New Hampshire
Queen City Woman Arrested Again On Driving Under The Influence Charges After A Crash In Concord
CONCORD, NH — A woman from Manchester is facing another driving under the influence charge after a crash on Airport Road in Concord in January.
Around 4:30 p.m. on Jan. 31, officers were sent to the area of Manchester Street and Airport Road for a report of a crash. The caller told dispatch the driver, a woman, had driven into a snowbank, and she smelled like alcohol, according to an affidavit.
The first officer arrived and found a 2014 Subaru Forester between the road and Concord Nissan. The SUV had airbag deployment and “the undercarriage seemed to be destroyed,” the officer wrote.
The officer approached the SUV and spoke to the operator, identified later as Nicole E. Roy, 37, of Youville Street in Manchester, and accused her of having “bloodshot and glassy” eyes. She also had “thick, slow, slurred speech,” and smelled like alcohol, the reporting officer said.
Editor’s note: This post was derived from information supplied by the Concord Police Department and Concord District Court and does not indicate a conviction. This link explains how to request the removal of a name from New Hampshire Patch police reports.
“I asked her what happened and she spoke too softly for me to understand her,” the office wrote in the report. “She then told me her ex-boyfriend was calling her, and she drove off the road.”
Fire and rescue teams were requested and evaluated her, but she declined services, the report said. While she was being checked, the reporting officer spoke to a witness, a man in his early 20s, who reported seeing her “drive off the road at a high rate of speed.” When the witness approached the vehicle to see if the driver was OK, he accused her of smelling like alcohol and being impaired, the report stated.
When asked if she had anything to drink, Roy said she had not, the officer wrote. The officer then asked if she had hit her head or were injured and she said no, due to wearing a seatbelt.
Roy was requested to take a field sobriety test and was unsteady on her feet and nearly fell when exiting the vehicle, the affidavit said. She walked in the new, deep snow, and into the parking lot of Concord Nissan, but was accused of struggling.
“I was concerned she was going to fall,” the officer wrote. “Roy refused my assistance.”
After going through three sets of tests, the officer asked if she was being honest about her alcohol consumption, the report said. When asked why she smelled like alcohol and her eyes displayed signs of impairment, she told the officer she smoked cannabis around 11 a.m., the report said.
Roy was arrested and “showed a variety of emotions” during the trip to police headquarters for processing, “from being nice, to crying, to yelling at (the officer) in a short span of time,” the affidavit said.
At the police station, Roy was accused of being unsteady on her feet and smelling of alcohol after being taken out of the cruiser. She walked into a wall on the ramp inside the stationhouse, a report said.
The officer also called the owner of the Subaru, who “refused to pick her up,” and called Roy “an alcoholic,” according to an affidavit.
Roy was accused of displaying “a range of emotions” while calling three people to assist her, the report said.
The officer also noted Roy was convicted of driving under the influence in Hooksett District Court in May 2023.
On Feb. 2, she pleaded not guilty to the charges.
On Feb. 5, she was granted a public defender.
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New Hampshire
Nashua, NH, woman jailed for falsifying marriage to claim late man’s estate
KEENE, N.H. — A Nashua woman who had a town clerk falsely certify a marriage that never happened so she could claim her late partner’s property has been sentenced to seven days in jail, placed on probation and ordered to repay thousands to his estate.
Attorney General John Formella said Wendy Leedberg‑Snow, 60, turned to Winchester Town Clerk Jim Tetreault after the death of her longtime partner, Eric Leedberg — who was born in Lowell — using the falsified license to pose as his spouse and lay claim to property from his estate, an effort prosecutors describe as an attempt to rewrite the couple’s history for financial gain.
“This case involved a deliberate effort to manipulate official government records and exploit the death of a loved one for personal financial gain,” Formella said in a press release announcing the sentencing. “Our vital records system depends on honesty and integrity, and those who seek to corrupt that system will be held accountable. I want to thank the investigators and prosecutors whose work ensured justice for the victim’s family.”
According to Leedberg’s obituary, he was 53 when he died on Oct. 12, 2023, following a two‑year battle with cancer.
In the obituary, Leedberg-Snow is described as his “significant other.”
Prosecutors said Leedberg‑Snow moved quickly after his death, relying on Tetreault’s signature to fabricate a marriage that never occurred and position herself as Leedberg’s surviving spouse.
Tetreault, who was a New Hampshire justice of the peace at the time, falsely signed the marriage license claiming he had officiated the couple’s wedding. He later admitted he never performed any ceremony for Leedberg‑Snow and Leedberg and had no personal knowledge of them ever being married.
Leedberg‑Snow used the fraudulent certificate to obtain property from Leedberg’s estate, including a pickup truck and trailer, and later attempted to influence a witness connected to the scheme.
Leedberg‑Snow pleaded guilty in Cheshire County Superior Court in Keene to felony counts of solicitation to commit vital records fraud, title fraud, theft by misapplication of property and witness tampering.
In addition to her seven‑day jail term, she must serve two years of probation, pay $4,600 in restitution, return the truck and trailer to Leedberg’s estate and comply with a suspended three‑and‑a‑half‑ to seven‑year prison sentence, which means the sentence only takes effect if she violates the conditions of her probation.
Tetreault, who continues to serve as Winchester’s town clerk and “fully cooperated with the State’s investigation,” according to prosecutors, pleaded guilty in April to notarial misconduct, a Class A misdemeanor. As part of a negotiated plea, prosecutors dropped a felony charge of vital records fraud. He was sentenced to 90 days in the house of corrections, all suspended for two years on good behavior, and ordered to pay a $1,000 fine plus a $240 penalty assessment.
He resigned his commissions as a justice of the peace and bail commissioner and agreed not to seek recommissioning as a justice of the peace or notary public during the two‑year suspension period.
Tetreault could not be reached for comment at his office number.
Follow Aaron Curtis on X @aselahcurtis, or on Bluesky @aaronscurtis.bsky.social.
New Hampshire
Rescue Crews Help Injured Woman Off Mt. Washington
SARGENT’S PURCHASE – On Saturday, personnel from multiple rescue crews teamed up to help an injured woman get off of Mt. Washington to seek medical treatment.
At approximately 7:45 AM, New Hampshire Fish and Game Department Conservation Officers were notified that a staff member at the Appalachian Mountain Club (AMC) Lakes of the Clouds Hut had taken a serious fall at the hut and was left unable to walk.
Fish and Game subsequently mobilized search and rescue personnel to come and help evacuate the young woman from her remote location.
By 10:00 AM, members of the Androscoggin Valley Search and Rescue Team (AVSAR), Pemigewassett Valley Search and Rescue Team (Pemi), AMC and Fish and Game had gathered at the Base Station of the Cog Rail. The Cog Railway generously donated room on their trains, and rescuers and equipment were given rides up Mt. Washington to the West Side Trail, which allowed for a shorter and less strenuous 1.6 mile hike than other routes.
By 11:20 AM rescuers were at the hut with the patient. The patient was subsequently packaged in a litter and prepared for an overland carryout back to the Cog tracks.
Rescue personnel made steady progress, and by 2:15 PM had made it back across West Side Trail and to the train tracks. A Cog Railway train picked up the whole rescue party and brought everyone back down the mountain. Once roadside, the patient was evaluated by personnel from Twin Mountain Fire and Rescue.
She was ultimately driven from the scene by a friend and went to Memorial Hospital in North Conway for further evaluation
and treatment of multiple injuries related to her fall. The patient was identified as Cali Turner, 26, of Willimantic, Maine.
Fish and Game would like to thank all of the people and organizations involved in this rescue effort. Through the help of everyone, the rescue was a great success and got done in a timely manner.
New Hampshire
Gilmanton Iron Works Man Accused Of Possessing Guns, Hundreds Of Grams Of Fentanyl In Hooksett, Manchester
Editor’s note: This post was derived from information provided by the Hooksett and Manchester police departments and does not constitute a conviction. This link explains how to request the removal of a name from New Hampshire Patch police reports.
Stark was arrested later by police during a motor vehicle stop in Manchester and charged with drug sale, possession, driving after revocation or suspension, and armed career criminal. He was then turned over to Hooksett police on that department’s charges, processed, declined bail, and was held at the Merrimack County Jail for future arraignment.
Decades Of Priors
Stark, according to superior court records, has more than two decades of criminal history, mostly in the Lakes Region.
In Laconia in December 2005, when he was a teen, Stark was accused of second-degree assault and felony theft. He pleaded guilty to both charges in August 2006. Stark was given work release in January 2007 and about 11 months later, was accused of violating probation. After being sentenced, he was accused of violating probation again in August 2008. A bail forfeiture hearing was held in December 2008, and a probation violation hearing was held in March 2009.
Stark was accused of controlled drug act in Laconia in December 2009, but the charge was nolle prossed in August 2010. In June 2010, he was accused of controlled drug act in Laconia, but the charge was nolle prossed in November 2010. Stark was charged with bail jumping in May 2010 and pleaded guilty a year later to the charge and received a two-to-four-year prison sentence with 113 days time served credit.
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