New Hampshire
Missing New Hampshire girl’s stepmother indicted on gun charges
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MANCHESTER, N.H. (AP) — The stepmother of a lacking New Hampshire lady who vanished in 2019 at age 5 has been indicted on costs that she acquired stolen firearms, unrelated to the kid’s disappearance.
Kayla Montgomery, 31, is accused of receiving a rifle and a shotgun between Sept. 29 and Oct. 22 of 2019, realizing that they’d been stolen or believing they’d in all probability been stolen. She was just lately indicted by a Hillsborough County grand jury, WMUR-TV reported Monday.
Montgomery pleaded not responsible to the fees and has been out on bail.
She was arrested earlier this yr on costs that she lied that Concord Montgomery was residing along with her to gather welfare advantages. She additionally pleaded not responsible to these costs, and to separate perjury costs.
Authorities say Concord vanished someday in late November or early December of 2019 — however authorities didn’t know she was lacking till final fall.
Concord’s father, Adam Montgomery, pleaded not responsible to a cost that he struck Concord in July 2019, and to unrelated firearms costs.
Police are nonetheless trying to find Concord and so they have acquired tons of of suggestions. They’re providing $150,000 for info that can cause them to the lacking baby.
(Copyright 2022 The Related Press. All rights reserved. This materials is probably not revealed, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed with out permission.)

New Hampshire
Man charged in connection with death of New Hampshire toddler in 2024

A 22-year-old man was arrested Tuesday evening in connection with the death of a nearly 2-year-old child in January 2024, according to officials in New Hampshire.
Annthoni Bliss is charged with one count of second-degree murder in the death of 23-month-old Luca Hudson, who died on Jan. 17, 2024, said New Hampshire Attorney General John M. Formella and Keene Police Chief Steven M. Stewart in a joint statement.
“It is alleged that Annthoni Bliss caused the death of Luca Hudson recklessly under circumstances manifesting an extreme indifference to the value of human life, by subjecting Luca to abusive violence and not obtaining timely medical assistance for his injuries,” the statement reads.
Officials did not say what, if any, relationship Bliss had to Hudson.
Police and medical personnel went to an apartment in Keene, New Hampshire on the morning of Jan. 14, 2024 for a call reporting an infant experiencing medical distress. When first responders arrived, Hudson was unconscious and not breathing. He was rushed to a hospital, where he died on Jan. 17, 2024, according to the statement.
An autopsy determined Hudson’s cause of death was homicide resulting from blunt head trauma, officials said.
Bliss is expected to be arraigned on the murder charge Wednesday.
New Hampshire
Remains of missing woman found in Derry, NH, after five years

Police in Derry, New Hampshire, announced that they have found the remains of a woman who has been missing for five years.
Missing since 2020
Amanda Grazewski’s remains were found near a golf course in Derry, New Hampshire, on Thursday, March 20, almost exactly five years after she disappeared.
Grazewski was 23 years old when she disappeared. She had been staying with a friend, but, police said, she left the friend’s home without her belongings and vanished from the Birch Street area in Derry on March 17, 2020.
Tip from drone pilot
A drone pilot hired by Grazewski’s family saw something near the Hoodkroft Country Club golf course in Derry and notified police on Wednesday, March 19. Police searched the area based on the tip and found the skeletal remains that have now been identified as belonging to Grazewski by the Office of the Chief Medical Examiner in consultation with forensic anthropologists.
“Our thoughts are with Amanda Grazewski’s family during this incredibly difficult time. We extend our deepest sympathy to them,” said Attorney General John Formella. “I also want to express my gratitude to the dedicated law enforcement and forensic professionals involved in this case, as well as to the community members who have provided valuable tips throughout this investigation.”
Police said they are still working to determine how Grazewski died and that the case continues to be under investigation. They are asking anyone with information about Grazewski’s disappearance and death to contact the Derry, New Hampshire, Police Department.
New Hampshire
Governor Ayotte signs bill tightening New Hampshire bail law – The Boston Globe

She thanked those in attendance who helped push the bill forward, including the attorney general and Manchester Mayor Jay Ruais, who has been a vocal advocate of bail reform.
“Now that HB 52 has been signed into law, we are returning to a strong bail bystem, where public safety comes first and the revolving door for violent and repeat offenders has been slammed shut,” Ruais said in a statement Tuesday. “Our previous bail system was seriously flawed, putting our citizens, businesses, visitors and law enforcement in danger.”
In Ayotte’s short time in the corner office, she’s emphasized tough-on-crime policies. Among her top priorities has been tightening the state’s bail law. She has advocated for it as a public safety measure, arguing that the state’s current bail law allows too many violent offenders to go free, enabling them to commit additional crimes.
“I’ve heard so much about the issues we’ve had with bail creating a revolving door that is putting our law enforcement in danger, that is putting average citizens… in danger,” she said, during a press event in March, when she urged lawmakers to pass House Bill 592.
Her hands-on approach successfully put the bill on a fast track, landing on her desk months ahead of the deadline to do so. Earlier in March, Ayotte touted bipartisan support for the measure from eight mayors, in addition to all 10 of the state’s county sheriffs, in front of a room she had packed with dozens of members of law enforcement.
Shepherding this bill into law illustrates how, as a new governor, Ayotte isn’t shy about pushing lawmakers to advance her priorities. And at least in this case, with strong Republican majorities in both chambers, they were happy to oblige. The bill also enjoyed unanimous support from Senate Democrats.
But some civil liberties advocates have warned about the harm the new law could cause. People accused of low-level crimes could lose their jobs and custody of their children while awaiting a trial that could prove them innocent, and taxpayers ultimately have to foot the bill for detaining these individuals. Then, there are concerns about freedom, justice, and due process.
Attorneys at the ACLU of New Hampshire have said it was already possible to detain dangerous individuals and they point to lowering crime rates in the state. Plus, they said, tightening the bail law raises concerns about due process.
“Police are not a judge and jury, and they should not have the power to take away someone’s freedom. That power is left to a judge’s discretion,” said Amanda P. Azad, the organization’s policy director, in a statement.
The current debate about bail stems from a change to the state’s law in 2018, when New Hampshire passed reforms that made it harder to detain people who couldn’t afford to pay bail. Now commonly referred to as bail reform, these changes also allowed any person deemed a danger to the community to be detained before trial, regardless what kind of crime they had been accused of.
Lawmakers have been tinkering with those laws in the years since, passing additional reforms as recently as last year. But Ayotte disagreed with some of the changes, and began championing HB 592.
It eliminates a magistrate system that was only fully enacted a few months ago when three magistrates were appointed. The system was supposed to decrease how long someone has to wait behind bars for a bail decision when a judge isn’t available. The magistrates were scheduled to work on weekends.
While the law used to provide a 24-hour window for an individual to appear in court for a bail determination, HB 592 extends that to 36 hours.
It also lowers the standard required to detain someone from “clear and convincing evidence” to probable cause.
The updated law maintains a provision that the court should not to impose a financial condition that would result in incarceration just because someone can’t afford their freedom, although it allows cash bail if there is “no reasonable alternative” to ensure the person will not commit a new crime, violate bail, or fail to appear in court. Here too, it lowers the standard for making this determination from clear and convincing evidence to probable cause.
And it allows people to be detained if there’s probable cause they have broken certain rules while out on bail — such as committing a felony or class A misdemeanor, failing to appear for court, or violating a condition of their bail.
The new law takes effect 180 days from its signing, on Sept. 21.
This article has been updated with a statement from the mayor of Manchester.
Amanda Gokee can be reached at amanda.gokee@globe.com. Follow her @amanda_gokee.
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