Rhode Island
Flavored vape ban takes effect in Rhode Island
(WJAR) — A flavored vape ban is now in effect in Rhode Island.
It’s just one of a list of new laws across Southern New England starting in 2025.
The ban on the sale or “possession with intent to sell” flavored vape products went into effect on New Year’s Day.
Vape stores are critical of the ban and said the new law will hurt business.
State leaders said E-cigarettes are dangerous, especially for children.
Teachers have even had conferences to discuss vaping problems in the classroom.
“We hear from counselors and teachers that students are really struggling with nicotine addiction. One out of three Rhode Islanders have tried e-cigarettes and currently 17% report past 30-day use,” said Natalie Kimmerlein, with the South County Prevention Coalition.
A new vape tax will also go into effect. Single-use vape products will be taxed at 50 cents per milliliter of liquid.
Meanwhile, there will be a 10% tax on the wholesale price of Refillable E-cigarettes.
Two local vape companies filed a motion in court to try to delay the flavor ban, but a federal judge denied it.
Rhode Island
Deadly mass shooting at Rhode Island hockey match strikes family – OSV News
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(OSV News) — A deadly shooting erupted during a boys hockey game Feb. 16 in Rhode Island, involving a co-op with a number of players reported to be from an area Catholic school, and may have been motivated by what law enforcement characterized as a “family dispute.”
Police identified the suspect late that Monday as Robert Dugan, a biological male who appeared to identify as a woman and went by the name Roberta Esposito.
Three individuals, including the suspected shooter, were killed and several seriously injured during a Feb. 16 face-off between the Coventry/Johnston and Blackstone Valley High School Hockey Co-op teams at the Dennis M. Lynch arena in Pawtucket, located just over five miles north of Providence.
The co-op includes players from several schools, including St. Raphael Academy, a coeducational, diocesan, Lasallian Catholic high school in Pawtucket, part of the Diocese of Providence.
OSV News is awaiting a response to its request for comment from St. Raphael Academy.
In an afternoon press conference following the attack, Pawtucket Police Chief Tina Goncalves told media the shooter had apparently died of a self-inflicted gunshot wound.
Goncalves said her department had received a call just before 2:30 p.m. regarding an active shooter at the area. She said law enforcement found two individuals, one of whom was the suspect, deceased in the arena.
The third individual killed succumbed to injuries while at the hospital, she said.
Without releasing the victims’ ages, Goncalves said, “It appears they’re both adults.”
Three additional individuals were hospitalized in critical condition, Goncalves said.
She noted the shooting appeared to be “a targeted event” that “may be a family dispute,” adding police could not release the names of the victims pending notification of the affected families.
Goncalves could not provide additional details, citing the ongoing investigation.
Gina Christian is a multimedia reporter for OSV News. Follow her on X @GinaJesseReina.
Rhode Island
The Pentagon put out a call for autonomous boats. Two Navy veterans started a Rhode Island company to make them. – The Boston Globe
The next day, Lwin and Joe Turner, also a Navy veteran, quit their jobs and started Havoc – a Rhode Island-based company that does just that.
Officially formed in early 2024, Havoc, now boasts about 130 employees from New England to Hawaii, and produces not only autonomous vessels, but also the software that allows them to do “sophisticated things together,” said Lwin, Havoc’s CEO.
They may, for example, be stationed and programmed to protect a manned-military boat against enemies while traversing the ocean. Stateside, they could enhance security at cargo ports, among other uses, Lwin said.
“Even back in ’24 and now in ’26, there are a lot of people building these robots in different domains. Whether it’s maritime, air, or ground, if you think about it, they’re all robots. They just do different things,” Lwin said.
“We realized that the challenge wasn’t building those specific robots, but the challenge was making those robots work together and work with [humans] to do something useful.”
Lwin recently spoke to the Globe about Havoc’s work, its footprint in Rhode Island, and what’s next for the fast-growing company.
Q. So the idea is that you can have these boats that are equipped with your tech: You make the entire boat and then you make the software that allows the boats to communicate with each other without human input?
Lwin: Yep. We started with smaller boats, but now we’re all the way up to a 100-foot ship in Hawaii that’s running our software, and now we’ve started putting it on other things, like ground vehicles and quadcopters, and it’s the same exact software stack that’s controlling all of these.
What would be a situation the military would use this for?
There are multiple use cases. One simple use case is transferring supplies. In the Pacific, the US military is moving into these island chains … and you have to transfer supplies between them, right?
If you think about how we do that now, you would use helicopters or manned ships, which put people in danger. In a conflict with China, they’re going to probably shoot down any giant helicopters or any ships, and so you don’t want to put people at risk. So this is a way of using these vessels and these aerial platforms and even land vehicles to move supplies between and in these islands.
The other thing is what we call ISR [or intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance]. You can put thousands of these vessels in the ocean. They create a distributed sensor network. They’re all talking to each other. They can have different sensors on each boat, and then they’re all communicating and fusing that information, and giving you an ability to understand what’s going on in these big ocean areas.
Is the military and defense industry your primary business right now?
There’s some commercial use cases. We could complement harbor police. The other thing is environmental monitoring.
Right now, after a storm, especially for those [roll-on, roll-off] ships in Narragansett Bay, there are essentially fishing vessels that go out and take depth meters to make sure there’s enough draft, that the ro-ro ships aren’t going to run aground. So it’s very intensive, especially in the freezing cold. We could put those sensors on our vessels, and they could do with a human just sitting in a warm room, controlling hundreds of these vessels safely.
You have facilities all over the United States. What do you do at your locations in Boston and East Providence?
It’s a hardware site. We would not be where we are if we weren’t based in the Northeast. We needed access to the boat builders – and so Rhode Island makes the most sense – but also water space to test.
You also have the tech sector here, right? If you think about in Massachusetts, with MIT, Harvard, BU, BC, all of those colleges all have very good engineering programs. And in Rhode Island, you’ve got Brown, URI, right? In Connecticut, you have Yale, UConn. They’re producing very good engineers, and to be able to tap into that pool is what allowed us to move as quickly as possible.
Where do you want Havoc to be in the next two years?
We want to successfully have built thousands of these vessels and put them into the ocean. There’s a very compelling and relevant reason right now: If we do that, we might prevent a war in the Pacific. If the United States is able to put thousands of autonomous vessels and provide our allies with those vessels, it might just change the calculus – for China to not invade Taiwan and have this global conflict. So that is what we are focused on.
This interview has been condensed and edited for length and clarity.
The Boston Globe’s weekly Ocean State Innovators column features a Q&A with Rhode Island innovators who are starting new businesses and nonprofits, conducting groundbreaking research, and reshaping the state’s economy. Send tips and suggestions to rinews@globe.com.
Christopher Gavin can be reached at christopher.gavin@globe.com.
Rhode Island
Two wrong-way drivers arrested on I-95 in separate incidents. What to know.
The story behind RI State Trooper’s distinctive boots
Retired RI state troopers Lt. Kenneth Bowman and Lt. James Beck chat about the history of the RI state police boots at the RI State Police Museum.
The Rhode Island State Police arrested two wrong-way drivers in separate incidents on Interstate 95 in a short span of time in the early hours of Sunday, Feb. 15.
Both drivers were pulled over driving northbound on I-95 South within a few hours of each other, and both were charged with driving under the influence.
Six other drivers were arrested the same night for driving under the influence, according to a press release from the state police.
Two wrong-way drivers arrested on I-95 within hours
According to a state police press release, the Hope Valley Barracks received 911 calls reporting a vehicle traveling northbound on I-95 southbound in the vicinity of Exit 21 in East Greenwich around 1:20 a.m.
That vehicle was stopped by troopers from the Wickford Barracks just prior to the Rt. 4 split.
The driver, identified as a 21-year-old Coventry woman, was subsequently charged with reckless driving and driving under the influence after she allegedly failed all field sobriety tests administered at the scene.
The driver was arraigned by a justice of the peace and released to “a responsible adult” to face the charges, in court, at a later date.
At approximately 4:50 a.m., the Hope Valley Barracks again received 911 calls about a second wrong-way driver.
This driver was also traveling northbound on I-95 South in the vicinity of Exit 4 in Hopkinton. Moments later, troopers from the Hope Valley Barracks stopped the vehicle on I-95 South in the vicinity of Baker Pines Road in Richmond.
The 35-year-old driver from New London, Connecticut also “failed all Field Sobriety Tests” administered at the scene and was held pending an arraignment on charges of driving under the influence, reckless driving and a prohibited weapons charge.
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