|
By Gintautas Dumcius
Reporter Correspondent
Amid an ongoing special grand jury
investigation, four Dorchester men and a Brockton
resident were arraigned this week on murder charges
stemming from the brutal stabbing of a 16-year-old
last year. Police are still searching for a sixth
suspect.
Those charged with murder included Markeese
Mitchell, 16, of Brockton, with the rest from
Dorchester: Admilson Vizcaino, 16; Terrance Pabon,
18; and Paul Goode, 25. Richard Allen, 20, is
charged as an accessory.
Police say a sixth suspect, Pedro Ortiz, 28, of
Dorchester, is on the loose but a bulletin remains
out on him. "He'll turn up," B-3 police commander
Capt. James Claiborne said.
The defendants, who were picked up on Feb. 29,
pleaded not guilty in Dorchester District Court.
District Court Judge Kenneth Desmond ordered that
they be held without bail and ordered them to be
back in court on April 3, according to Jake Wark,
spokesman for Suffolk District Attorney Daniel
Conley's office.
Claiborne said with the new detectives that were
sworn in earlier this year, crime has stabilized.
Detectives have more time to work on cases and are
allowed "better quality of investigation," he
said.
Car thefts and larcenies are down from last
year, according to preliminary figures provided by
police for January through March, but homicides,
particularly in District C-11, robberies and
aggravated assaults remain up. Homicides rose to 7
from 1 last year in the same time period in C-11,
while B-3 saw 2 murders, up from 1, last year.
The May 22 murder of 16-year-old Terrance
Jacobs, who was stabbed to death on Havelock Street
by a group of six to seven teens, was one of 66
homicides last year.
"They're all known to police," said Claiborne of
the suspects.
Prosecutors say the murder may have been the
result of a fight with a group known to the
Havelock and Wilcock streets group.
The incident occurred shortly before 8 p.m.,
with Jacobs sent to Boston Medical Center, where he
died from multiple stab wounds.
According to Conley's office, the grand jury is
continuing to take testimony, including some from
over a dozen witnesses.
Back
to Reporter Home Page
|