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Paramedic tried to buy wine wearing his thong

Paramedic tried to buy wine wearing only his thong after supermarket staff 'refused to serve him in uniform'

By Daily Mail Reporter
Last updated at 3:10 PM on 03rd May 2009

 

A paramedic was facing disciplinary action today after he walked into a supermarket crowded with shoppers wearing just a thong.

The ambulanceman had been on duty when he strode defiantly into the Tesco store wearing just the underwear and a pair of socks after staff refused to serve him while he was wearing his ambulance uniform.

Police were called in and interviewed the medic about his actions which were said to have left shop staff and customers embarrassed and stunned.

Tesco

Supermarket showdown:The Tesco store in Addlestone, Surrey, where a paramedic stripped down to his thong and socks after being refused alcohol because he was wearing his uniform

The man, aged in his 40's, had walked into the large Tesco shop at Addlestone, Surrey wearing his full all-in-one green coloured ambulance uniform.

He selected a bottle of wine but become annoyed when the check-out assistant told him it was the store's policy not to sell alcohol to people wearing uniform.

The paramedic then stormed out of the shop, walked to his vehicle in the car park and took off his uniform.

However, he didn't stop there - and stripped right down to the thong and pair of socks he was wearing. Then he walked back into the shop and asked the same cashier:

'Now, I'm not wearing my uniform any more. Will you serve me now?' The assistant refused and the manager was called, along with the police.

paramedic uniform

Refused: Tesco would not serve the man while wearing his full ambulance uniform (posed by models)

Rachael Monkton, who had been in the Tesco store shopping when the incident took place, said: 'He was shopping with a woman when the girl at the check-out said she couldn't let him buy alcohol.

'He got a bit agitated and the manager was called over but she took the side of her employee.

'So the paramedic stormed out, leaving the woman at the tills and when he came back he was just in his underwear.

'People were staring at him and laughing - I couldn't believe my eyes. Normally people would pay to see a man in uniform strip but we got a free show,' added Rachael.

A spokesman for Tesco confirmed that it was company policy not to serve members of the emergency services if they were wearing uniform and stood by the cashier's actions.

'It is absolutely right that the cashier did not serve him when he was in uniform but what happened afterwards was unprecedented,' he said.

'We realise that the customer may not have understood why he was refused alcohol but it was simply a member of our staff following company policy and the actions which followed were wholly unnecessary,' the spokesman added.

The paramedic, who is employed by the South East Coast Ambulance NHS Trust, Surrey division, was understood to have been spoken to by his managers and to be facing the possibility of suspension and disciplinary action.

It was the second time in as many months that a customer at the Addlestone branch of Tesco has stripped in the store in protest at actions of the staff.

In February, 68-year-old Norman Matthews took off his clothes after being wrongly accused of stealing a scratch card from the customer service desk.

Entry #431

Expletives Not Deleted- Man Tells Court What To Do With Jury Duty

Jury Duty? Take This Summons And ...

Expletives Not Deleted: Montana Man Tells Court What It Can Do With Jury Duty

 

HELENA, Mont., May. 1, 2009 

 

 

 


(AP)  A Montana man who replied to a jury summons with an expletive-filled affidavit has apologized to the court on a judge's orders. The Smoking Gun Web site on Thursday posted the affidavit submitted by Erik Slye of Belgrade to the Gallatin County District court in January.

The document shows Slye asked to be excused from jury duty because he didn't want to lose income. It calls court workers "morons" and says that the service was "a complete waste of time."

The automobile painter was ordered by a judge to apologize to court clerks at a hearing last week.

His wife Jennifer says her husband couldn't be reached for comment Friday. She says she was the one who wrote it.

Entry #430

Criminal intruder returned everynight to eat sleep and shower

Sydney's curious case of the cereal intruder

  • Arjun Ramachandran
  • May 4, 2009 - 2:29PM

 

Caught on cerealcam ... the brekkie bandit.

Caught on cerealcam ... the brekkie bandit.

A mystery intruder has been plundering cereal and sleeping on the couches for weeks at one of Sydney's marketing agencies.

Staff at the The Marketing Store were perplexed and slightly amused when, almost daily, they would arrive at their Ultimo office to find a trail left by their unwanted nocturnal visitor.

"My office was the starting point for it,'' said the agency's Asia Pacific president Doug Chapman.

"I'd come in and I'd notice somebody had been sleeping on the lounge or doing something in my office.

"All the cushions would be on the floor and it would be all messed up. I kind of wondered whether it was someone bonking on the lounge.''

Even more peculiar, was the absence of large amounts of cereal  - about six bowls a night - from the stocks in the office kitchen, and evidence that the showers had been used.

Fingers were initially pointed around the office.

"I put the word out through the office but nothing eventuated,'' he said.

"About four weeks ago I came in and it was in a particularly bad state - there were some tablets lying around, and some tobacco or weed on the floor.''

After reporting the matter to the building landlord and checking security passes, the company ruled out an employee, concluding the intruder had to be entering the building overnight.

But office security cameras never managed to point in the right spot to detect anyone, Mr Chapman said.

While the company hires creative people to promote clients' brands, it was a moment of genius from the woman who runs the kitchen that snared the unwanted visitor.

She came up with the idea of hiding a camera in a cereal box.

"She knew we were either huge eaters or someone was stealing cereal,'' Mr Chapman said.

"She got a cereal box and hid a small camera inside and put it on a benchtop in the kitchen.''

The camera was linked to a computer and activated by motion sensors, snapping clear photos of the intruder on his next visit and emailing them to staff, Mr Chapman said.

They showed the man slipping into the office via an overhead ventilation panel (the office is on the building's fifth and top floor) and then leaving via the fire escape.

On his next visit, the intruder was greeted by a security guard. The company called police, warned the man, but decided against pressing charges.

"We didn't want to press charges but we did warn him - told him it's a bit off-putting for the girls, and those who have to work late night.

"We took it very seriously ... although it was a little funny getting the daily updates.

"But we knew he wasn't stealing anything ... he could've easily taken computers, he didn't take any drinks.

"He was a particularly neat guy. He'd come in at 4am, have breakfast - and it was a hearty breakfast, six bowls - clean up after himself, shower and then leave.

"He'd made his home here.''

The company doesn't know what the man's motives were - he wasn't interrogated - but it didn't appear that he was a typical vagrant.

"He was fairly young, in his mid 30s, and very clean cut for someone that was supposedly homeless.''

The company's office in Ultimo is situated close to a number of university and TAFE campuses, and also near a lot of students accommodation.

Entry #428

Swine Flu Fears Cruise Ships Skip Mexico Adding Dollars to Alternate Ports

 

Cruise Ship Diversions From Mexico Adding Dollars to Alternate Ports

May 3, 2009 5:25 p.m. EST

 

                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                 Melvin Baker - AHN Reporter
San Francisco, CA (AHN) - Vacationers who booked cruises to Mexico have recently seen their itineraries suddenly changed by the outbreak of swine flu in that country. The result has been a sudden and unexpected boom in tourism dollars in substitute destinations.

On Friday, 3,000 passengers came down the gangway of the cruise ship Carnival Splendor. But they didn't set foot on Mexican soil, which was where they were supposed to be. Rather, fears of catching the swine flu had forced the ship to change course and head back across the border to San Francisco.

Cruise lines around the United States are yanking their              advertised stops to Mexican ports, penciling alternative ports of call as precautions against a disease for which 787 cases have now been reported around the globe. Of those cases, 506 have been reported in Mexico.

On April 29, Carnival announced that it had cancelled all stops in Mexican ports until Monday. The company was searching for alternative stops and was offering the option of rescheduling cruises for a future date.

On Saturday, Royal Caribbean cruise line said it had suspended trips departing from South Florida to Cozumel by four of its ships and would instead spend additional time in Key West, the Bahamas, or Jamaica and add another day at sea. Cruises leaving from Los Angeles have a "fully revised itinerary," according to a company statement, which includes stops along the West Coast and Canada.

The revised itinerary includes a notice to passengers that "the weather on the revised itinerary is considerably colder. Guests should remember to pack clothing that is appropriate for this new itinerary."

While these changes may be disappointing to cruise travelers, they can be a boon to local merchants not accustomed to the heavier tourist traffic. In San Francisco, each cruise ship accounts for about $1 million spent at shops and businesses, notes television station KGO. And the number of cruise ships scheduled to stop there has doubled, from nine to 18.

 

 

Feature: Swine Flu A Boon To Key West Cruise Tourism

May 3, 2009 3:36 p.m. EST

 

David Goodhue - AHN Reporter

Miami, FL (AHN) - Key West is seeing a silver lining in the swine flu scare.

The Southernmost City is reaping about $400,000 in extra disembarkation fees from cruise ships that were destined for ports of call in Mexico, but changed destinations because of the H1N1 virus.

"There is an increase in ships being rerouted to Key West," said Alyson Crean, a spokeswoman for the city. "We're receiving about 19 extra calls this month."

The amount of money the city charges ships to dock in Key West varies depending upon the size of the vessel, but Crean said an average of about $20,000 goes into the city's coffers from each ship. City business will also likely see a bump in income in May from all the passengers that disembark from the extra ships.

Carnival Cruise Lines, which has ships that stop off in Key West, has modified all trips that began April 30 through May 11 that include stops in Mexico, Joyce Oliva, a spokeswoman with the company said.

"Guests who do not wish to sail on a modified itinerary may opt to receive a refund in the form of a future cruise credit equal to the full amount paid for the voyage," Carnival said in a statement.

The credit is good for any trip departing through 2010, Oliva said.

Five Carnival ships destined for Mexico will stop off in Key West instead of the original port of call, Cozumel.

More ships could be on their way if the situation stays dire for Mexico, where the virus has claimed the lives of at least 19 people. Oliva said that for passengers on ships scheduled to leave after May 11, an update will be provided soon.

Being prepared

But being a tourist destination also carries with it risks when dealing with an infectious illness like the swine flu. Any one of the thousands of tourists who visit the Keys, could be introducing the virus to the popuuulaaatiooon. There have been no confirmed cases of H1N1 in the Keys, but local county and school district officials are on guard.

"It is our belief that prevention will be the best defense against this illness," Sunny Booker, the Monroe County School District's safe schools coordinator said in a statement.

The district announced a list of procedures it is taking to try to prevent the virus from impacting students and teachers. Chief among the efforts is to encourage hand washing.

Each teacher will receive a supply of hand soap for their classrooms. Elementary and middle school students will be encouraged t0o build in hand-washing breaks throughout the school day.

Posters will be hung throughout the schools reminding students and staff the importance of good hygiene. Custodians are being instructed to "vigorously wipe down all door handles and desks and other surfaces each night with specialized cleansers."

The school district is also telling its students that if they feel sick, they should stay home. Symptoms of swine flu are similar to those of typical flu viruses, but the district does not want to take chances.

Entry #426

Radio personality Shannon Burke accused of shooting wife, dog by accident

Radio personality Shannon Burke accused of shooting wife, dog

By Gary Taylor | Sentinel Staff Writer 3:45 PM EDT, May 1, 2009

Shannon Burke arrested -- first appearance

Radio personality Shannon Burke makes his first appearance in Seminole circuit court, Friday, May 1, 2009, in Sanford. He was arrested Thursday and charged with shooting his wife and dog. Bail was set at $10,000. Burke works for Orlando station 104.1 FM. (Joe Burbank, Orlando Sentinel)

 

Link to 911 tape and full story

 

 

http://www.orlandosentinel.com/news/local/seminole/orl-bk-radio-personality-jailed-050109,0,6410001.story

Entry #425

Burglar stuck on the roof

The Herald SunA BURGLAR has been rescued by police and fire crews after becoming stuck on the roof of a Sydney factory.March 3, 2009

Police were called to a three-storey factory in Leichhardt, in Sydney's inner-west, about 1.50am (AEST) last night to find the 53-year-old on the roof.

Officers believe the man was trying to break into the factory but wet weather and the steep colourbond roof caused him to get stuck.

Numerous attempts were made to rescue the man, eventually requiring a fire truck with a large ladder and a Polair helicopter to illuminate the rooftop. The man was finally retrieved at 4.50am.

He allegedly had numerous items on him, including a helmet with a light, bolt cutters, tin snips, a small ladder, backpack, tarpaulin, ropes and harnesses.

The man was arrested and taken to Newtown police station where he is being questioned.

Entry #423

Child's report of dad shooting mother turns out to be false

Child's report of dad shooting mother turns out to be false

By BARBARA ARRIGONI - Staff Writer
Posted: 05/02/2009 12:00:00 AM PDT

 

 

HAMILTON CITY -- An 8-year-old Hamilton City boy had Glenn County authorities racing across the county Friday on a report his father had shot his mother and she was on fire.

The call was a prank.

Taking the 1 p.m. 9-1-1 emergency call as a high-priority when it was received by dispatchers, the Glenn County Sheriff's Office, California Highway Patrol and Fish and Game units sped to the Ideal Mobile Home Park in Hamilton City with lights and sirens. An ambulance was on standby.

When deputies arrived, they found a door was open. They were able to get inside, but no one was home.

Sheriff's Sgt. Travis Goodwin said investigators learned who the boy was and that he was supposed to be at school. Deputies located the boy at the SPARK after-school program at Hamilton Elementary School.

The boy eventually confessed to making the whole thing up, Goodwin said.

Sheriff Larry Jones said the boy had apparently gotten a new cell phone from his parents that hadn't been activated and concocted the prank. Emergency 9-1-1 calls can still go through, even if a phone isn't activated yet, he said.

Detectives did ask the child why he made up such a story.

"He didn't really say why," Goodwin said.

The boy was cited for making a false police report and misuse of the 9-1-1 system, both misdemeanors. Authorities opted not to take him to the juvenile hall, Goodwin said.

Both the father and mother of the child were located and found to be OK. The cell phone was taken by investigators as evidence.

Entry #422

Artist creates invisible car

Artist creates invisible car

Art student Sara Watson has found the ultimate way of avoiding traffic wardens – by making her car invisible.

 

Last Updated: 3:27PM BST 02 May 2009

Artist creates invisible car
Art student Sara Watson is studying drawing and image making Photo: PA

The 22-year-old student at the University of Central Lancashire spray painted a battered Skoda Fabia to match the car park and entrance to her art studio.

Her work, created as part of her drawing and image making course at the university, creates the illusion that the car is see through.

She was given the car from a breakers yard and worked for three weeks to ensure that it blended perfectly with its surroundings.

"I was experimenting with the whole concept of illusion but needed something a bit more physical to make a real impact." said Miss Watson, who is from Ashton under Lyne.

"People have been stopping in the street to look and coming up and almost bumping into it, so it's had the desired effect."

The car is reminiscent of the work by pavement artist Julian Beever, whose attempts to trick people's minds into seeing perspective on the flat surfaces of paving stones.

Steve Jackson, owner of Recycling Lives, the firm that gave Miss Watson the car, said: "When I first saw the photos I was convinced it was something which had been done on the computer, but when you look more closely you see the effort and attention to detail she has put into it. It is just amazing.

Entry #420

Swine flu may be less potent than first feared

Swine flu deaths ebb, but could come back strong

By ALEXANDRA OLSON, Associated Press Writers Alexandra Olson, Associated Press Writers
May 2, 2009
2:00 pm EST

MEXICO CITY – Mexico reported no new deaths from swine flu overnight — more reason to be optimistic that the worst is over at the epicenter of the outbreak. But the virus keeps spreading around the world, with new cases confirmed in Europe and Asia, and governments banning flights and preparing quarantines.

The World Health Organization said it has sent 2.4 million treatments of anti-flu drug Tamiflu to 72 developing countries, taking the drugs from a stockpile donated by Roche Holding AG.

"At this point it's important that all countries have access to antivirals," said Dr. Mike Ryan, WHO's global alert and response director.

The WHO has decided not to raise its alert to a full pandemic, since the virus has yet to cause sustained transmission outside North America. But Ryan warned against complacency.

"These viruses mutate, these viruses changes, these viruses can further reassort with other genetic material, with other viruses. So it would be imprudent at this point to take too much reassurance" from signs the virus is weaker than feared.

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention also said it's too early to declare victory.

"We have seen times where things appear to be getting better and then get worse again," said Dr. Anne Schuchat, the U.S. agency's interim science and public health deputy director. "I think in Mexico we may be holding our breath for sometime

China worked aggressively to track down people who may have been near a sick Mexican tourist, sealing 305 people inside a Hong Kong hotel where he stayed and hospitalizing 15 fellow passengers. The man developed a fever after arriving in the Chinese territory and was isolated in stable condition Saturday.

South Korea reported Asia's second confirmed case — a woman just back from Mexico — and other governments also prepared to quarantine passengers, eager to show how they have learned from the deadly SARS epidemic in 2003, when Hong Kong was criticized for imposing quarantines too slowly.

The U.S. is taking "all necessary precautions" now to be prepared if the swine flu develops into "something worse" President Barack Obama said Saturday.

"This is a new strain of the flu virus, and because we haven't developed an immunity to it, it has more potential to cause us harm," Obama said. "Unlike the various strains of animal flu that have emerged in the past, it's a flu that is spreading from human to human. This creates the potential for a pandemic, which is why we are acting quickly and aggressively."

The global caseload was 717 and growing — the vast majority in Mexico, the U.S. and Canada. Swine flu cases also were confirmed in 13 other countries — in Europe, the Middle East, Asia and the Pacific — and experts believe the actual spread is much wider than the numbers suggest.

Mexico has taken extraordinary measures to combat the epidemic, ordering all nonessential government and private businesses to shut down for five days, at a tremendous cost to its economy. In the wide valley where traffic and crowds can be stifling even on a Saturday, Mexico City streets were strangely quiet, its usually crowded markets shuttered and even parks locked down.

"I'm going crazy in my house with this confinement," retiree Rocio Lara said in Mexico City. "There is nowhere to go, nowhere to spend your time."

Mexico City's mayor Marcelo Ebrard said they had expected exponential growth in the number of persons complaining of swine flu symptoms, and that the outbreak seems to be slowing instead.

It should soon become clear whether the epidemic is really stabilizing in Mexico, but many questions remain about how the disease kills, said the leader of an international team of flu-fighters now operating in the capital.

"That is the big question: Is it stabilizing or not? And it is too early to say, but I think we are getting systems in place where we are going to be able to get a handle on this soon," said Dr. Steve Waterman of the CDC.

Waterman also warned against taking false comfort from the fact that only one person has died outside Mexico, saying more deaths are likely as the epidemic evolves.

The U.S. government said schools with confirmed cases should close for at least 14 days because children can be contagious for seven to 10 days from when they get sick. More than 430 U.S. schools had closed, affecting about 245,000 children in 18 states.

With the disease on its doorstep, mainland China suspended all direct flights from Mexico, and sealed off the Metropark Hotel, where the 25-year-old Mexican stayed before he became Asia's first confirmed case late Friday. Health workers in white bodysuits patrolled the lobby, and mask-wearing police enforced a seven-day quarantine. One guest, Olivier Dolige of Paris, said they were taking Tamiflu as a precaution — and trying to make the best of it.

Speaking with The Associated Press using his computer's video-conferencing program, Dolige said he will turn 43 on Tuesday in quarantine. "I think about having my birthday with water and bad cake," he wrote. "No champagne."

Scientists trying to determine the mortality rate said this virus does not appear to match the ferocity of past killers.

"Most people think it is unlikely this is going to be as virulent as the 1918 epidemic. From what we know so far, it doesn't seem like it is as virulent," Waterman said.

"The virus has been circulating for over a month in a city of 20 million of high population density. It could have been much worse," agreed CDC epidemiologist Marc-Alain Widdowson.

The two CDC doctors spoke during a tour of Mexico's Intelligence Unit for Health Emergencies, where teams of doctors and scientists monitor the outbreak in real time and plasma screens enable frequent video conference calls with leaders from the Atlanta-based CDC, the World Health Organization and other institutions.

Health Secretary Jose Angel Cordova cited other indications that the disease is not very contagious: Mexican investigators who visited 280 relatives of victims found only 4 had contracted the disease, and that the number of people hospitalized with suspected cases is declining. But he stressed that it's too early for the government to declare the epidemic is subsiding.

Getting fast and effective care is important, said Hugo Lopez-Gatell Ramirez, deputy director general of epidemiology at the center. Among the 16 confirmed swine flu deaths in Mexico, the average time victims waited before going to a doctor was seven days. For those who were sickened but recovered, the average wait was three days.

Lopez-Gatell said that even before the swine flu outbreak, Mexican authorities had been monitoring a higher-than-usual number of flu cases and an unusual phenomenon in which otherwise healthy young adults were falling ill with pneumonia in greater numbers. There had been 15 flu outbreaks in this year's flu season, as opposed to the 5 or 6 that Mexico normally sees.

He said that put Mexico on guard and led to a fast reaction when unexplained illnesses began in March. Despite some international criticism of the Mexican response, Lopez-Gatell said no mistakes were made.

"We would have done everything the same if we had it to do over again," he said.

Link:

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20090502/ap_on_he_me/med_swine_flu

Entry #419

Swine Scare Making Churches Rethink Mass Rituals

May 1, 2009 5:25 pm US/Eastern

Swine Scare Making Churches Rethink Mass Rituals

Conn. Diocese Recommends Against Touching Hands During Sign Of Peace, Taking Communion On Tongue

Archbishop Dolan: N.Y. Not Going To That Extreme ... Yet

Reporting
John Slattery

NEW YORK (CBS)

 

 

Concern over swine flu spreading is touching even the way church services are conducted.

Sanitizing hands during mass, eliminating the less sanitary way to receive the Holy Eucharist and respect for a more distant sign of peace are all under discussion because of recent flu scare.

"Anything we can do, practically, to keep this from spreading, we want to do," Archbishop Timothy Dolan told CBS 2 HD.

Dolan is not issuing a list of don'ts. But in the diocese of Bridgeport, Conn., there are strong recommendations for those who attend mass. Don't touch hands during the sign of peace. Receive communion in the hands, not on the tongue. And pastors can decide whether to suspend the sharing of wine from a common chalice.

But in the New York Archdiocese, and in Newark, the cautions are less severe. There's no recommendation against shaking hands.

"If some people don't want to shake hands during mass, we ask people to be sensitive to that, to respect other people's feelings," said Bishop Edgar da Cunha of the Archdiocese of Newark.

Archbishop Dolan urges the same respect if people are standoffish, and said precautions should be taken by those who are serving the faithful.

"Let's make sure our Eucharistic ministers are careful about sanitizing hands. Let's maybe not take communion from the cup," Dolan said.

And if the flu were to become an epidemic, masses could even be suspended altogether.

"I don't think that's likely, but could there be? Yes. I now the bishops in Mexico City did that," Dolan said.

Most bishops are in full agreement over this: If you've been recently ill, or don't feel well, skip mass altogether. God will understand.

Areas closer to Mexico, in the Archdiocese of San Antonio and in Dallas, churches are being advised to use only bread, not wine, for Holy Communion.
Entry #418

Two pot dealers arrested after tailgating unmarked Police car

Cops: Two arrested after tailgating unmarked Framingham Police car

By Norman Miller/Daily News staff
The MetroWest Daily News
Posted Apr 30, 2009 @ 11:41 PM FRAMINGHAM —

Two suspected pot dealers were arrested after police said the pair tailgated an unmarked police car.

Jonathan Gonzalez, 23, of Leominster, and Felicia Deneen, 19, of Framingham, were arrested Wednesday at 10:10 p.m. after police stopped them on River Street, Lt. Paul Shastany said.

Two officers riding in an unmarked car on Union Avenue noticed a car tailgating them. They pulled into a driveway to let the car pass, and then stopped the car on River Street, Shastany said.

The officers asked the driver, Deneen, for her license and registration, when they made a discovery.

"She opened up the glove box, and in plain view were several individually wrapped baggies of marijuana," Shastany said. "There were five individual baggies that were packed for sale, in the officers' opinions."

The officers ordered Deneen and her passenger, Gonzalez, out of the car.

When Gonzalez got out, he reached into his pocket, removed something and dropped it on the ground. The officers said it was cocaine, Shastany aid.

"Gonzalez said, 'The weed is mine, but I didn't drop the coke,"' Shastany said. "They (the officers) said they saw him drop it, but he still denied it."

Deneen told officers the marijuana and the cocaine were both hers, police said.

Police also found a single hydrocodone pill, which is a prescription pain reliever, while searching the car.

Deneen, of 18 Arbetter Drive, and Gonzalez, of 394 Merriam Ave., were charged with possession of marijuana with intent to distribute and possession of cocaine.

Deneen was also charged with possession of hydrocodone and cited for following too closely.

Gonzalez has an open assault and battery case in Middlesex Superior Court stemming from a carjacking incident last September in Framingham. He was indicted on charges related to that case three weeks ago.

Both Gonzalez and Deneen pleaded not guilty at their Framingham District Court arraignments yesterday.

Gonzalez was ordered held on $1,000 bail, while Deneen was released without bail. Both are due back in court on June 26 for a pretrial conference.

Entry #417