The Boston Globe - 11.03.2020

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WEDNESDAY, MARCH 11, 2020 The Boston Globe Metro B


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Today is Wednesday, March
11, the 71st day of 2020. There
are 295 days left in the year.
Birthdays: Media mogul Ru-
pert Murdoch is 89. Former
ABC News correspondent Sam
Donaldson is 86. Musician Fla-
co Jimenez is 81. Singer Bobby
McFerrin is 70. Movie director
Jerry Zucker is 70. Singer Nina
Hagen is 65. Director Peter
Berg is 58. Singer-songwriter
Mary Gauthier is 58. Actress Al-
ex Kingston is 57. Singer Lisa
Loeb is 52. Neo-soul keyboard-
ist Al Gamble for St. Paul the
Broken Bones is 51. Singer Pete
Droge is 51. Actor Terrence
Howard is 51. Actor Johnny
Knoxville is 49.
ºIn 1888, the Blizzard of
‘88, also known as the ‘‘Great


White Hurricane,’’ began inun-
dating the Northeast, resulting
in some 400 deaths.
ºIn 1918, what are believed
to be the first confirmed US cas-
es of a deadly global flu pan-
demic were reported among US
Army soldiers stationed at Fort
Riley, Kans; 46 would die. (The
worldwide outbreak of influen-
za claimed an estimated 20 to
40 million lives.)
ºIn 1941, President Frank-
lin Roosevelt signed the Lend-
Lease Bill, providing war sup-
plies to countries fighting the
Axis.
ºIn 1942, as Japanese forc-
es continued to advance in the
Pacific during World War II, US
Army General Douglas MacAr-
thur left the Philippines for

Australia, where he vowed on
March 20, ‘‘I shall return’’ — a
promise he kept more than 2½
years later.
ºIn 1954, the Army charged
that Senator Joseph R. McCa-
rthy, Republican of Wisconsin,
and his subcommittee’s chief
counsel, Roy Cohn, had exerted
pressure to obtain favored
treatment for Private G. David
Schine, a former consultant to
the subcommittee. (The con-
frontation culminated in the fa-
mous Senate Army-McCarthy
hearings.)
ºIn 1985, Mikhail S. Gor-
bachev was chosen to succeed
the late Konstantin U. Chernen-
ko as general secretary of the
Soviet Communist Party.
ºIn 2003, Recep Tayyip Er-

dogan, the leader of Turkey’s
governing party, was named
prime minister.
ºIn 2004, ten bombs ex-
ploded in quick succession
across the commuter rail net-
work in Madrid, killing 191
people in an attack linked to Al
Qaeda-inspired militants.
ºIn 2011, a magnitude-9.
earthquake and resulting tsu-
nami struck Japan’s northeast-
ern coast, killing nearly 20,
people and severely damaging
the Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear
power station.
ºLast year, airlines in Ethio-
pia, China, Indonesia and else-
where grounded the Boeing
737 Max 8 jetliner after the sec-
ond devastating crash of one of
the planes in five months.

This day in history


By Travis Andersen
GLOBE STAFF
A Florida appellate court
will hear oral arguments on
May 21 in the appeal of an evi-
dence ruling in New England
Patriots owner Robert Kraft’s
misdemeanor prostitution
case, legal filings show.
The Fourth District Court of
Appeal said in a brief order
Tuesday that it will hear argu-
ments at 10 a.m. in the West
Palm Beach courthouse. State
Attorney General Ashley
Moody’s office is appealing a
lower court ruling that tossed


out video surveillance footage
that reportedly captured Kraft
paying for sex acts at a spa in
Jupiter, Fla.
Kraft, 78, is charged with
two misdemeanor counts of so-
liciting prostitution on consec-
utive days at the Orchids of
Asia Day Spa in January 2019,
shortly before the Patriots cap-
tured yet another AFC title en
route to their sixth Super Bowl
victory.
The billionaire owner has
pleaded not guilty and denied
engaging in criminal activity.
Kraft’s high-powered legal
team said last year in court pa-
pers that “everyone loses” if the
appeals court accepts prosecu-
tors’ “perverse view of the law”

andreversestherulingthat
threw out the video footage.
“Government could run
roughshod over privacy and
constitutional rights while
evading scrutiny and check” if
prosecutors win the appeal,
Kraft’s lawyers wrote in an Oc-
tober filing. “That outcome
would be directly counter to
the Constitution, civil liberties,
and the rule of law.”
But in an earlier filing,
Moody’s office maintained that
Kraft’s guilt is “a virtual cer-
tainty.”
According to Moody’s office,
the search warrant to install
hidden cameras in the spa met
federal legal thresholds “which
together require only that the

warrant be issued by a neutral
and detached magistrate, be
predicated on a showing of
probable cause, and be particu-
larized as to the place to be
searched and items to be
seized.”
Moody’s office said that of
the 39 recordings of customers
at the spa, only four failed to
capture any criminal conduct.
None “of those four individuals
were recorded naked," prosecu-
tors wrote. Two were men and
two were women.

Travis Andersen
can be reached at
[email protected].
Follow him on Twitter
@TAGlobe.

By Travis Andersen
GLOBE STAFF
Violent crime on the MBTA
increased slightly in 2019,
compared to the previous year,
but the transit system contin-
ued to see the “lowest crime
rate in history for four consecu-
tive years,” Transit Police Su-
perintendent Richard Sullivan
said Tuesday.
Sullivan released figures
showing there were 779 homi-
cides, rapes, aggravated as-
saults, larcenies and other so-
called part-one crimes on the T
last year, compared to 770 in



  1. The four-year average for
    2016 through 2019 stands at
    782, compared to 998 for the
    previous five years, he said in a
    phone interview.
    Also on the list of part-one
    crimes are assault to rape, rob-
    bery, burglary, auto theft and
    arson, he said.


Sullivan said the numbers
show that since he and Transit
Police Chief Kenneth Green in-
stituted a new patrol plan in
2016, those crimes “had a pre-
cipitous drop, and we’ve main-
tained that for the last four
years.” Riders take more than
1.1 million trips on the T every
weekday.
Violent crimes that saw in-
creases last year, compared to
2018, included homicides,
which went from zero to three;
rape and assault to rape, which
went from zero incidents to
one; robbery, which went from
90 to 99; aggravated assault,
which increased from 150 to
157; and larceny, which went
from 497 to 498. Burglary, auto
theft, and arson all decreased.
The 2019 homicides includ-
ed the May death of a Boston
College senior who jumped
from a Roxbury parking garage

near Ruggles Station after a
lengthy campaign of alleged
abuse from his girlfriend, who
now faces a charge of involun-
tary manslaughter.
The other homicide victims
were two young children who
died in falls from the same ga-
rage during a murder-suicide
on Christmas Day that also
claimed the life of their mother.
Sullivan described those
cases as “very alarming homi-

cides”thatoriginatedonprop-
erty not owned by the T. “I am
by no means minimizing”
those crimes, he said.
He also stressed the strategy
that took effect in 2016 has
paid dividends.
The “principal reason crime
is low is because of the men
and women of the Transit Po-
lice who day in and day out po-
lice a vast underground city un-
to itself,” Sullivan said.” They
do so with dedication and com-
mitment.”
He added, “With the
amount of people who use the
T, we think those [part-one
crime] numbers are very laud-
able.”

Laura Crimaldi of the Globe
staff contributed to this report.
Travis Andersen can be
reached at travis.andersen
@globe.com.

Arguments in Kraft case slated for May 21


Atissueisruling


ontapedevidence


MBTA police laud falling crime rate


‘Withtheamount


ofpeoplewhouse


theT,wethink


those[part-one


crime]numbers


areverylaudable.’


RICHARD SULLIVAN,
Transit Police Superintendent

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