Rhode Island
How many cops from Rhode Island went to controversial New Jersey seminar? ACLU wants to know. – Rhode Island Current

The ACLU of Rhode Island Monday announced it filed open records requests with every police department across the state to find out if any of its officers attended a 2021 training seminar in New Jersey that encouraged insubordination and unconstitutional tactics.
Last December, the New Jersey Comptroller’s Office released a report indicating some Rhode Island police officers participated in the privately-run six-day seminar operated by Street Cop in Atlantic City. It notes that speakers disparaged marginalized groups of people and often made lewd gestures related to genitalia.
Instructors reportedly used words such as “retard” and “bitch” in describing people, according to the report. One showed an offensive meme featuring a monkey in a shirt after describing a motor vehicle stop of a “75 year old Black man coming out of Trenton.”
Attendees were also provided with a “Reasonable Suspicion Factors Checklist,” which warned officers that a person smoking during a traffic stop suggests criminal activity. Stretching was also seen as something a criminal would do when stopped, according to the New Jersey report.
Public agencies in Rhode Island also provided direct payment to Street Cop between 2020 and 2023, but the report did not say which departments contributed or how much. New Jersey Monitor reported that agencies in its state paid at least $75,000 in taxpayer funds to cover conference costs.
In a statement sent to New Jersey Monitor last December, Street Cop founder Dennis Benigno said his firm planned to “impose stricter standards on colloquial and jocular language occasionally used by some instructors” before the state comptroller’s office issued its report. Video from the conference shows Benigno himself used obscenity-laced language.
Street Cop filed for bankruptcy in late January.
“The New Jersey report is eye-opening and extraordinarily disturbing. Rhode Islanders deserve to know which police departments sent officers, however unwittingly, to learn how to engage in unconstitutional traffic stops and searches, and whether steps will be taken to retrain them,” ACLU of Rhode Island Executive Director Steven Brown said in a statement.
The ACLU on Feb. 22 asked the Rhode Island Police Officers Commission on Standards and Training (POST) to investigate and disclose which police departments sent officers to the seminar.
Commission Chairman Michael Winquist, who is also chief of police for the city of Cranston, responded via letter the next day saying “the actions you are requesting are outside the POST’s scope of authority.”
“Undoubtedly, all POST members would never condone any training that promotes unconstitutional or discriminatory policing practices at the Rhode Island Police Municipal Training Academy, for probationary police officers, or otherwise,” Winquist wrote.
Rhode Island Police Chiefs Association Executive Director Sidney Wordell told Rhode Island Current the ACLU’s letter was forwarded to local departments.
“We will certainly as an association make sure everyone follows up,” he said. “But at the end of the day, department policy will dictate how they respond.”
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Rhode Island
Storms tore apart the Charlestown Breachway. Vital repairs are about to begin

What is causing erosion at the Charlestown breachway? Here’s an explanation.
Jon Lyons from Ocean House Marina explains what is happening at the Charlestown Breachway with erosion.
CHARLESTOWN – With a population of 7,997, this seaside town doesn’t have a lot going for it in terms of industry.
It is among the smallest employers – both as a town and in the private sector – in Rhode Island, according to the Department of Labor and Training. But it somehow manages to also have one of the lowest tax rates in the state.
“If you drive around town, we don’t have a lot of industry,” said Stephen McCandless. “We don’t have the big box stores. We don’t have a lot of business. And we are still the third or fourth lowest tax rate in the state.”
McCandless, who is Charlestown’s coastal geologist and GIS coordinator, reckons there is an easy explanation for this.
“It comes to the environment,” he said. “People come here for nature.”
Charlestown is home to Ninigret Pond, a popular boating, fishing and swimming spot. In fact, the town’s population more than triples during the summer due to tourists coming to enjoy its recreational offerings.
The pond is also an aquaculture engine for the state. About 40% of the oysters harvested in Rhode Island come from it.
But Ninigret Pond’s – and Charlestown’s – ecological and economic health has been under threat after winter storms from 2023-2024 eroded the breachway that connects the pond to the ocean.
The storms left a gaping hole in the breachway’s western wall, allowing water to pour out and sand to build up in the channel. This created navigational hazards for boaters, impacting businesses in the pond, erased 135 feet of valuable beach real estate and affected the water quality, endangering the health of shellfish in the pond.
A $500,000 emergency repair, performed last October, stymied the leak and stabilized the breachway, but a longer-term fix has been needed.
On Wednesday, Oct. 8, the Town of Charlestown, the Rhode Island Department of Environmental Management and the Coastal Resources Management Council announced a plan to repair the breachway.
The project will cost $8.4 million, with the lion’s share – $5 million – coming from the state through a DEM budget allocation through CRMC, $2 million from CRMC’s dredging budget and $1.4 million from Charlestown.
McCandless, who has spent over two decades studying the pond and spearheaded the work to restore the breachway, said that the project came together quickly thanks to efficient collaboration between the town and the state. Usually, between permitting from state agencies and funding, a project like this can take between two to three years, he estimated, but Charlestown and state officials were able to turn it around in a year.
“Trying to get that money in one year, it just doesn’t happen. I mean, it was a feat to get that accomplished that quickly,” McCandless said.
The project will be done in two main phases: first, rebuilding the breachway’s western stone wall to a height of eight feet, and second, dredging the channel and using the sand to rebuild the beach and its dunes
Work will begin Oct. 20 and run through Feb. 26, according to McCandless, though a press release from the state indicates it is expected to be completed by April 2026.
The breachway will remain open during construction, though access to the Blue Shutters Town Parking Lot may be restricted. The state encourages visitors to use the East Beach parking lot.
The breachway was originally constructed in 1952, though some structures dated back to 1890. Once completed, the renovated structure’s projected lifetime will be 100 years. That includes climate change scenarios.
“We designed it to last 100 years, and we hope it works. All the math says it will,” McCandless said.
Rhode Island
RI Lottery Lucky For Life, Numbers Midday winning numbers for Oct. 9, 2025
The Rhode Island Lottery offers multiple draw games for those aiming to win big. Here’s a look at Oct. 9, 2025, results for each game:
Winning Lucky For Life numbers from Oct. 9 drawing
09-11-27-42-46, Lucky Ball: 17
Check Lucky For Life payouts and previous drawings here.
Winning Numbers numbers from Oct. 9 drawing
Midday: 3-5-8-1
Evening: 7-7-5-1
Check Numbers payouts and previous drawings here.
Winning Wild Money numbers from Oct. 9 drawing
05-12-25-29-37, Extra: 08
Check Wild Money payouts and previous drawings here.
Feeling lucky? Explore the latest lottery news & results
Are you a winner? Here’s how to claim your prize
- Prizes less than $600 can be claimed at any Rhode Island Lottery Retailer. Prizes of $600 and above must be claimed at Lottery Headquarters, 1425 Pontiac Ave., Cranston, Rhode Island 02920.
- Mega Millions and Powerball jackpot winners can decide on cash or annuity payment within 60 days after becoming entitled to the prize. The annuitized prize shall be paid in 30 graduated annual installments.
- Winners of the Lucky for Life top prize of $1,000 a day for life and second prize of $25,000 a year for life can decide to collect the prize for a minimum of 20 years or take a lump sum cash payment.
When are the Rhode Island Lottery drawings held?
- Powerball: 10:59 p.m. ET on Monday, Wednesday, and Saturday.
- Mega Millions: 11:00 p.m. ET on Tuesday and Friday.
- Lucky for Life: 10:30 p.m. ET daily.
- Numbers (Midday): 1:30 p.m. ET daily.
- Numbers (Evening): 7:29 p.m. ET daily.
- Wild Money: 7:29 p.m. ET on Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday.
This results page was generated automatically using information from TinBu and a template written and reviewed by a Rhode Island editor. You can send feedback using this form.
Rhode Island
Does Taylor Swift mention Rhode Island in her new album? Lyrics hint at Fourth of July party
TikTok can’t stop dancing to Taylor Swift’s ‘The Fate of Ophelia’
Taylor Swift’s “The Fate of Ophelia” music video dropped, and TikTok creators are recreating the viral dance with their own flair.
Taylor Swift’s twelfth studio album “The Life of a Showgirl” talks a lot about Swift’s journey in the spotlight, but unfortunately, there is no behind-the-scenes look at the showgirl’s downtime at her Watch Hill mansion.
However, in a recent interview with SiriusXM, Swift discussed how certain lines in “The Fate of Ophelia,” the opening track and lead single from her new album, reference one of her many Rhode Island Fourth of July parties.
While the song overall says that fiance Travis Kelce coming into Swift’s life saved her from the fate of Ophelia from Shakespeare’s “Hamlet,” in the first verse, Swift talks about exactly when Kelce came into her life: “I swore my loyalty to me, myself and I / Right before you lit my sky up.”
In a recent interview with “Morning Mash Up” on SiriusXM Hits 1, host Nicole Ryan tells Swift she noticed the connection between her Instagram post and “The Fate of Ophelia” lyrics, with Swift responding “Oh my god, right?”.
Swift went on to talk about the irony in the timing of the caption, saying “how deranged is that post? I think back on that, I’m like that’s – there’s no way.”
“The fact that it was right before the Kansas City show, where like, I’d been like, ‘Happy Independence Day from your local, single girlies’ or something like that. And then I the next day go and play in Kansas City – not knowing that Travis was gonna come to the show,” Swift added. “It’s unreal.”
Here’s a breakdown of this reference, and how it involves Rhode Island.
Reference to Rhode Island party in ‘The Fate of Ophelia’
Kelce first entered Swift’s life – or “lit her sky up” – by attending an Eras Tour concert in Kansas City, Missouri on July 8, 2023. Famously, Kelce brought a friendship bracelet with his phone number on it for the singer, and while he did not get to give it to Swift during the concert, the gesture launched their romance.
Where was Taylor Swift “right before” Kelce attended her concert? She was celebrating the Fourth of July with friends at her Rhode Island mansion. On July 7, 2023 – just one day before Kelce went to The Eras Tour – Swift posted on Instagram about the Ocean State celebration, sharing pictures posing in front of the water, laughing in the kitchen and enjoying red, white and blue popsicles with friends Este, Danielle and Alana Haim, as well as Selena Gomez, Ashley Avignone and Sydney Ness.
More interestingly, Swift’s caption for the post declared the single status of herself and her friends: “Happy belated Independence Day from your local neighborhood independent girlies.”
Swift directly references this declaration of her independence with the line “I swore my loyalty to me, myself and I.”
As if the callback to the specific caption is not enough, Swift solidifies the reference to her Rhode Island Taymerica bash with other clever references to Independence Day throughout “The Fate of Ophelia,” such as repetitions of “I pledge allegiance” in the chorus of the song and the image of a firework exploding with the line “you lit my sky up.”
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