Judge In G Herbo Fraud Case Allows Him to Speak With Team & Half Brother
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Update 04/03/2021 2:11pm:
Previously, G Herbo was named in a $1.5 million federal fraud case, where the rapper and members of his team were accused of using stolen IDs to purchase luxury items like private jets, exotic rental cars, and more. G Herbo noted he was innocent but surrendered himself. The rapper was released conditionally, with one of the conditions being that he had to adhere to following a “no contact” list of folks he could not communicate with. People on that list included members of his team. Now, it has been revealed that his no-contact list has been amended.
Judge Sides With Tenant In First Test Of MA Pandemic Rent Rules - Boston, MA - Caffé Nero was excused from paying some rent for its Newbury Street location because of the pandemic shutdown.
People on the Move
The longtime owner of
M. L. Schmitt Electric Inc. has transferred his business to two electricians who have worked for him for many years. Thomas Schmitt transferred the electrical-contracting firm that performs residential, commercial, and industrial construction projects to new co-owners
Peter Coppez and
Jean Pierre Crevier. Coppez joined M. L. Schmitt as an apprentice in 2000. He’s a graduate of Springfield Technical Community College, the Local IBEW #7 apprenticeship program, and Wentworth Institute of Technology, where he graduated this spring with a bachelor’s degree in project management. Crevier joined M. L. Schmitt as an apprentice in 2004. He earned his bachelor’s degree in communications from UMass and completed the Local IBEW #7 apprenticeship program. He graduated this spring with a master’s degree in project management from Wentworth Institute of Technology. Schmitt was President of M. L. Schmitt Electric for 31 years.
Photo (cc) 2010 by Thomas Hawk
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A federal appeals court has upheld the right to secretly record police officers in the performance of their public duties, but has declined to act similarly with respect to other government officials because they have a greater expectation of privacy.
The ruling, by the First Circuit Court of Appeals, essentially strikes down the Massachusetts wiretap law, also known as Section 99, as it pertains to police officers. According to an analysis by Michael Lambert, a First Amendment lawyer with the Boston firm of Prince Lobel, “The decision means that Massachusetts journalists and citizens can, openly or secretly, record police discharging their duties in public without fear of criminal charges under the state’s wiretap law.”