Connect with us

Lifestyle

Woman Killed Newton Man After He Discovered She Had Been Forging Checks, DA Says

Published

on

Woman Killed Newton Man After He Discovered She Had Been Forging Checks, DA Says

A girl has been arrested in reference to the alleged homicide of a 65-year-old man from Newton, Massachusetts, Middlesex District Legal professional Marian Ryan introduced Wednesday.

Ryan stated 43-year-old Xiu Fang Ke was arrested Wednesday for killing Leonard Garber in his house on Mt. Vernon Terrace. She was arraigned on Wednesday afternoon in Newton District Court docket.

Prosecutors stated after Garber’s physique was discovered, Ke was referred to as to police headquarters, the place she confessed.

“Through the interview the defendant admitted that she had stolen checks from Leonard Garber and that she had killed him,” Assistant District Legal professional Julie Kunkel stated in courtroom Wednesday. “She later acknowledged that she had used a hammer and hid his physique within the location the place it was finally discovered by police.”

The district lawyer stated the investigation that led to Ke’s arrest started on Monday when police obtained telephone calls from family and friends of Garber saying that he was somebody who stored in common contact with individuals however hadn’t been heard from because the finish of final week.

Advertisement

Police went to the home Monday and once more early Tuesday. After they returned to the house Tuesday afternoon, Ryan stated they discovered Garber’s physique wrapped in a curtain underneath development supplies and a number of other different heavy gadgets within the entrance hallway of the house. She stated it appeared the physique had been there for over a day and had been positioned in a method to conceal it from individuals coming into the house.

Xiu Fang Ke, 43, was arrested Wednesday for killing Leonard Garber in his house on Mt. Vernon Terrace. She was arraigned on Wednesday afternoon in Newton District Court docket.

Because of their investigation, Ryan stated police discovered that Garber had been spending a while these days with Ke, a former tenant of his at a special deal with. The investigation signifies that Ke had been forging checks from Garber’s accounts and had allegedly stolen over $40,000.

Prosecutors stated there may be proof that Ke had stolen checks earlier than and had playing money owed.

“She had been a tenant of his a number of years in the past at a special property, not on the home the place the incident befell. Apparently they’d been mates since that point,” Ryan stated.

Advertisement

She stated investigators are nonetheless wanting into whether or not the 2 might need been in a romantic relationship.

Ryan stated investigators have discovered that someday between Thursday and Saturday, Garber turned conscious of using his checks, confronted Ke about them, and she or he struck and killed him after which made efforts to cover the physique. The reason for demise has not but been decided, however Ryan stated it seems to be blunt power trauma.

Middlesex District Legal professional Marian Ryan supplies particulars on a homicide investigation in Newton.

Surveillance footage from the outside of Garber’s house confirmed a girl, later recognized as Ke, coming into the house a number of occasions within the days main as much as the invention of his physique.

Newton Mayor Ruthanne Fuller additionally spoke at Wednesday’s press convention, expressing her condolences to Garber’s household.

Advertisement

“I communicate for the individuals of Newton once I say our hearts and prayers are heavy,” she stated. “Mr. Garber was a member of our group, he attended synagogue right here, and he had mates and neighbors who cared about him.”

“Actually unhappy this might occur to Lenny,” neighbor Pat Hamilton stated Wednesday. “You by no means anticipate this kind of factor to occur to individuals you recognize.”

“When it occurs subsequent door, it is a bit bit totally different,” added Ron Cohen, one other neighbor. “My spouse had a tough time with it, awoke crying.”

Fuller stated Ke can also be recognized in the neighborhood, and referred to as this “a disturbing and tough time” for individuals who know her. She stated there isn’t any recognized hazard to Newton residents, as this doesn’t seem to have been a random act.

The case was investigated by the Middlesex District Legal professional’s Workplace, state police and Newton police.

Advertisement

Lifestyle

Two new novels investigate what makes magic, what is real and imagined

Published

on

Two new novels investigate what makes magic, what is real and imagined
Covers of Pages of Mourning and The Cemetery of Untold Stories

In an enchanted world, where does mystery begin? Two authors pose this question in new novels out this spring.

In Pages of Mourning by the Mexican magical realism interrogator-author Diego Gerard Morrison, the protagonist is a Mexican writer named Aureliano Más II who is at war with his memory of familial sorrow and — you guessed it — magical realism. And the protagonist Alma Cruz in Julia Alvarez’s latest novel, The Cemetery of Untold Stories, is also a writer. Alma seeks to bury her unpublished stories in a graveyard of her own making, in order to find peace in their repose — and meaning from the vulnerability that comes from unheard stories.

Both of these novels, one from an emerging writer and one from a long celebrated author, walk an open road of remembering love, grief, and fate. Both find a destiny not in death, but in the reality of abandonment and in dreams that come from a hope for reunion. At this intersection of memory and meaning, their storytelling diverges.

Pages of Mourning

Pages of Mourning, out this month, is set in 2017, three years after 43 students disappear from the Ayotzinapa Rural Teachers’ College after being abducted in Iguala, Guerrero, Mexico. The main character, Aureliano, is attempting to write the Great Mexican Novel that reflects this crisis and his mother’s own unexplained disappearance when he was a boy. He’s also struggling with the idea of magical realism as literary genre — he holds resentment over being named after the protagonist in 100 Years of Solitude, which fits squarely within it. He sets out on a journey with his maternal aunt to find his father, ask questions about his mother, and deal with his drinking problem and various earthquakes.

Morrison’s voice reflects his work as a writer, editor and translator based in Mexico City, who seeks to interrogate “the concept of dissonance” through blended art forms such as poetry and fiction, translation and criticism. His story could be seen as an archetype, criticism, or a reflection through linguistic cadence on Pan American literature. His novel name drops and alludes to American, Mexican and Latin American writers including Walt Whitman, Juan Rulfo, Gabriel Garcia Márquez — and even himself. There’s an earnest use of adjectives to accompany the lived dissonance of his characters.

There’s nothing magical, in the genre sense, in Morrison’s story. There are no magical rivers, enchanted messages, babies born with tails. Morrison’s dissonance is real — people get disappeared, they suffer addictions, writer’s block, crazy parents, crazier shamans, blank pages, corruption, the loss of loved ones. In this depiction of real Pan-American life — because all of this we are also explicitly suffering up North — Morrison finds his magic. His Aureliano is our Aureliano. He’s someone we know. Probably someone we loved — someone trying so hard to live.

Advertisement

The Cemetery of Untold Stories

From the author of In the Time of the Butterflies and How the García Girls Lost Their Accents, The Cemetery of Untold Stories is Julia Alvarez’s seventh novel. It’s a story that’s both languorous and urgent in conjuring a world from magical happenings. The source of these happenings, in a graveyard in the Dominican Republic, is the confrontation between memories and lived agendas. Alvarez is an acclaimed storyteller and teacher, a writer of poetry, non-fiction and children’s books, honored in 2013 with the National Medal of Arts. She continues her luminous virtuosity with the story of Alma Cruz.

Alma, the writer at the heart of The Cemetery of Untold Stories, has a goal – not to go crazy from the delayed promise of cartons of unpublished stories she has stored away. When she inherits land in her origin country — the Dominican Republic — she decides to retire there, and design a graveyard to bury her manuscript drafts, along with the characters whose fictional lives demand their own unrequited recompense. Her sisters think she’s nuts, and wasting their inheritance. Filomena, a local woman Alma hires to watch over the cemetery, finds solace in a steady paycheck and her unusual workplace.

Alma wants peace for herself and her characters. But they have their own agendas and, once buried, begin to make them known: They speak to each other and Filomena, rewriting and revising Alma’s creativity in order to reclaim themselves.

In this new story, Alvarez creates a world where everyone is on a quest to achieve a dream — retirement, literary fame, a steady job, peace of mind, authenticity. Things get complicated during the rewrites, when ambitions and memories bump into the reality of no money, getting arrested, no imagination, jealousy, and the grace of humble competence. Alma’s sisters, Filomena, the townspeople — all make a claim over Alma’s aspiration to find a final resting place for her memories. Alvarez sprinkles their journey with dialogue and phrases in Spanish and one — “no hay mal que por bien no venga” (there is goodness in every woe) — emerges as the oral talisman of her story. There is always something magical to discover in a story, and that is especially true in Alvarez’s landing place.

Marcela Davison Avilés is a writer and independent producer living in Northern California.

Advertisement
Continue Reading

Lifestyle

Donald Trump's Famous Jet Clips Parked Aircraft at Florida Airport

Published

on

Donald Trump's Famous Jet Clips Parked Aircraft at Florida Airport

Continue Reading

Lifestyle

The miracle of middle age with Miranda July : It's Been a Minute

Published

on

The miracle of middle age with Miranda July : It's Been a Minute

Author Miranda July poses next to her novel, “All Fours”

Elizabeth Weinberg/Amazon


hide caption

toggle caption

Advertisement

Elizabeth Weinberg/Amazon


Author Miranda July poses next to her novel, “All Fours”

Elizabeth Weinberg/Amazon

Our culture is full of stories about what it’s like to be young: to find yourself, to fall in love, to leave home. But there aren’t nearly as many scripts for what middle age might look like, especially for women. This week, host Brittany Luse is joined by author and filmmaker Miranda July, whose new novel ‘All Fours’ dives deep into the mystery and miracle of being a middle aged woman.

Want to be featured on the show? Record a question via voice memo for ‘Hey Brittany’ and send it to ibam@npr.org.

Advertisement

This episode was produced by Liam McBain and Corey Antonio Rose. It was edited by Jessica Placzek. Engineering support came from Tiffany Vera. Our executive producer is Veralyn Williams. Our VP of programming is Yolanda Sangweni.

Continue Reading

Trending