Traffic light, plaque will memorialize young Worcester woman killed by distracted driver
WORCESTER A traffic light and plaque memorializing a young woman who was struck and killed by a distracted driver in 2018 will be dedicated on Wednesday.
Gabriella “Gabby” Victoria Lowell was 20-years-old when she was struck and killed in a crosswalk on Grafton Street near Roosevelt Elementary School in June 2018.
City Officials at 4:15 p.m. Wednesday will dedicate the memorial in a ceremony, highlighting the installation of a traffic light and plaque in Lowell’s memory at 1006 Grafton St.
Mayor Joseph M. Petty, City Manager Edward M. Augustus, Jr., District 2 City Councilor George Russell and Worcester District Attorney Joseph D. Early Jr. will be joined by Lowell s mother Alyson Lowell at the ceremony.
Louis Hanley of Shrewsbury arraigned in hit-and-run of elderly woman
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Louis Hanley of Shrewsbury arraigned in hit-and-run of elderly woman
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WORCESTER Momoh Kamara, the West Boylston man accused of setting the 2018 fire in which Worcester firefighter Christopher Roy died, was denied an attempt Thursday to probe a contention that heat damage to a jacket seized from his home occurred at a laundromat.
Kamara is charged with second-degree murder, arson and armed burglary.
After a hearing in which he heard from the laundromat owners, Worcester Superior Court Judge James Gavin Reardon Jr. determined there was no basis to order the business to turn over records.
Kamara’s lawyer, Blake J. Rubin, told Reardon Thursday his client contends the jacket was damaged at a city laundromat and that a credit was issued as a result.
More than 4,700 OUI defendants in Worcester County may be eligible for a new trial because of breath test evidence issues
Updated Feb 10, 2021;
Worcester County defendants charged with operating under the influence of alcohol based on breath tests conducted over the last decade may be entitled to new trials, Worcester District Attorney Joseph D. Early Jr. said on Wednesday.
More than 4,700 Worcester County defendants will receive letters in the mail alerting them about the possibility of having their cases re-examined because of “problems with Breathalyzer evidence,” Early said.
Breath tests between 2011 and 2018 used in criminal trials were declared to be inadmissible evidence in a Northwestern district attorney decision announced on Monday. The letters from the trial court were sent to OUI defendants in Worcester County this week, officials said.