The Boston Globe - 13.08.2019

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B4 Metro The Boston Globe TUESDAY, AUGUST 13, 2019


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Today is Tuesday, Aug. 13,
the 225th day of 2019. There
are 140 days left in the year.
Birthdays: Former surgeon
general Joycelyn Elders is 86.
Actor Kevin Tighe is 75. Former
Federal Reserve chair Janet Yel-
len is 73. Opera singer Kathleen
Battle is 71. High-wire aerialist
Philippe Petit is 70. Hockey
Hall of Famer Bobby Clarke is



  1. Golf Hall of Famer Betsy
    King is 64. Movie director Paul
    Greengrass is 64. Actor Danny
    Bonaduce is 60. Actor John
    Slattery is 57. Actress Debi
    Mazar is 55. Actress Quinn
    Cummings is 52. Former White
    House press secretary Sarah
    Huckabee Sanders is 37. Actor
    Eme Ikwuakor is 35. Pop-rock
    singer James Morrison is 35.
    ºIn 1846, the American flag
    was raised in Los Angeles for
    the first time.
    ºIn 1889, William Gray of
    Hartford received a patent for a
    coin-operated telephone.
    ºIn 1910, Florence Nightin-
    gale, the founder of modern
    nursing, died in London at age


  2. ºIn 1960, the first two-way
    telephone conversation by sat-
    ellite took place with the help of
    Echo 1.
    ºIn 1961, East Germany
    sealed off the border between
    Berlin’s eastern and western
    sectors before building a wall
    that would divide the city for
    the next 28 years.
    ºIn 1967, the crime caper
    biopic ‘‘Bonnie and Clyde,’’ star-
    ring Warren Beatty and Faye
    Dunaway, had its US premiere;
    the movie, directed by Arthur
    Penn, was considered shocking
    as well as innovative for its
    graphic portrayal of violence.
    ºIn 1995, baseball Hall of
    Famer Mickey Mantle died at a
    Dallas hospital of rapidly
    spreading liver cancer; he was




  3. ºIn 2003, Libya agreed to
    set up a $2.7 billion fund for
    families of the 270 people killed
    in the 1988 Pan Am bombing.
    ºIn 2008, a man barged into
    the Arkansas Democratic head-
    quarters in Little Rock and
    opened fire, killing state party
    chairman Bill Gwatney before
    speeding off in a pickup. (Police
    later shot and killed the gun-
    man, Timothy Dale Johnson.)
    Michael Phelps swam into his-
    tory as the winningest Olympic
    athlete ever with his 10th and
    11th career gold medals.
    ºIn 2014,Brazilian presi-
    dential candidate Eduardo
    Campos died when the small
    plane carrying him and several
    campaign officials plunged into
    a residential neighborhood in
    the port city of Santos.
    ºIn 2017, in a statement,
    the White House said President
    Trump ‘‘very strongly’’ con-
    demned individual hate groups
    such as ‘‘white supremacists,
    KKK and neo-Nazis;’’ the state-
    ment followed criticism of
    Trump for blaming the previ-
    ous day’s deadly violence at a
    white supremacist rally in
    Charlottesville, Va., on ‘‘many
    sides.’’
    ºLast year, a lawyer for
    longtime FBI agent Peter
    Strzok, who’d been removed
    from the Russia investigation
    over anti-Trump text messages,
    said Strzok had been fired by
    the agency.




This day in


history


ed throughout the tight-knit
community of catamaran sail-
ors, who remembered her as a
strong yet kind-hearted com-
petitor whose passion for the
sport was obvious. She was

uTARTAGLINO
Continued from Page B

known for giving out home-
made brownies to her fellow
sailors at the conclusion of a
race.
“She was a fierce competitor
on the water and one of the nic-
est people on the shores,” said
Jeff Dusek, a former represen-

tative for the USF18 Eastern
Area, who crewed for Tartagli-
no a few years ago. “She was
well-known and well-loved by a
much broader sailing commu-
nity.”
Tartaglino, who lived in
Tiverton, R.I., served as the

longtime class treasurer of the
US Formula 18 Association, ac-
cording to the group’s Facebook
page, an organization dedicat-
ed to the sailing and promotion
of F18s.
“Sandra was an amazing
woman, tough competitor, and
dear friend we all learned so
much from her on and off the
water,” the post said. “While she
passed away doing what she
loved, she was taken far too
soon and will be truly missed.”
Women sailors, in particu-
lar, looked up to Tartaglino as a
role model. Caroline Atwood, a
Tufts University graduate and
world-class sailor on the US
Sailing Team, met Tartaglino in
2017 at a regatta in Newport.
What impressed her about Tart-
aglino, besides her skill as a
sailor, was her refusal to “shy
away from [her] femininity” in
the male-dominated sport.
“I think it’s really easy as a
woman at the top level of a
sport to be so consumed with
proving that you’re just as good
as the guys to adopt this kind of
stone-cold attitude and that
wasn’t Sandra at all,” Atwood
said. “She was unflinchingly
nurturing, kind, and welcom-
ing to everyone that came into
the fleet.”
Tartaglino’s death has also
served as a reminder of the seri-
ous dangers inherent in their
sport. Catamaran sailing is
both physically and mentally
challenging, and sailors are vul-

nerable to elements beyond
their control, such as the
weather, the waves, and in-
creasingly, other boaters.
“I can’t stop crying thinking
of what happened to her,” said
Lise Duchesne, a F18 skipper
from Quebec City. “Every time
we are on water, crossing motor
boats, we are [unaware] of if
they know the rules. Are they
drunk? Did they see us? Why
[did] they come so close to us? I
sail putting this fear aside, tell-
ing myself that I have never
seen or heard of such an acci-
dent. But now, it happened to
one of the rare women practic-
ing this sport. I’m in shock.”

Deanna Pan can be reached at
[email protected].
Follow her on Twitter @DDpan.

Competitive sailing world mourns loss of a pioneer


ment Saturday night, prompt-
ing her to leave the house, Suf-
folk Assistant District Attorney
Ian Polumbaum said in court.
She returned with police early
Sunday morning.
She was “not reporting any
crime against her at that time,
but asking that the police get
him to leave the house, which
he did,” Polumbaum said.
When Chaves returned to
the Clarence Street home, he
and his wife went into the bed-
room and argued behind a
locked door. When Chaves
emerged, he was covered in
blood, Polumbaum said.
“His claim was the last thing
he remembered was the victim
yelling at him or arguing with
him,” Polumbaum said. “Next
thing he knew, she was in that
state of being seriously wound-
ed and he had no memory or no
idea of how she got that way.”
Whether police officers
should have arrested Chaves
initially depends heavily on the
specifics of the case, which
were not available Monday,
said Maureen Flores, civilian
domestic violence advocacy
program manager for Quincy-
based DOVE Inc., or Domestic

uSTABBING
Continued from Page B

Violence Ended.
“This is a common call from
the police, that the victim just
wants things to calm down and
just get their needs met in that
way,” Flores said. “If she said
nothing about anything physi-
cal happening — if he didn’t as-
sault her or threaten to assault
her when she called in the
morning, the police are kind of
limited.”
Under Massachusetts law,
officers are encouraged — but
not required — to make an ar-
rest when there is evidence of
physical abuse or threats of vio-
lence, Flores said.
“A lot of victims say that ‘I
don’t want them arrested, I
don’t want to move forward
with charges.’ But police still ar-
rest,” Flores said. “We have no
idea where that person is going
to be the next hour, the next
day.”
Toni K. Troop, a spokes-
woman for Jane Doe Inc., said
police officers and victim advo-
cates use questionnaires to as-
sess the risk of violence. Has
the abuser threatened to kill
you? Does he or she have access
to firearms? Have you been
strangled or forced to have sex?
Has the violence escalated?
Those all require people be-

ing abused to participate,
which they are sometimes re-
luctant to do, she said.
“This is why it’s so challeng-
ing,” Troop said. “We never
blame the victim for any vio-
lence that might be perpetrated
against them because we un-
derstand the real barriers that
might be in place for them to
speak out and seek services.
The threat of violence can
sometimes intimidate victims.”
Chaves’s mother, Maria Isa-

bel de Brito, was staying with
the family over the weekend,
she said in a brief interview on
Sunday.
“He used to be a good son,”
she said, speaking through a
translator.
The couple’s landlord, Au-
gusto Pina, said they had lived
in the apartment for several
years, and Chaves never
seemed to be a problem until
about two or three months ago,
when he began playing loud

music and using “bad words”
while sitting on the apartment
building’s steps.
“He’s changed like day and
night,” Pina said.
Clarence Street is part of the
Cape Verdean community’s
hub in Roxbury. Dulce Ferreira,
director of domestic violence
and sexual assault services for
the Massachusetts Alliance of
Portuguese Speakers, called on
community members to speak
more openly about the issue.
“We know that domestic vio-
lence remains a delicate subject
in the Cabo Verdean communi-
ty and others, and even though
many are comfortable enough
to reach out for support, many
more do not act in fear of retali-
ation or of being negatively
judged by the community,” Fer-
reira said. “This tragic event
highlights the enormous
amount of work that is still
needed to prevent domestic vi-
olence in our communities, and
we encourage everyone facing
domestic violence to seek help.”

Globe correspondent John
Hilliard contributed to this
report. Gal Tziperman Lotan
can be reached at
[email protected] or at 617-
929-2043.

Roxbury man pleads not guilty in killing of wife


NIC ANTAYA FOR THE BOSTON GLOBE
THE FRUITS OF LABOR —Briley Dolan, 10, and Amory O’Connor, 8, were pulled by Jackson Dolan, 11, while picking blueberries at Wards Berry
Farm in Sharon on Monday. The farm also features pick-your-own raspberries, cherry tomatoes, and flowers, and dig-your-own potatoes.

‘Sandrawasan


amazingwoman,


toughcompetitor,


anddearfriendwe


alllearnedso


muchfromheron


andoffthewater


... shewastaken


fartoosoon.’


FACEBOOK POST FROM US
FORMULA 18 ASSOCIATION

PAT GREENHOUSE/GLOBE STAFF
Defense attorney Earl Howard (left), said Valdir Chaves
was “not too sure of what’s going on here.”

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