Massachusetts
US Marshals nab fugitive in Connecticut, wanted for murder and other crimes in Massachusetts
U.S. Marshals apprehended a Puerto Rican man in Willimantic, Connecticut on Thursday, who was wanted for allegedly shooting and killing a man in Massachusetts in December.
The U.S. Marshal’s Service said 28-year-old Lee George-Maldonado faces multiple charges in Fall River, Massachusetts, including murder, carrying a firearm without a license, attempting to commit a crime, kidnapping with a firearm, and two counts of attempted assault with a firearm. He also faces domestic violence charges in Puerto Rico.
Detectives with the Fall River Police Department investigated the shooting of 44-year-old Juan Castro, who was found dead outside his home on Bank Street on Dec. 23, 2023.
UTAH POLICE OFFICER KILLED BY SEMI-TRUCK, SUSPECT ARRESTED AFTER HOURS-LONG MANHUNT
An image of Lee George-Maldonado, who was wanted in connection to a murder on Dec. 23, 2023, in Massachusetts. (U.S. Marshals Service)
Following the investigation, police obtained a warrant for Maldonado’s arrest on May 17, and requested assistance from the U.S. Marshals Service to locate and take him into custody.
Members of the U.S. Marshals Connecticut Violent Fugitive Task Force tracked Maldonado to a residence in Willimantic, Connecticut, where he was ultimately apprehended with the help of SWAT members from the Willimantic Police Department.
DEADLY FLORIDA CARJACKING: PERSON OF INTEREST ARRESTED, ANOTHER ON THE LOOSE AS PLOT THICKENS
The U.S. Marshals have recently been involved in several successful fugitive captures in New England. (File )
Maldonado is currently being held, pending extradition to Massachusetts to face charges against him.
The Connecticut Violent Fugitive Task Force is made up of several agencies, including police departments in Hartford, New Haven, Bridgeport, Norwalk and Waterbury, as well as U.S. Immigrations and Customs Enforcement.
CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP
The task force seeks out and arrests violent fugitives and sexual predators, and since the group’s inception in 1999, they have arrested people wanted for being unregistered sex offenders or on charges of murder, assault, probation and parole violations and more.
Massachusetts
Massachusetts housing market is even competitive for burned down homes
(WJAR) — Massachusetts’ housing market is becoming so competitive, even homes destroyed by fire are attracting strong interest from buyers.
In Dorchester, a burned and condemned multi-family property recently sold in days.
Damaged homes in Massachusetts still have a competitive market. (NECN)
That Dorchester home, which had significant fire damage, sold for $776,000.
The home has been boarded up and empty for over a year and a half.
The listing agent says groups of people were quote “waiting in the wings” to see what would happen with it.
In a tight housing market like Boston’s, these types of properties offer rare opportunities for investors that are eager to take on major renovation projects.
It showcases a broader trend where even severely damaged homes can attract serious interest in the greater Boston housing market.
For developers, the limited land, strong demand, and potential to build equity are all very appealing.
The properties show even after a disaster, there’s still demand in the market.
Massachusetts
Video shows lightning strike near Massachusetts family:
A Southboro, Massachusetts family came within feet of being struck by lightning on Tuesday, and the entire incident was caught on camera.
Brad Robillard had just got home with his son and daughter. “It sounded like a bomb was going off,” Robillard said.
As he went to get his daughter out of the back seat of his pickup truck, an explosion happened right behind him.
“I had literally just told my son that the chances of getting struck by lightning are pretty slim,” said Robillard. “It was the hair raising on the back of your neck, then immediately right after, it went off.”
Robillard knew there was thunder and lightning in the area. He counted to “10 Mississippi” before getting out of the car. It’s common teaching to determine how close lightning is. You start the count after you hear thunder and then divide by 5. It gives a rough estimate of how many miles the last lightning strike was.
“I had counted to 10 before we got out of the car and I’m like yeah, it’s OK. I never thought it would be on top of us on the next one,” said Robillard.
In the video you can see an explosion happening right behind him, but he doesn’t believe that is the lightning strike. There is a tree in his backyard with a line of bark shaved off the side. He thinks the lightning struck the tree, ran into a metal fence in their backyard, and then climbed their home and exited from a soffit at the roof. There are burn marks at the soffit and scorch marks on parts of the fence.
“The path of least resistance, then that big explosion behind me,” said Robillard.
The surveillance footage of the incident made quick rounds on the internet, but Robillard is still trying to wrap his head around what happened.
“At the time it’s like, ‘Wow what is going on?’ Then we ran inside and the adrenaline wears off, that’s what you start thinking about,” said Robillard.
Massachusetts
As online sexual exploitation grows, laws need to catch up – The Boston Globe
You’d think a predator in our own backyard — no matter how far-flung his victims — would be a wake-up call to lawmakers to tackle the growing problem of online sexual exploitation of children. Well, think again.
Sure, Gavin’s wide-ranging national and international exploits made him a natural for federal prosecution. But the mere fact that the Massachusetts State Police received 23,000 reports about child exploitation in 2025 via the CyberTipline — a 77 percent increase over the previous year — would surely indicate the problem is growing right under our noses.
And yet Massachusetts remains an outlier among other states in adapting its own laws to deal with the sexual exploitation and abuse of children generally and its newest manifestation — the proliferation of internet exploitation whether on the so-called dark web or social media outlets.
Massachusetts, for example, remains one of only five states in the nation that has failed to criminalize AI-generated or computer-edited materials involving the sexual exploitation of children.
According to the advocacy group EnoughAbuse.org, half of those laws approved in other states were passed during the 2024-25 legislative cycle. Massachusetts did pass a bill in 2024 to criminalize “deep-fake nudes,” the group noted on its website, but it was not specifically to protect children, nor has anyone been prosecuted under it, according to the website.
And while lawmakers on Beacon Hill have advanced — although not yet passed — legislation to prohibit the use of AI-generated “deep fakes” in election ads and materials, they have not made a similar effort to confront their use to exploit children, whose only “crime” might have been to post a photo on the web that could then be manipulated or “nudified” via AI.
Assistant US Attorney Luke Goldworm, the prosecutor in the Gavin case, told the Globe the exploitation is very real.
“They’re not dots and pixels, ones and zeros,” Goldworm said. “They’re someone’s daughter, granddaughter, sister, niece, and friend. And these crimes steal their innocence. It robs them of the safety all children should feel in their own home.”
The most obvious way to close that gaping loophole in Massachusetts law, advocates say, would be to update the state’s child pornography law.
Today predators are using every available avenue to reach children — including those ubiquitous game boxes. One of Gavin’s victims — the one whose father helped investigators make the case against the Brookline teacher — was a 12-year-old Tennessee girl Gavin managed to find via her Microsoft Xbox.
Meanwhile, states continue to play whack-a-mole with social media companies like Meta and tech giants like Apple, demanding more safety controls to protect children. Apple is now also facing a suit by West Virginia’s attorney general for allegedly knowingly allowing its iCloud storage platform to host illicit images of children. The suit charges that “Rather than implement industry-standard detection tools used by its peers, Apple repeatedly shirked their responsibility to protect children under the guise of user privacy.”
Meanwhile, as predators get ever more savvy about using technology to exploit and victimize children, Massachusetts remains behind the curve even on the simple stuff.
Legislation aimed at mandating education about child sexual abuse prevention for students and school personnel continues to languish. So too enhanced screening for those seeking to work in school systems. And while there’s no evidence that Gavin exploited those in his immediate orbit or that any of his employers knew of his illegal activities, there’s also no reason for Massachusetts not to approve legislation to prevent “passing the trash,” as it’s known — where one school system knowingly passes along those employees guilty of sexual misconduct to another school system.
All of those concepts are included in an omnibus bill, which also would close the age-of-consent loophole that has allowed the sexual exploitation of 16- to 18-year-olds by adults in positions of authority, like teachers, coaches, or counselors. The latter concept has been approved by 39 other states.
But that legislation has been languishing in the House Ways and Means Committee since September.
Sure, tech companies need to do more to protect children. Parents, often bewildered by the technology that seems to be second nature to their children, need to be more vigilant. But there is simply no excuse for Massachusetts lawmakers to ignore legislation that would educate children about the dangers of online sexual abuse and criminalize the conduct of predators in their midst and those who would enable them.
Editorials represent the views of the Boston Globe Editorial Board. Follow us @GlobeOpinion.
-
Delaware29 seconds agoMike Purzycki was enough for Wilmington. We’ll miss him | Opinion
-
Florida7 minutes agoMan who stabbed woman, her daughter to death in Coral Springs to be executed
-
Georgia12 minutes agoWhat channel is Tennessee softball vs Georgia on today? Time, TV schedule to watch Knoxville Super Regional Game 1
-
Hawaii19 minutes agoGeneral plan bill advances in County Council – West Hawaii Today
-
Idaho25 minutes agoMontana Tech, Idaho National Laboratory sign partnership agreement
-
Illinois31 minutes ago1 dead, 3 injured after interstate crash in Morton, State Police say
-
Indiana36 minutes agoThese former Indiana high school softball players are in NCAA Super Regionals
-
Iowa42 minutes agoCrews respond to fire near Eastern Iowa Airport