Updated June 29
Father of man killed on Vinalhaven files suit to gain access to police records
Lester Feltis wants the Maine Attorney General s Office to turn over investigative files related to his son s death in June 2020.
By Stephen BettsThe Courier-Gazette
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The father of a man who died of a stab wound on Vinalhaven a year ago has filed a lawsuit asking the court to order the Maine Attorney General’s office to turn over investigative files related to his son’s death.
The lawsuit filed on behalf of Lester Feltis also claims that the AG’s office wants a confidentiality agreement because it knows there was misconduct by law enforcement and does not want that information to become public.
24-year-old Nicholas Benjamin Lynch of Tomes Road in Lincolnton was sentenced to more than 20 years in prison after he plead guilty in Lincoln County Superior C
Judge rules in favor of Medical Lake Cemetery in appeal against Spokane Gun Club
The gun club originally was granted a permit to construct a shooting range across from the almost 150-year-old cemetery. Author: Whitney Ward Updated: 8:47 AM PST February 5, 2021
MEDICAL LAKE, Wash. A Lincoln County Superior Court judge has ruled in support of the Medical Lake Cemetery s appeal of the construction of a Spokane Gun Club shooting range across from the cemetery.
Last summer, KREM 2 spoke with both sides about the gun club s plan to build a gun range across the street from the Medical Lake Cemetery, which has sat at the location for almost 150 years.
JOSEPH CHARPENTIER
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Boothbay Harbor business owner Tom Myette and neighbor Chandler Wright are appealing a code enforcement decision on abutter Dennis Hilton and his business Harbor Crossing at 14 Todd Ave. Myette and Wright have filed a complaint in Lincoln County Superior Court. On Nov. 19, the town board of appeals denied Myette’s and Wright’s Oct. 22 appeal over Code Enforcement Officer Geoff Smith’s decision to lift a stop work order on Hilton’s construction.
Myette’s and Wright’s attorney Kristin Collins of PretiFlaherty filed the complaint Dec. 9 calling for the court to decide if the stop work order’s lifting was, as the complaint contends, a “de facto new building permit” which would send the project back to the planning board for site plan review.