Crime & Safety

Man Sentenced For Methuen Marine Murder: Patch PM

Kindergarten quarantine | Man pees on bus passenger | Bullet on school bus | Vote tallies go missing | Somerville Sparkles | More

ANDOVER, MA — It's Wednesday, Nov. 17. Here's what you should know this afternoon:

  • A man who appeared intoxicated will face charges after being accused of urinating on a fellow passenger while riding a Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority bus on Monday night.
  • A bullet was found on a Bourne school bus full of elementary school students Tuesday.
  • A 55-year-old New Hampshire man was identified Tuesday as the person killed during a double shooting on Technology Way in Salem Monday night.

Scroll down for more on those and other stories Patch has been covering in Massachusetts today.


Today's Top Story

A Lawrence man was sentenced Wednesday to life in prison with the possibility of parole for a 2019 shooting death in Methuen.

Find out what's happening in Andoverfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

On Nov. 9, a jury found Remy Salazar, 27, guilty of second-degree murder in the death of former U.S. Marine Kelvin Frias, who was 30 at the time.

Salazar was also found guilty of unlawful possession of a firearm and discharging a firearm within 500 feet of a dwelling. The trial lasted six days. Salazar was sentenced by a Lawrence Superior Court judge to life in prison with the possibility of parole after 25 years.

Find out what's happening in Andoverfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

Salazar shot Frias on March 19, 2019 while Frias stood outside a store on Broadway in Methuen, according to a news release from the Essex District Attorney's Office.

Read the full story.


Like this article? Sign up for our newsletter and get it delivered every weekday. It's free!


Wednesday's Other Top Stories

Town 'traumatized' in wake of hockey team scandal: The Danvers School committee released statement Tuesday saying the town is "traumatized" by recent accusations of racist behavior and homophobic hazing within the high school hockey program while also saying it would not comment on aspects of its ongoing investigation. "We all agree on the importance of moving forward together and to ensure the district lives our values," the statement said. The committee met in executive session Monday to consider a motion to place Superintendent Lisa Dana on administrative leave. Dana remains in her position, according to the statement.

Man accused of peeing on fellow bus passenger: A man who appeared intoxicated will face charges after being accused of urinating on a fellow passenger while riding a Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority bus on Monday night, police said. At around 9:55 p.m. Monday, MBTA officers responded to a radio call for a male who urinated on another passenger in the area of 70 Massachusetts Ave. in Cambridge, police said. Officers located the victim, an adult male, who said while the bus was traveling on Massachusetts Avenue, he was "alerted to a stream of liquid running by his feet and other passengers looking at him with their 'eyes wide open,'" police said.

Danvers "has been traumatized": Nearly 24 hours after a 90-minute executive session ended with no action taken on a public proposal to place Superintendent Lisa Dana on administrative leave amid accusations of racist behavior and homophobic hazing within the hockey program, the Danvers School Committee Tuesday night released a collective statement allowing that "our community has been traumatized." There is no change in Dana's status as superintendent and the committee reiterated there are certain aspects of the hockey investigation it cannot and will not publicly discuss. "We all agree on the importance of moving forward together and to ensure the district lives our values," the statement said.

Murder-suicide shooter identified: A 55-year-old New Hampshire man was identified Tuesday as the person killed during a double shooting on Technology Way in Salem Monday night. The Essex County District Attorney's Office said Richard Lorman, of Wilton, NH, was found dead at the scene Monday night. Essex County District Attorney Jonathan Blodgett said Monday night that a 55-year-old man was the suspect in an apparent murder-suicide attempt that left a 33-year-old woman hospitalized with gunshot wounds.

Bullet found on school bus: A bullet was found on a Bourne school bus full of elementary school students Tuesday, according to Superintendent Kerrie Anne Quinlan-Zhou. Shortly before 9 a.m., a small group of Bournedale Elementary School students discovered the .22 caliber round on the floor of a school bus. A student handed it to the bus driver as the bus pulled into the school, and the driver then reported it to administrators, school officials said. The district then immediately called Bourne police to begin their investigation.

Vote tallies go missing in Newton: Voting tallies from six precincts in Newton were found to be missing after the "official results" were posted on Friday, according to the city's website. The results were taken down Saturday due to missing results for all four precincts in Ward 1 and precincts 1 and 2 in Ward 2. According to City Clerk Carol Moore, the main discrepancies were in the hand ballots that are entered after the voting machine have been closed out. These can include provisional ballots accepted by the state, overseas ballots, and those dropped off at City Hall by those who couldn't make it to the polling stations. However, there were not enough mistakes for the outcome to be affected and the election results will not change.


Massachusetts: Tell Someone You're Grateful For Them This Holiday Season


Picture This: Leonid Meteors Peak Over MA

The Leonid meteor shower, which peaks this week over YOUR STATE, is known for producing fireballs — especially during meteor storms, such as the one that occurred in 1966. Cyclonic peaks only occur every 33 years, but 2021 isn’t one of them. (NASA/Getty Images)

The Leonid meteor shower — known to produce fast, bright meteors as Earth plows through a trail of debris left behind by the comet 55P/Tempel-Tuttle — peaks Wednesday and Thursday mornings just before dawn. It depends on the weather, of course. AccuWeather calls for partly cloudy skies — although Thursday morning shoulder be much warmer than other days this week.


They Said It

"After consulting with the Quincy Health Department and the Massachusetts Department of Public Health, the parents of the other students in the classroom have been notified that their students should remain home and quarantine for the next seven days."


In Case You Missed It

MA preps to give adult COVID boosters: All vaccinated adults in Massachusetts will soon get the opportunity for a booster shot of Pfizer's COVID-19 vaccine. The Food and Drug Administration is expected to grant emergency use authorization for the booster shot as early as Thursday. That would open the door for millions of fully vaccinated Americans 18 and over to get another shot. Pfizer received authorization in September to provide booster shots to people 65 and older and those 18 or older with an elevated risk of serious illness.


By The Numbers

30: The approximate number of miles covered in a police chase early Wednesday morning. The chase started in Hopkinton before the driver was eventually stopped and arrested in Dorchester.


And, Finally Today...

Somerville is rallying around Sparkle, a beloved 11-year-old Corgi mix, following a recent cancer diagnosis. (Eric Magnussen)

A dog who became a celebrity in her Somerville neighborhood thanks to her eagerness to meet – and get lots of pets from – new friends needs some "extra love" after she was diagnosed with incurable cancer. Sparkle, an 11-year-old Corgi mix, has been a fixture in her front yard for years, lazing on the walkway alongside a sign that introduces her to passersby: "My name is Sparkle. I LOVE to be outside and meet people all year! But I also go inside whenever I want."

Get more local news delivered straight to your inbox. Sign up for free Patch newsletters and alerts.