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Teen's Murder Unsolved After 26 Years | Patch PM
Also: Ex-police captain arrested in OT fraud investigation | A lizard's wanderlust brings it to Massachusetts | More.
MASSACHUSETTS — It's Tuesday, March 30. Here's what you should know this afternoon:
- A police captain accused of bilking taxpayers out of more than $12,000 by skipping out early.
- Another plea to not let up on the fight against the coronavirus.
- Something doesn't compute about how a company thinks workers will respond to its robot.
Scroll down for more on those and other stories Patch has been covering in Massachusetts today.
Today's Top Story
It's been 26 years since 17-year-old Deanna Cremin's body was found behind a Jaques Street housing complex, an unsolved murder that still haunts the city of Somerville.
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Deanna was studying at her boyfriend's house the night of March 29, 1995. At around 11 p.m., her boyfriend walked her part of the way home and turned back, he later told her mother.
She never returned home.
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The next day, two children found her body on their way to school. She had just turned 17.
Other top stories
This ain't over yet: Not by a long shot. Gov. Charlie Baker urged people not to confuse progress with victory, asking virus-weary residents to keep guard against a "false sense of security." Baker was speaking Tuesday alongside CDC Director Rochelle Walensky, who only one day before warned of "impending doom" due to rising coronavirus cases across the country. One of those places seeing an increase in cases is Massachusetts, but said Tuesday she wouldn't comment on the restrictions in individual states. She did say she was pleased to see so many in Massachusetts wearing a mask. Walensky also clarified Monday's comments to say the "impending doom" is preventable.
Captain arrested in alleged OT fraud scheme: A retired Boston police captain was arrested Tuesday as part of a federal investigation into an overtime fraud scheme at the department's warehouse. Richard Evans, 62, of Hanover, is accused as being part of a group of officers who skipped out hours early on overtime shifts for the Evidence Control Unit he oversaw. Officers can make 1.5 times their pay in overtime working the unit. The Massachusetts U.S. Attorney's office said that between March 2015 and February 2019, Evans was paid $12,395 in overtime hours he didn't work, while he endorsed dozens of fraudulent overtime slips for other officers.
Good for workers? That might be a stretch: Boston Dynamics, the Waltham-based company known for its robot dog Spot, released a video of Stretch, its latest robot prototype. This robot is designed to automate repetitive box-moving in warehouses and distribution centers. Stretch can unload trucks and build pallets of boxes, according to the company. The company said Stretch makes "makes warehouse operations more efficient and safer for workers." We wonder what the workers feel about the new guy.
We hope he used Geico: A traveler from Florida brought home an unlikely souvenir —a lizard that hid in the car during the whole trip up to Massachusetts. Once the driver spotted the lizard, they brought it to the Animal Rescue League of Boston's Brewster location. The ARL said the lizard was a Brown Anole lizard and not native to Massachusetts. The little lizard's travels weren't quite over yet.
They're right there!: Ever see an endangered right whale? If you were motoring around off the Cape earlier this month you probably did. There were 89 sightings of the creature on March 21, the most spotted in a single day this season. Federal officials have urged boaters to slow down to avoid injuring the endangered fellas.
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