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Lawyer Gets Prison Time For Smuggling Drugs Into Jail: Patch PM

Also: HS adds metal detectors | 'Methadone Mile' cleanup begins | Bruins honor injured hockey player | Nor'easter heading to MA | More

Elana Gordon, shown in a 2016 booking photo on an unrelated arrest by Bridgewater police, was found guilty Friday of smuggling Suboxone strips into the Plymouth County House of Corrections​.
Elana Gordon, shown in a 2016 booking photo on an unrelated arrest by Bridgewater police, was found guilty Friday of smuggling Suboxone strips into the Plymouth County House of Corrections​. (Bridgewater Police Department)

MASSACHUSETTS — It's Monday, Oct. 25. Here's what you should know this afternoon:

  • Boston city officials began removing the tents lining both sides of a street near the "Methadone Mile" Monday morning as part of acting Mayor Kim Janey's effort to address homelessness and substance abuse as a public health issue.
  • Most parts of the state will see rainfall totals up to six inches and wind gusts could top out at 60 MPH from the Nor'Easter making a beeline towards Massachusetts.
  • While much of the on-field attention was on Tom Brady in Tampa Bay's 38-3 beatdown of Chicago on — the former Patriots quarterback became the first in NFL history to throw 600 touchdowns — it was a special postgame moment that people are talking about Monday.

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


Today's Top Story

A Bridgewater woman was sentenced to six months in prison after a Plymouth County jury found her guilty Friday of smuggling Suboxone strips into the Plymouth County House of Corrections.

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

Prosecutors had asked for Elana Gordon, 45, of Bridgewater, to be sentenced to three- to five years in prison. The sentence was handed down after a five-day trial.

Massachusetts State Police began a "months-long" investigation of Gordon in 2018. Gordon, according to court documents, used her position as an attorney to conspire with a relative who was an inmate at the jail to smuggle the drugs into the facility.

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


Monday's Other Top Stories

'Methadone Mile' cleanup begins: Boston city officials began removing the tents lining both sides of a street near the "Methadone Mile" Monday morning, according to a flyer posted in the area of the weekend. Notices in the area of Theodore Glynn Way - a side street off of the intersection between Massachusetts Avenue and Melnea Cass Boulevard read that "all items must be removed from the space by Monday at 7 a.m., for the City of Boston is conducting a 'general cleanup' of the area." The flyers say the organized cleanup is due to health, environmental, and sanitary concerns.

Brockton High School adds metal detectors: Starting Monday morning, Brockton high schoolers must walk through a metal detector before entering the building. The metal detectors are part of a new safety plan implemented by both the school system and police after a nearly two-hour stay-in-place order was initiated Friday when a video of a student with a magazine clipped to his pants surfaced on the social network Snapchat.

Bruins honor injured player: The Bruins set Milton Academy hockey player Jake Thibeault and his family up in box seats so they could watch the team beat the San Jose Sharks Sunday night. After suffering from a spinal cord injury on the ice, the 18-year-old Fitchburg native and hockey enthusiast became paralyzed in early September.


Heading to Salem to celebrate Halloween this month? Read Patch's visitors guide.


Picture This: GOAT is also a nice guy

(AP Photo/Alex Menendez)
A boy named Noah Reeb was captured on camera during Sunday's Tampa Bay Bucaneers game holding a sign that read "Tom Brady Helped Me Beat Brain Cancer." After the game Brady approached Reeb hanging over the stands and gave him a Buccaneers hat, shaking his hand and sending the boy — and likely most of North America — into tears.

In Case You Missed It

School system pulls plug on Halloween: Halloween is going the way of Columbus and the Red Raider in Melrose Public Schools. In a letter Friday to the school community, Superintendent Julie Kukenberger confirmed the rumors that had been bubbling like witch's brew: The district will no longer be celebrating Halloween. "Over the past several years, MPS has worked to deemphasize Halloween and shift our focus toward community building through fall celebrations," Kukenberger wrote. "This is in line with our mission, vision, values and district priorities."

Bob Neumeier dead at 70: Neumeier, commonly referred to as "Neumy" by local fans and colleagues, was a constant for decades on TV and radio. A Weymouth native and Syracuse graduate, he was best known for his 20-year as a WBZ sports anchor on WBZ. Neumeier could also be seen on NBC Sports Boston and heard on WEEI as part of the "Dale & Neumy Show."


By The Numbers

20 feet: The forecasted height of waves coming with a Nor'easter hitting Massachusetts this week. Most parts of the state will see rainfall totals up to six inches and wind gusts could top out at 60 MPH.

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