logo
Springfield debates stricter laws to stop drug dealing near parks, schools following shutdown of trafficking operation

Springfield debates stricter laws to stop drug dealing near parks, schools following shutdown of trafficking operation

Yahoo2 days ago

SPRINGFIELD — With a continuing increase in overdoses, a never-ending problem of used needles littering parks and a May bust that shut down a major drug trafficking operation, the city is looking at trying to bring back a law that charged dealers for peddling drugs near schools and parks.
The City Council's Health and Human Service and Public Safety committees are teaming up to try to find a way to restore a law that made it illegal to sell drugs within 1,000 feet of a school. The charge came with a two-year mandatory minimum sentence, said City Councilor Brian Santaniello, chairman of the health and human service committee.
'I'm not here to give drug dealers business hours,' City Councilor Lavar Click-Bruce said. 'It seems like this rule benefits the people who are committing the crimes and we wonder why we have stuff like this happening through the city.'
The law was changed in 2012 to reduce the zone to 300 feet for schools and 100 feet for parks and it cut the time it could be in effect to between 5 a.m. and midnight. Three years later, it further limited arrests to dealers who threatened to or used violence with a weapon, said Springfield Lt. Jamie Bruno.
'We are going to go out and get information and find out what other cities have done,' he said.
Once the research is completed, Santaniello said he expects the City Council will try to change the law or create an ordinance. It will likely do so through the home rule petition process, which will need approval from the state legislature.
In Springfield, the number of reported overdoses continue to rise although the number of fatalities have decreased because of the widespread availability of naloxone, the drug which reverses opioid overdoses, said Helen Caulton-Harris, health and human services commissioner.
'Fentanyl is the number one challenge … it is a huge problem for the city of Springfield and the commonwealth,' she said.
Not only is heroin being cut with the drug, now tests are finding it in cocaine and even black market marijuana. Also concerning is the increasing discovery of xylazine, a horse tranquilizer and a powerful sedative, being used to cut heroin and other drugs, Caulton-Harris said.
'Narcan (the brand name of naxalone) will work on fentanyl but it will have no effect on zylazine and other additives,' she said.
But it isn't just overdoses. It is the needles people discard after using drugs that are found littered throughout parks and even on school playgrounds.
'They are everywhere … You can fill a truck with it,' said Thomas Ashe, director of parks, buildings and recreation management.
The amount of needles and other drug paraphernalia staff find and pick up early in the morning is 'alarming' and that is a time when the parks are used by runners, walkers and families who bring their children, he said. It is especially problematic in the Metro Center area, Ashe said.
Click-Bruck, the Ward 5 councilor who is also a coach at Duggan Academy, said some of his students have found needles.
The issue came to the forefront last month after a two-year, multi-pronged investigation into drug trafficking between here and New York City netted 52 arrests, 45 seized guns, more than 12,000 grams of cocaine and 350 grams of fentanyl.
During an announcement of the law enforcement actions, Hampden District Anthony D. Gulluni said the investigation identified two local businesses, Garcia Market, 344 Orange St., and the neighboring Angel's Used Appliances, on White Street, as a front for the drug trafficking operation.
'It could cause quite a significant amount of overdoses,' Bruno said. 'What is also alarming is when you get a large amount of cocaine with the fentanyl you can cross contaminate both illegal substances … which can cause an overdose and accidental death.'
Mayor Domenic J. Sarno and members of the committee have called for the shutdown of the two businesses.
'We have decided to leave it to the mayor and the law department,' Santaniello said.
Read the original article on MassLive.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Former Paterson councilman rips AG for delays on 5-year-old election fraud case
Former Paterson councilman rips AG for delays on 5-year-old election fraud case

Yahoo

time15 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Former Paterson councilman rips AG for delays on 5-year-old election fraud case

PATERSON — William McKoy, who spent 20 years on the City Council, says the state attorney general owes the people of Paterson an explanation for the five-year duration of the still-pending election fraud case against current Council President Alex Mendez. Otherwise, McKoy said the state prosecutors ought to start the trial against Mendez without further delay, assertions he made in statements issued to Paterson Press on June 26 and June 27. 'The residents' and voters' confidence in the justice system has been shattered and must be restored,' McKoy said. 'This is the sole responsibility of the attorney general.' McKoy has more than a passing interest in the was the other candidate in the 3rd Ward council election in May 2020 in which state investigators say Mendez and his campaign staff stole absentee ballots from home mailboxes, destroyed those with votes for McKoy, and replaced them with votes for Mendez. Mendez — who was in the Dominican Republic in recent days based on his social media postings — couldn't be reached for comment. He repeatedly has professed his innocence and predicted he will clear his name when the charges go to trial. McKoy and Mendez — longtime, bitter political rivals — seem to agree on one thing. They both say they are frustrated by the lack of progress in the case. But McKoy has accused Mendez of causing some of the delays, by doing such things as filing motions attempting to have the charges against him dismissed. 'It is entirely understandable that a candidate who competed against Mendez in the election at issue would be frustrated by the alleged criminal acts committed by the defendants,' said Daniel Prochilo, an Attorney General's Office spokesman. Prochilo noted that Mendez has been 'accused of attempting to deprive Paterson residents of a fair and impartially conducted election by submitting fraudulent ballots and vote-by-mail registrations, and of stealing the ballots of prospective voters with intent to deprive them of their votes.' 'But our office doesn't set the trial calendar,' the AG spokesman added. 'Cases are set for trial when the case has reached the appropriate point, as determined by the court. "The discovery of additional acts, additional charges, defense review of discovery, defense pretrial motions, and court rulings can take time before a trial is scheduled, and they are an essential part of the due process that must occur before a defendant's innocence or guilt can be decided,' Prochilo said. The AG's office also has a separate election fraud case from 2020 pending against Paterson's 1st Ward councilman, Michael Jackson. That prosecution has been stalled by a two-year cell phone passcode battle as authorities pursue witness tampering charges against Jackson after a witness recanted testimony, a judge said. In the Mendez case, the AG's office waited 40 months after filing the initial charges to expand the prosecution in Oct. 2023 to include criminal complaints against the councilman's wife, Yohanny, and two of his campaign workers, Omar Ledesma and Iris Ruiz. A grand jury rendered indictments against all the defendants at the end of April. Probable cause documents say investigators have a cooperating witness from within the Mendez camp as well as recordings and photos. 'It is clear that the attorney general has the necessary evidence and eyewitness accounts of his criminal voter fraud activities to successfully prosecute this case and convict him and his criminal associates on all charges,' McKoy said of Mendez. 'The only outstanding question is whether there is the willingness on the part of the attorney general to actually do so before his term in office comes to an end,' McKoy added. 'Having observed the attorney general's commitment to the defense of our civil liberties and constitutional protection under the law, I choose to believe that in the end, justice will ultimately prevail.' In Jun 2020, McKoy successfully filed a court challenge having Mendez's May 2020 election victory nullified. But Mendez defeated McKoy in a special election in Nov. 2020 and did the same in Paterson's 2024 ward contests. In the past, Mendez has dismissed McKoy's attacks on him regarding the election fraud charges as whining by what he called a 'sore loser.' Back in 2020, Mayor Andre Sayegh was one of McKoy's strongest backers in his condemnations of Mendez. Sayegh even made a political contribution to McKoy to help pay his legal fees in the court challenge. But Sayegh and Mendez have forged somewhat of an alliance in the past years, as Mendez became president of the council in July 2023. This article originally appeared on Former Paterson councilman rips AG over election fraud case

Saginaw city council member, candidate convicted of election forgery
Saginaw city council member, candidate convicted of election forgery

Yahoo

time19 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Saginaw city council member, candidate convicted of election forgery

LANSING, Mich. (WLNS) — A current Saginaw City Council member and a former city council candidate were found guilty of multiple election law forgery charges Friday, Michigan Attorney General Dana Nessel announced Friday. Monique Lamar-Silvia, 64, a current council member, and Eric Eggleston, 53, were convicted of forging signatures on a nominating petition, trying to get Eggleston on the 2024 ballot for City Council. According to Nessel, in July 2024, Lamar-Silvia fraudulently signed the names of several Saginaw voters on a petition form to put Eggleston on the ballot. Eggleston then signed the fraudulent form, falsely certifying that he was the circulator, and submitted both forms to the clerk's office shortly before the filing deadline. Eggleston ended up not making it onto the ballot, and the two were later charged with election law forgery in January after a complaint of apparent election fraud was referred to the Department of State and later, the attorney general. Friday, Eggleston was convicted of the following: One count of conspiracy to do a legal act in an illegal manner, a five-year felony. One count of election law forgery, a five-year felony. One count of signing a petition as a circulator when he was not the circulator, a 93-day misdemeanor. Lamar-Silvia was found guilty of the following: One count of conspiracy to do a legal act in an illegal manner, a five-year felony. One count of election law forgery, a five-year felony. One count of signing a nominating petition with multiple names, a five-year felony. One count of signing a nominating petition with a name other than her own, a 93-day misdemeanor. The two are expected to be sentenced on Aug. 30. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Southgate man injured after a pickup hit a highway wall, police say
Southgate man injured after a pickup hit a highway wall, police say

CBS News

timea day ago

  • CBS News

Southgate man injured after a pickup hit a highway wall, police say

A Southgate man got emergency medical aid on site and was taken to the hospital after a Ford F-150 he was driving struck a highway wall Thursday in Metro Detroit. Several 911 calls had been made to the Detroit Regional Communication Center about the situation that was noticed about 6:40 p.m. Thursday on Westbound I-94 near Miller Road, the Michigan State Police reported. Some of the calls indicated that the driver appeared to be in convulsions. Another witness was trying to get into the vehicle to provide first aid. When police arrived, the 55-year-old man was still in the car and unresponsive. "Signs of potential drug use were also found in the vehicle," the state police report said. Troopers and Dearborn Police officers attempted CPR and Narcan until Dearborn EMS crews arrived and took over. The man's pulse returned while medics were tending to him. After he was taken to a hospital, he regained consciousness and was alert. "Great work by troopers and officers in using their training to stabilize this driver prior to EMS arriving," F/Lt Mike Shaw said about the incident. "Once the investigation is completed, troopers will forward an investigators report to the prosecutor for review."

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store