Jan 11, 2014
New Hampshire Union Leader
Jan 11, 2014
Attorney General Joseph
Foster says his office needs five to 10 additional attorneys over the next
several years. (DAVID LANE/UNION LEADER COURTESY)
Early last week, state prosecutor James T.
Boffetti was heading off to Brentwood where he has been filling in as
Rockingham County Attorney since James Reams was stripped of his prosecutorial
duties pending a criminal probe.
Then it was back to Concord to resume his
normal duties as head of the state's Consumer Protection and Anti-Trust
division. Waiting for him was the escalating and potentially life-threatening
Fred Fuller Oil & Propane Co. debacle that left hundreds of residents with
empty or near empty home heating oil tanks during an arctic blast of sub-zero
weather
At about the same time, a 2009 video of three
Seabrook police officers slamming a drunken driving defendant into a wall and
pepper spraying him while in custody went viral on YouTube, prompting the New
Hampshire Attorney General's criminal bureau to reassign investigators from existing
criminal cases to launch a public integrity probe of the officers involved.
More staff needed
In a department whose most high-profile unit — homicide — just came off one of its busiest years in recent memory, these and other cases have further strained the office's 58 staff attorneys - a number that barely budged since the early 1980s. It's a point Attorney General Joseph A. Foster has publicly pounced on since taking office last May as reason why he will ask for another five to 10 attorneys over the next several state budget cycles.
In a department whose most high-profile unit — homicide — just came off one of its busiest years in recent memory, these and other cases have further strained the office's 58 staff attorneys - a number that barely budged since the early 1980s. It's a point Attorney General Joseph A. Foster has publicly pounced on since taking office last May as reason why he will ask for another five to 10 attorneys over the next several state budget cycles.
"I think we are unusually busy. They
(staff) have gone through cycles like that before," Foster explained.
"We work hard and buckle down and get the work done - perhaps at a slower pace than we would like, but they will get the work done, and they will do it right," he added.
"We work hard and buckle down and get the work done - perhaps at a slower pace than we would like, but they will get the work done, and they will do it right," he added.
Prosecutors cope by reshuffling priorities — a practice they call triage — with the emphasis given to cases involving public safety and meeting deadlines in pending court cases, Foster and Deputy Attorney General Ann Rice explained.
Former Attorney General Michael A. Delaney said this is one of the office's
strengths."There are a lot of major, pending investigations right now and
I think that office has always done an incredible job of handling some of the
most important investigations in the state with limited resources," said
Delaney, who served as attorney general for four years before he chose not seek
reappointment last spring.
Given the first two weeks in a homicide case are the most critical, they get top priority. No matter what else is going on at the time, two prosecutors immediately are assigned to work with local and state police agencies on each homicide, Senior Assistant Attorney General Jeffery A. Strelzin said Friday.
Given the first two weeks in a homicide case are the most critical, they get top priority. No matter what else is going on at the time, two prosecutors immediately are assigned to work with local and state police agencies on each homicide, Senior Assistant Attorney General Jeffery A. Strelzin said Friday.
"This is definitely one of the busiest years we've had in my time in the office," Strelzin said of the 25 homicides in 2013. Strelzin has been in the office 13 years and heads the homicide bureau. The state averages 19 homicides a year.Until the case is finally over, the work doesn't go away. A case typically takes one to two years to prosecute so you have a constant backlog of cases. However busy your prior year was, coming into your next year you know you will probably have 20 new (homicides)," he explained.
Added paperwork
In addition, the office must respond to an increasing number of habeas petitions filed by convicted defendants seeking new trials and works on 150 active state and federal appeals a year, he said. They include the capital murder and death penalty appeal of Michael K. Addison which prosecutors have been working on since a Manchester police officer was killed in 2006 and likely will continue another 15 years, Strelzin said.
In addition, the criminal division handles several high-profile cases that have consumed enormous state, local and federal resources. They include that of missing Conway teen Abigail Hernandez, which remains an active and ongoing probe since her disappearance in October. The office also is working with the Hillsborough County Attorney's office in a criminal investigation of how a Manchester man became paralyzed with a broken neck suffered sometime after he entered Elliot Hospital emergency room to his being taken into custody by Manchester police and Hillsborough County Department of Corrections in October.
Prosecutors said it was not possible to give a precise number of total cases the office handles.
The onslaught of new cases since late fall has contributed to the delay in completing the investigation of the officer-involved fatal shooting of a suspected drug dealer in Weare last August, Foster said. Foster previously said he hoped to have the preliminary finding complete by the end of November.
But a Nov. 24 double fatal shooting of two men in Manchester and the Dec. 7 deaths of a Vermont couple on Interstate 89 in Lebanon by a man authorities alleged deliberately caused the collision in a failed suicide attempt diverted staff from the Weare case, he said.
"That's one of the problems. Every time one of these major issues come up, we all get pulled off to work on a new fire," Rice said.
Constant reshuffling
Not only have state prosecutors handling the case been diverted to other homicides, but the state police investigators working the case also were assigned to the newly-breaking homicides, prosecutors said.
Rice said the Weare officer-involved shooting investigation has taken "longer than most of the office-involved shootings that we have been involved in certainly. Without commenting on the substance of the case, I can say it's a complex issue."
Foster would not comment on when he expects the report to be ready.
Former Attorney General Delaney noted New Hampshire is one of the few states in the country that requires each of its law enforcement officers to undergo the same basic core certification training at the state Police Standards and Training Academy before they hit the streets.
"It's excellent training. And that is just the starting point. All of the agencies have their officers involved in regular training above that," Delaney said.
In addition, the office must respond to an increasing number of habeas petitions filed by convicted defendants seeking new trials and works on 150 active state and federal appeals a year, he said. They include the capital murder and death penalty appeal of Michael K. Addison which prosecutors have been working on since a Manchester police officer was killed in 2006 and likely will continue another 15 years, Strelzin said.
In addition, the criminal division handles several high-profile cases that have consumed enormous state, local and federal resources. They include that of missing Conway teen Abigail Hernandez, which remains an active and ongoing probe since her disappearance in October. The office also is working with the Hillsborough County Attorney's office in a criminal investigation of how a Manchester man became paralyzed with a broken neck suffered sometime after he entered Elliot Hospital emergency room to his being taken into custody by Manchester police and Hillsborough County Department of Corrections in October.
Prosecutors said it was not possible to give a precise number of total cases the office handles.
The onslaught of new cases since late fall has contributed to the delay in completing the investigation of the officer-involved fatal shooting of a suspected drug dealer in Weare last August, Foster said. Foster previously said he hoped to have the preliminary finding complete by the end of November.
But a Nov. 24 double fatal shooting of two men in Manchester and the Dec. 7 deaths of a Vermont couple on Interstate 89 in Lebanon by a man authorities alleged deliberately caused the collision in a failed suicide attempt diverted staff from the Weare case, he said.
"That's one of the problems. Every time one of these major issues come up, we all get pulled off to work on a new fire," Rice said.
Constant reshuffling
Not only have state prosecutors handling the case been diverted to other homicides, but the state police investigators working the case also were assigned to the newly-breaking homicides, prosecutors said.
Rice said the Weare officer-involved shooting investigation has taken "longer than most of the office-involved shootings that we have been involved in certainly. Without commenting on the substance of the case, I can say it's a complex issue."
Foster would not comment on when he expects the report to be ready.
Former Attorney General Delaney noted New Hampshire is one of the few states in the country that requires each of its law enforcement officers to undergo the same basic core certification training at the state Police Standards and Training Academy before they hit the streets.
"It's excellent training. And that is just the starting point. All of the agencies have their officers involved in regular training above that," Delaney said.
NH State Police Major Crimes Unit
Mike Mulligan
|
Oct 28, 2013
Basically, I said I noted your unit has seen a large
increase in cases in recent years...has your budgets kept with your case
load.
Well, left that on his voice recording machine. Do you think he will give me a call back? |
Mike Mulligan
|
Oct 28, 2013
Judged:
I don't think so unless his unit is really hard up for
money.
If he is a political guy...he might be afraid of pissing off his bosses... His site is only updated to 2011...don't have the money to update his government site? Lets see, it is Oct 2013? |
Mike Mulligan
|
Oct 28, 2013
|
Mike Mulligan
|
Oct 28, 2013
Right, the NH anti government political zealots would get
pissed if a vital government agency declaired they don’t have enough
resources.
The state police over the years have been known to be severely underfunded... |
Infowars dot Com
|
Oct 28, 2013
Judged:
No mikey, no State needs more 'State police', they all
need to return to proper Constitutional county law and sheriffs/deputies as
the ONLY law enforcement!
It is improper to refer to a cop as 'officer' unless you're actually speaking to an elected sheriff. When the municiple or appointed State 'public safety' quasi-cops go bad, they can't be Unelected. It is a fact that the only truly lawful law enforcers are those elected as sheriffs or at least deputised agents working under one. Still many sheriffs violate people's Constitutional rights daily, even good old Sheriff Arpaio what a Real police officer looks like- https://www.google.com/#q=sheriff+richard+mac... AP Photo: Checkpoint Cops Point Guns at Americans’ Heads Fallujah-style security comes to Sacramento http://www.infowars.com/ap-photo-checkpoint-c... (^this is what pigs look like) Cops With Tasers Have Now Executed Over 500 Americans http://rt.com/usa/500-taser-law-enforcement-5... -- talk about a State having a 'Major Crimes Unit' ppffftttttt The govt. Ships In most of the damn drugs into the U.S. By the Ton and has gotten caught doing that And arming drug lords in Mexico etc.('Fast & Furious') and effectively causing the crime in America which has resulted in the NWO police state control freaks to claim the 'need' for MORE draconian laws and enforcement with More rights being infringed. See how it works sheeple? It's called 'Problem-Reaction-Solution' http://www.youtube.com/results... |
Mike Mulligan
|
Oct 28, 2013
Our neighborhood domestic anti government terrorist...
|
Mike Mulligan
|
Oct 28, 2013
All right, do we have a spike in crime in NH? We do. What is
the depth of it and the cause. Maybe the police and staties are hobbled and
demoralized by local and state budget cuts. We know the courts are and the
jails are too much of a financial burden on the towns and state. We know
crimes usually increase during economic distress. Do the crooks know they got
a green light to do as they please because they know the courts and police
are hobbled by budget cutbacks and so called tax stabilization?
Are we heading to see much more lawlessness as the police and courts have been crippled by budget issues... |
Mike Mulligan
|
Oct 28, 2013
So I left a message at the major crime unit lieutenant’s
voice mail. Is he going to call me saying we got a huge budget problem...we
are letting murders and criminals get away with major crimes because we are
overwhelmed? Because we can’t do proper investigation...if I disclosed this
it would give the prosecutors a tactical advantage in our cases.
|
| |
Mike Mulligan
|
Oct 28, 2013
Judged:
FBI's New England chief worried about budget
Posted: 10/28/2013 05:00:26 PM EDT | Updated: about 4 hours ago PORTLAND, Maine (AP)- The FBI's Boston chief has a lot to worry about between terrorism, conventional crime and intelligence gathering. But these days, one of his biggest concerns is his budget. Vincent Lisi, special agent in charge for Massachusetts, Maine, New Hampshire and Vermont, told reporters in Portland on Monday that one of his biggest challenges is dealing with the mandatory budget cuts known as sequestration. He said the cuts amount to $700 million of the national FBI budget this year. He said vacant positions aren't being filled and training has been slashed. He said it could be a few years before any new field agents are hired. Instead of doing "more with less," the FBI is performing threat assessments and prioritizing its most important duties as it becomes accustomed to doing "less with less," Lisi said. "It's doing less with less," he said. "You can't keep doing more with less. Otherwise, you'll end up being a mile wide and an inch deep." |
Mike Mulligan
|
Oct 29, 2013
Mike Mulligan wrote:
So I left a message at the major crime unit lieutenant’s
voice mail. Is he going to call me saying we got a huge budget problem...we
are letting murders and criminals get away with major crimes because we are
overwhelmed? Because we can’t do proper investigation...if I disclosed this
it would give the prosecutors a tactical advantage in our cases.
"if I disclosed this it would give the prosecutors a
tactical disadvantage in our cases."
The route 119 bridge disease in the major crimes unit of the NH state police? |
Mike Mulligan
|
Oct 29, 2013
Judged:
“This is extremely important to public safety,” he
said.“New Hampshire State Police have been dealing with an increase in calls
and operating at reduced staffing levels.”
July 22, 2013 NH to add 10 troopers State budget includes $723K for new officers By John Toolejtoole@eagletribune.com More state troopers are coming soon to New Hampshire highways. Early next year, drivers on Interstate 93 should notice an increased presence, as will those on highways in remote parts of the state. State police are actively recruiting for the 10 new positions Gov. Maggie Hassan and the Legislature authorized under the recently passed budget. The state budgeted $723,384 for salary and benefits for the new troopers. The new budget provides for 343 troopers. There were 333 slots before, with 12 current vacancies due to retirements or other departures. The agency also must manage with troopers on leave for military service “This is extremely important to public safety,” he said.“New Hampshire State Police have been dealing with an increase in calls and operating at reduced staffing levels.” |
Mike Mulligan
|
Oct 29, 2013
Fills 10 of 31 trooper vacancies at the New Hampshire
State Police. In addition, the budget hires civilians to conduct Division of
Motor Vehicle commercial
licensing exams, allowing Safety to put five more troopers on the road. |
Mike Mulligan
|
Oct 30, 2013
So why didn’t it go to a NH medical examiner...
Autopsy results released in Hinsdale shooting Dr. Kimberly Springer of the Massachusetts Office of the Chief Medical Examiner completed the autopsy on Curtiss’ body Oct. 15, two days after he was shot at least three times in a family dispute that turned violent, investigators said. The results were not released until today. |
Mike Mulligan
|
Oct 30, 2013
Chief Medical Examiner
Department of Justice Office of Attorney General Chief Medical Examiner Frequently Asked Questions The Office of the Chief Medical Examiner (OCME) is responsible for determining the cause and manner of sudden, unexpected or unnatural deaths falling under its jurisdiction (RSA 611-B:11). |
Mike Mulligan
|
Oct 30, 2013
|
Mike Mulligan
|
Oct 30, 2013
Oh, he died or was taken to a hospital in Ma.
|
Mike Mulligan
|
Oct 30, 2013
http://doj.nh.gov/media-center/press-releases...
gunshot wounds of the torso and upper extremities |
Mike Mulligan
|
Oct 31, 2013
So a spokesman for the major crimes unit just got done
talking to me by phone.
He says murders are tracking about normal. He seems to say their case load was static...but he wasn't that sure. They got enough money from the legislators to burn...just kidding. He said they have sufficient monies. But he had a proviso...he doesn’t see much budget issue from his view. Excuse me now, I got to change my wet pants. I don't mean this in the negative...he was highly skilled at communicating and talking like you would expect in a important and large organization. |
Mike Mulligan
|
Oct 31, 2013
He wants me to take to the commissioner or the director...
|
Mike Mulligan
|
Oct 31, 2013
I like to talk to a, say a seasoned major crimes unit
investigator...who would discuss his agency’s budget vulnerabilities.
More the first level boss or management of the investigators... Somebody in the main artery of the information stream....a big picture person. I wouldn’t want detained shit...just generalities. You know, how you guys doing... |
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