New Hampshire
Winchester town clerk pleads guilty to filling out fake marriage license involving deceased ‘groom’

A town clerk will pay fines and be stripped of his justice of the peace accreditions, but avoid jail time, after he signed a marriage license for a wedding he didn’t perform, involving a groom who was dead.
Jim Tetreault pleaded guilty in Keene District Court on Thursday to a misdemeanor count of notarial misconduct. He was given a suspended sentence of 90 days in jail, assessed a $1,240 fine, and resigned his justice of the peace and bail commissioner positions.
According to prosecutors, Tetreault signed a marriage license for Wendy Leedberg-Snow and Eric Leedberg. Tetreault originally told investigators that he performed the ceremony in his living room in September 2023. Tetreault would later admit, however, that he didn’t perform the ceremony, and that he was asked by Leedberg-Snow to sign the document some time after Eric Leedberg’s death.
He told authorities that he was friendly with Leedberg-Snow, who changed her legal name shortly before Eric Leedberg’s death. In his obituary, she is described as his “significant other.”
Leedberg’s family alerted authorities after they received his death certificate, which listed Leedberg-Snow as his spouse.
Leedberg-Snow has not yet been charged with any wrongdoing, but the New Hampshire Attorney General’s office confirmed she is under investigation. She previously declined to comment to NHPR.
Tetreault was back in his office as town clerk and tax collector in Winchester by midday Thursday. He declined to comment when reached by NHPR, but through his attorney, said that he “took responsibility for my poor choice in that one moment. I want to thank my family and friends and the townspeople for their support during this time.”
Tetreault was facing felony charges for vital records fraud, but accepted a plea deal on a misdemeanor count. Under the terms of the settlement, he agreed to not seek reappointment as a justice of the peace or notary for two years.

New Hampshire
RAW VIDEO: NH officials seek info on poacher who shot turkey in cemetery with people nearby

New Hampshire Fish and Game Department conservation officers are asking for the public’s help in identifying a man who shot a turkey in a cemetery with people nearby.
Around 10 a.m. Sunday, a hunter observed a male in camouflage apparel shoot a turkey in the cemetery on Clough Hill Road in Loudon, the New Hampshire Fish and Game Department said on Facebook. The poacher was dropped off by a late-model, black full-sized pickup.
After shooting the turkey in the cemetery, the poacher wrestled the wounded, still living turkey into the woods and left. The video below was taken by the hunter.
New Hampshire law prohibits hunting in cemeteries. And at the time of the shooting, there were pedestrians at the cemetery.
Anyone with information on this incident, please contact New Hampshire Fish and Game Department at 603-271-3361 or anonymously on the NH OGT App that can be downloaded on any mobile device.
Turkey season in New Hampshire began on May 1 and runs through May 31.
New Hampshire
New Hampshire mom, 3-year-old son shot and killed in possible murder-suicide: Authorities

A New Hampshire mom may have shot and killed her toddler son before turning the weapon on herself inside the family’s secluded cottage home, authorities said.
Another resident of the house in the woods on Pembroke Hill Road called 911 around 1 a.m. Friday after reportedly hearing two gunshots, according to the Pembroke Police Department.
Julia Byrne and toddler son Blake were in an upstairs bedroom, each with with single gunshot wounds to the head, police said.
The mom, 26, was pronounced dead at the scene, while her child was rushed to a local hospital, where he died.
The case is being investigated at a possible murder and suicide, the New Hampshire Department of Justice said.
The site of the shooting, a two-story yellow shingled house at the top of a hill along a usually serene rural area, was cordoned off with crime scene tape early Friday as investigators took forensic photos, according to the Concord Monitor.
“I don’t know who lived there, and I don’t think I ever saw them come out of the house,” Ryan Demers, a neighbor who has lived on Pembroke Hill Road for two years, told the news outlet.
“As far I knew, they pretty much kept to themselves,” he added.
Julia Byrne’s social media is filled with happy pictures of her and her son on hikes and picnics, but she had also shared a number of troubling posts about struggling with her mental health and the challenges of being a mother, the Daily Mail first reported.
Byrne enlisted in the US Army in 2018. It is unclear if Byrne graduated basic training or was an active military member at the time of her death.
If you are struggling with suicidal thoughts or are experiencing a mental health crisis and live in New York City, you can call 1-888-NYC-WELL for free and confidential crisis counseling. If you live outside the five boroughs, you can dial the 24/7 National Suicide Prevention hotline at 988 or go to SuicidePreventionLifeline.org.
New Hampshire
No one hurt after ceiling collapses in Wolfeboro, New Hampshire classroom

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