Massachusetts
Boston Police Blotter: Hawaii child rape fugitive arrested in Massachusetts

U.S. Marshals in Worcester arrested a woman wanted for child rape in Hawaii.
Authorities arrested Coleen Kuamo`o, also known as Malama Kuamo`o, 43, who is wanted in Hawaii for one count of sexual assault in the first degree, three counts of sexual assault in the third degree and one count of use of a computer in the commission of a crime. Authorities say that she assaulted a child in Wailuku, Hawaii.
“Anyone who thinks they can flee across the country to avoid facing justice is mistaken,” said Acting U.S. Marshal for Massachusetts Kevin Neal. The U.S. Marshals Service is committed to ensuring fugitives face justice – no matter where they run.”
The Maui Police Department and the Marshals Service in Hawaii contacted the Massachusetts Marshals Service in Massachusetts because they believed the fugitive was hiding in the Bay State. Marshals tracked her down in Worcester Thursday.
Incident summary
Between 10 a.m. Friday and 10 a.m. Saturday, the Boston Police Department reports that its officers responded to 299 incidents. Those included two robberies, six aggravated assaults, five thefts from vehicles, two stolen cars, and 25 instances of miscellaneous larceny.
Arrests
All of the below-named defendants are presumed innocent until proven guilty.
– Shaneya Hollins, 2053R Columbus Ave., Roxbury. Operating a motor vehicle in violation of license class.
– Devin Hines, 10 Forsyth St., Chelsea. Possession of burglarious instrument.
– Daniel Rosario, 2030 Columbus Ave., Jamaica Plain. Municipal violation: Drinking alcohol in public.
– Tomongo Bey, 107 Devon St., Boston. External warrant arrest.
– Dayquan Hardy, 31 Oak Grove Ave., Springfield. Larceny under $250.
– Kerri Dunbar, 444 E. Third St., Boston. External warrant arrest.
– Dominique Hines, 106 Heath St., Boston. Felony possession of a firearm.
– Luis Abreu-Shanlatte, 250 Margaretta Drive, Hyde Park. Shoplifting over $100 by concealing.
– Terrell Harris, 64 Lithgow St., Dorchester. Shoplifting by concealing.
– Chamelea Miller, 378 Centre St., Dorchester. Shoplifting by asportation.
– Alex McGee, no address listed. Trespassing.
– Stanley Winn, 1352 Dorchester Ave., Dorchester. Trespassing.
– Jailson Gomescarvalho, no address listed. Criminal operation of a motor vehicle with suspended license.
– Jailene Rentas, 145 Navarre St., Roslindale. Operating a motor vehicle under the influence of alcohol.

Massachusetts
Here are 10 haunted places in Massachusetts to visit this spooky season

A ghost in a haunted Gardner mansion appears to be having a ball
A ball left on the staircase inside the S.K. Pierce Haunted Victorian Mansion appears to move on its own in this video.
Provided by John Godino
Ready to celebrate Halloween next week?
While preparations for the holiday typically include buying candy and watching spooky movies, if you’re a true horror fan, you’re probably looking for ways to celebrate the more scary aspect of the holiday. Luckily, Massachusetts has plenty of haunted places you can visit this spooky season, including restaurants, hotels, cemeteries and even ships.
Here are 10 must-visit haunted places in Massachusetts to check out this fall.
Lizzie Borden Bed & Breakfast
For those who love true crime, this Fall River bed and breakfast allows you to eat or stay at the scene of a historic murder. The Lizzie Borden Bed & Breakfast is the former house of Lizzie Borden, the primary yet exonerated suspect in the unsolved axe murders of her father Andrew Borden and stepmother Abby Gray in 1892.
Guests can stay in the rooms where the murders happened and eat breakfast in the very room where the first autopsies were performed. Many report a chilling dining experience, with guests often seeing apparitions of Lizzie or her deceased parents.
Room rates at the Lizzie Borden House typically range from $200-400, with breakfast for an additional $20 per person. To secure the room option you want, it is recommended to book as far in advance as possible. The hardest months to get a booking are August and October.
If you don’t want to sleep with ghosts but still want to visit, the Lizzie Borden House also offers daily tours from 10:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. at $30 a ticket, nightly ghost tours from 7 to 9 p.m. at $25 a ticket and nightly ghost hunts from 10 p.m. to midnight at $40 a ticket.
Location: 230 Second St., Fall River
Omni Parker House
Founded in 1855, the Omni Parker House is one of the oldest continuously operating hotels in the country, housing names like Henry David Thoreau, Nathaniel Hawhorne, Ulysses S. Grant, John F. Kennedy, Judy Garland, James Dean and more.
However, the most popular name at the Omni is Harvey Parker, who is believed to haunt the hotel he once founded. Guests have reported seeing an apparition of a older man with a mustache wearing clothes from the 1800s floating through the hallways or standing inside guest rooms, according to the Omni Hotels’ “Unpacked” blog.
Other ghostly encounters include noise complaints for empty rooms, a lingering smell of whiskey and the elevator traveling to the third floor – the floor where Charles Dickens once stayed – by itself.
If you want to see Parker with your own eyes, make a reservation to stay at Omni Parker House online.
Location: 60 School St., Boston
S. K. Pierce Mansion
Back in the 1800s, this historic mansion was built for thriving local businessman Sylvester Pierce. Pierce’s wife died just weeks after moving in, and the building eventually became a boarding house known as The Victorian, which filled the property with drinking, gambling and prostitution.
The mansion has been certified as haunted by six mediums and paranormal experts, according to The Gardner News. During an episode of “Ghost Hunters” filmed at the property, it was determined that Pierce Mansion is inhabited by a trio of ghosts – a 19-year-old girl, a five-year-old boy and a resident who died in a fire.
Today, the mansion offeres guided tours on weeknights and weekend afternoons for $40 per person. For the brave of heart, Pierce Mansion also offers ghost tours and overnight stays. Tickets and scheduling can be found online.
Location: 4 W Broadway, Gardner
Turner’s Seafood
Of course, many of the state’s haunted restaurants are in Salem. One of these is Turner’s Seafood located in the historic Lyceum Hall, home to famous visitors like Ralph Waldo Emerson, Frederick Douglass, Henry David Thoreau, John Quincy Adams and Alexander Graham Bell, who gave the first demonstration of the telephone in Lyceum.
However, the history of this restaurant reaches back even further. Before the grounds were Lyceum Hall, they were the site of an apple orchard belonging to Bridget Bishop, the first woman killed in the Salem Witch Trials.
Visitors report seeing a figure believed to be Bishop in windows, mirrors and staircases while wearing a long, white gown. Whenever guests in the dining room get a strong whiff of apple, it is believed that Bishop is lingering nearby.
See if you can sniff Bishop out in the main dining room from noon to 9 p.m. Sunday through Thursday or noon to 10 p.m. Friday and Saturday. Guests can request a table online, but walk-ins are welcome.
Location: 43 Church St., Salem
Spider Gates Cemetery
Spider Gates Cemetery, also known as Friends or Quaker Cemetery, lies deep in the woods of Kettle Brook Resrvoir out near Worcester. Legend says that the former entrance to the 18th century cemetery is the eighth gate to Hell, according to ghost tour company Boston Ghosts.
A 2024 report from the Worcester Telegram shares the stories of various hauntings on the cemetery grounds: a Hanging Tree haunted by someone who took their own life among its branches; a second cemetery across the street that disappears after you see it once; the river Styx running underneath a cave where a young woman was murdered; and the voice of Marmaduke Earle, who speaks to those that rest their head on his gravestne at midnight.
Location: 15 Earle St., Leicester
Wayside Inn
The oldest hotel in the entire country, The Wayside Inn dates all the way back to 1661, when John How, one of the first settlers of the Massachusetts Bay Colony, was granted a license for a house of public entertainment, or “pub,” in Marlborough, which began a multi-generation tradition of family innkeepers.
The first two-room dwelling was built in 1703, acting as the How family house until 1716, when four Sudbury selectmen granted Samuel’s son David How permission to keep a house of entertainment for travelers.
Today, the inn is believed to be haunted by former resident Jerusha Howe, who ran the inn with her brother Lyman until her death in 1842. According to Boston Ghosts, Howe died from a broken heart after the man she was supposed to marry never returned from England, and now she haunts the hotel looking for male companionship. Male guests of rooms nine and ten – Howe’s former living quarters – have reported feeling her presence or finding her at the foot of their bed in the night.
Double-occupancy rates at The Wayside range from $220-240 per night, and reservations can be booked by calling the front desk at 978-443-1776.
Location: 72 Wayside Inn Road, Sudbury
Hoosac Tunnel
Looking for a ghostly encounter without staying the night? Take a drive by the Hoosac Tunnel in the Berkshires. Running along the Deerfield River, this tunnel is believed to be haunted by the 200 deaths that happened during its 24-year construction, earning the tunnel the nickname of “the bloody pit.”
While only freight trains can drive through the tunnel, past travelers have repoted hearing voices and seeing orbs from outside, says US Ghost Adventures.
Location: Eastern portal at 239 River Road, Drury
Warren Tavern
Established in 1780, Warren Tavern is the oldest tavern in Massachusetts and one of the first buildings to be erected after Charlestown was ransacked and burned by the British in 1775. Many founding fathers visited the tavern, including Paul Revere and George Washington, whose funeral speech was given there.
The tavern is named after Dr. Joseph Warren, a major general in the Revolutionary War who sent Paul Revere on his messenger ride and lost his life in the Battle of Bunker Hill. Bar guests have reported seeing a man in a colonial wig and tights and hearing the click of Colonial-era heeled boots, leading many to believe that Dr. Warren’s spirit still resides at his namesake tavern. Another female entity, possibly a relative, has been seen hanging around the front room in Victorian clothing.
Warren Tavern is open for dining from 11 a.m. to 1 a.m. daily. Reservations are not required, but can be made by calling 617-241-8142.
Location: 2 Pleasant St., Charlestown
The Mount
The Mount, the former home of author Edith Wharton, is believed to be haunted by various spirits, according to haunted research company Haunted US. Paranormal activity may date al the way back to when Wharton was alive, as the frightened author frequently claimed she was followed by “formless horrors.”
In 1942, when the estate became the Foxhollow School for Girls, students began to complain about hearing strange noises and phantom footsteps. Visitors have also reported apparitions, both of a young house servant wandering the halls and of Wharton herself reading books.
The Mount offers ghost tours about these stories and more on select dates from July through October. Tickets, which can be bought online, cost $30 per adult or $25 per child. The estate also offers ghost tours for children and regular house tours.
Location: 2 Plunkett St., Lenox
USS Salem
Quincy is home to one of the most haunted ships in the nation, the USS Salem. Once the most powerful vessel in the United States Navy, the USS Salem treated over a thousand civilians after a powerful earthquake in Greece during August of 1953. Many of the patients suffered mortal injuries, and it is believed that they still roam the passageways of the ship alongside her many former sailors.
On select Friday and Saturday nights from 7 p.m. to midnight, The Greater Boston Paranormal Associates offer guided paranormal investigations aboard the ship for $50 per person, which includes state-of-the-art equipment. The ship is also open for general admission self-guided tours from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. on Saturday and Sunday through Nov. 23.
Location: 549 South St. Pier 3, Quincy
Massachusetts
Obituary for Travis E. Green at Brookside Chapel & Funeral Home

Massachusetts
Massachusetts High School Football Final Scores, Results – October 17, 2025

The 2025 Massachusetts high school football season continued on Friday, and High School On SI has a list of final scores from the seventh week of action.
Massachusetts High School Football Schedule & Scores (MIAA) – October 17, 2025
Amesbury 30, North Reading 28
Archbishop Williams 54, Sharon 15
Ashland 42, Holliston 13
Atlantis Charter 39, Holbrook 14
Attleboro 45, Franklin 0
Barnstable 35, Dartmouth 7
Bartlett 34, Worcester Tech 14
Bedford 33, Westford Academy 28
Boston Latin Academy 32, Roxbury Prep Charter 0
Bridgewater-Raynham 48, New Bedford 7
Burlington 30, Stoneham 14
Burncoat 44, Montachusett RVT 6
Cambridge Rindge & Latin 19, Acton-Boxborough 14
Cape Cod RVT 12, Hull 7
Chelmsford 27, North Andover 6
Chicopee Comp 44, Pittsfield 6
Clinton 6, West Boylston 0
Cohasset 49, Carver 24
Diman RVT 48, Old Colony RVT 7
Essex North Shore Agriculture & Tech 21, Pentucket Regional 14
Fairhaven 42, Bourne 8
Foxborough 14, Canton 6
Greater Lawrence Tech 46, Greater Lowell Tech 0
Greenfield 24, Mahar Regional 14
Groton-Dunstable 46, Gardner 0
Haverhill 42, Everett 12
Hingham 28, Plymouth North 8
Hudson 42, Oakmont Regional 0
King Philip Regional 35, Taunton 7
Leicester 13, Oxford 7
Leominster 55, Shrewsbury 40
Lincoln-Sudbury 35, Concord-Carlisle 14
Littleton 41, Murdock 0
Lowell 22, Billerica Memorial 20
Lynn English 32, Medford 12
Lynn Vo-Tech 24, Monomoy 0
Manchester Essex 49, Hamilton-Wenham Regional 6
Mansfield 41, Oliver Ames 0
Marblehead 35, Peabody Veterans Memorial 14
Marlborough 40, Fitchburg 6
Marshfield 51, Whitman-Hanson Regional 0
Masconomet Regional 41, Beverly 22
Medfield 38, Millis 6
Melrose 21, Watertown 0
Methuen 36, Lawrence 6
Middleborough 45, East Bridgewater 26
Milton 35, Walpole 20
Monument Mountain 20, Smith Vo-Tech 8
Nantucket 49, Dennis-Yarmouth Regional 22
Nashoba Valley Tech 36, Lowell Catholic 0
Nauset Regional 48, Martha’s Vineyard Regional 35
Newburyport 29, Lynnfield 19
North 24, Belchertown 0
North Attleborough 42, Stoughton 0
North Quincy 7, Pembroke 0
Norton 42, Medway 28
Norwell 34, Rockland 22
Norwood 31, Hopkinton 0
Old Rochester Regional 41, Greater New Bedford RVT 0
Pathfinder RVT 32, McCann Tech 0
Prouty 36, Keefe Tech 18
Reading Memorial 48, Lexington 12
Scituate 48, Quincy 14
Shawsheen Valley Tech 34, Northeast Metro RVT 6
Shepherd Hill Regional 46, Nashoba Regional 16
South Hadley 48, Holyoke 7
Southbridge 12, Abby Kelley Foster 6
Swampscott 28, Winthrop 20
Tantasqua Regional 40, South 7
Tewksbury Memorial 35, Dracut 6
Triton Regional 39, Ipswich 16
Upper Cape Cod RVT 32, Wareham 26
Uxbridge 25, Millbury 20
Wachusett Regional 31, Westborough 0
Wellesley 42, Newton North 21
West Bridgewater 55, Seekonk 12
West Springfield 29, Longmeadow 14
Westfield 20, Minnechaug Regional 14
Westwood 43, Dedham 0
Wilmington 35, Wakefield Memorial 30
Woburn Memorial 50, Belmont 0
Xaverian Brothers 25, Catholic Memorial 22
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