New Hampshire
Body of Dover native Capt. Jack Casey, late U.S. Marine, returning to NH
DOVER — The body of Garrison City native Capt. Jack Casey, one of five U.S. Marines who died in a California helicopter crash this month during a training exercise, will be returned to New Hampshire Tuesday, according to city police.
A funeral procession for Casey, 26, will be held following a U.S. Marine Corps service at Pease Air National Guard Base in Portsmouth, the Dover Police Department announced on Monday. Assisted by New Hampshire State Police and Dover police, Casey’s family will ride along for a funeral procession from the base to Wiggin-Purdy-McCooey-Dion funeral home following the military honor guard at Pease.
The service at Pease is not open to members of the public, an announcement from Dover police Chief William Breault states. The procession is expected to begin around noon Tuesday and can be viewed by members of the public.
“The procession – which will include members of the Casey family – follows a route that specifically drives past local schools that Captain Casey attended,” Breault’s announcement states.
Previous story: Capt. Jack Casey of Dover one of five Marines killed in helicopter crash
Casey graduated from Saint Mary Academy and was a 2015 graduate of St. Thomas Aquinas High School.
According to the city, the procession will follow this route:
- From Pease, Newington Street east to Exit 1 of Route 16
- Route 16 north from Newington to Dover, to Exit 7
- Central Avenue (Route 108) north to Stark Avenue / Dover Point Road
- Dover Point Road south to Saint Thomas Aquinas H.S., 197 Dover Point Road (loop around school and reverse direction)
- Dover Point Road north to Central Avenue north (Route 108)
- Central Avenue north past Saint Mary Academy, 222 Central Avenue
- Central Avenue north past Dover City Hall, 288 Central Avenue
- Left (west) on Washington Street
- Washington Street from Central Avenue to Prospect Street, right on Prospect Street
- Prospect Street to Snows Court to Fourth Street, right on Fourth Street
- Fourth Street east to Central Avenue (Route 108), left on Central Avenue
- Central Avenue north to Wiggin-Purdy-McCooey-Dion Funeral Home, 655 Central Avenue
“Members of the public who wish to pay tribute are welcome to position themselves anywhere on the funeral procession route – preferably wherever it is safe to park without impeding traffic,” Breault’s statement adds. “The only exception is that motorists are requested not to stop or park anywhere on the Spaulding Turnpike.”
The Dover and Newington fire departments are expected to pay tribute at the Spaulding Turnpike overpasses between Exit 3 in Newington and Exit 7 in Dover.
Visitation will be held Friday, Feb. 23 from 3 to 7 p.m. at St. Thomas Aquinas High School, according to Casey’s obituary. A Mass of Christian Burial will be held Saturday, Feb. 24 at 10 a.m. at St. Theresa Catholic Church at 820 Central Road in Rye.
Obituary: Capt. Jack Casey, 1997-2024
New Hampshire
New Hampshire mountainside transformed into largest outdoor sculpture park in New England
Sponsored by New England Chevy Dealers
With over 100 sculptures woven into the mountainside, the Andres Institute of Art is New England’s largest outdoor sculpture park.
Along wooded trails and scenic overlooks, visitors encounter a rotating collection of works that blend art and nature, turning a simple hike into an immersive gallery experience
New Hampshire
Firefighters Extinguish House Fire In Concord’s South End: Video
CONCORD, NH — Concord fire and rescue teams were sent to a house fire in the South End on Saturday afternoon.
Around 3:15 p.m., Concord Fire Alarm began receiving reports about smoke coming from a home on Brookside Drive. Engine 4 arrived first and confirmed smoke was coming from the building. About 10 minutes later, a firefighter stated the fire appeared to be coming from the basement.
News 603 posted videos on Facebook here:
And here:
A few minutes later, firefighters reported putting water on the fire.
New Hampshire
Feds put ‘severely disruptive’ restrictions on applying for green cards
In a monumental shift in policy, the federal government plans to bar noncitizens from changing their immigration statuses except in extraordinary circumstances.
Local immigration attorneys say the move by the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) will impact thousands of people in the middle of the process and those planning to adjust their statuses in Massachusetts, and millions of foreign nationals nationwide. That includes students, temporary visa holders, and tourists, say attorneys.
Adjustment of status is when a noncitizen lawfully in the U.S. tries to switch to lawful permanent residence, known as a green card. It has been routine within the USCIS for decades. Adjustment of status has long allowed noncitizens to do so within the US without having to return to their country of origin.
“It’s extremely disruptive and is only going to further burden and complicate the system. It makes no sense,” said Robin Nice, a local immigration attorney.
Todd Pomerleau, a local attorney who has won cases before the Supreme Court, said that the USCIS “can’t eliminate statutory protections nor can it rewrite regulations while going through the proper channels. Otherwise, we’ll sue them in court.”
USCIS released a memo on Friday saying that the system has been abused. Specifically, the memo says the process that allows green card applicants to remain in the U.S. while applying was never intended to replace the system of applying for a visa from abroad. It instructs officers to treat adjustment of status applications as an exceptional, discretionary benefit, and that it is now “an extraordinary form of immigration relief.”
The agency says that even if applicants meet requirements for permanent residence when they’re about to apply in the US, they must leave the U.S. when their current visa ends, and wait for the State Department to process their case.
“It affects every person within the United States that is seeking adjustment of status. It affects students, it effects temporary protected status holders, it affects business visa holders,” said Annelise Araujo, a lawyer who runs an immigration practice in Boston.
Given the backlog of cases, attorneys say noncitizens will have to wait abroad for an indefinite period of time, and potentially be ineligible to return.
USCIS spokesman Zach Kahler said the change is about “returning to the original intent of the law.”
“This policy allows our immigration system to function as the law intended instead of incentivizing loopholes. When aliens apply from their home country, it reduces the need to find and remove those who decide to slip into the shadows and remain in the U.S. illegally after being denied residency,” he said in a statement. Kahler said nonimmigrants, like students, temporary workers, or people on tourist visas, come to the U.S. for a short time and for a specific purpose, and they must leave after.
Nice said the policy will drive immigrants “underground” and force them to pay thousands of extra dollars annually in renewing temporary statuses and work permits, since they won’t want to go abroad.
Araujo said the policy change will have a large impact on students. F-1 student visa holders can currently apply for green cards with limitations.
“They may change what their goals are, right? They may decide that they want to permanently stay after they’ve entered the United States and they may look for a job here. And that’s why adjustment of status exists,” she said.
Both Nice and Araujo said USCIS is wrong that this has previously been standard policy.
Araujo said the change will also impact people on work visas, like CEOs of multinational corporations, or on specialized visas, like an H-1B, a visa for foreign nationals with specialized knowledge in fields like technology, engineering, healthcare or finance.
“They can go from a non-immigrant intent, which was the intent they had at the time they applied to enter, to a immigrant intent after they’ve been in the United States,” she said. Noncitizens told they can’t have a path to a green card and work lawfully may start considering other countries.
Pomerleau recommended noncitizens thinking of adjusting their status or in the middle of it consult with an immigration attorney.
“This is just yet another sign of the government trying to make things difficult for people that are even able to follow the laws that Congress created,” said Pomerleau.
Copyright 2026 GBH News Boston
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