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Ransomville native in the mix to be ‘Biggest Loser’

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For Catherine “Cate” Laughlan, coming home from California for the holidays and resisting the urge to eat the Christmas cookies she saw everywhere was one of the biggest challenges of her new life.

“What I would have done in my previous life was just indulge in all of them,” the Ransomville native said. “At first, I wanted to throw myself on my bed and have a temper tantrum because I wanted to eat it so bad.”

The 5-foot, 2-inch blonde, who weighed 247 pounds and had trouble walking, considers every bite more carefully now that she is a contestant on the 14th season of NBC’s “The Biggest Loser” reality show, which premiered last week and has a new episode at 8 o’clock tonight.

A tempting sugar cookie now makes the 28-year-old woman think about how much she has to jog to work off the 120 calories.

So that treat did not make the final cut in her spare Christmas feast of 6 ounces of grilled turkey breast, a cup of roasted broccoli and a baby spinach salad with a teaspoon of olive oil and balsamic vinegar.

“The more you say, ‘No,’ the easier that gets,” she said during an interview as an NBC publicist listened in.

Managing diet and exercise, and tough fitness coaches, are among the obstacles that overweight contestants work to overcome as the show unfolds. Laughlan and 14 other competing cast members, who live at a spalike ranch in California, are divided into three teams led by different trainers and compete for prizes, including a $250,000 grand prize, by seeing who can lose the most weight. As the weeks go by until the finale in March, people get eliminated when pound-loss totals fall behind.

By the first two episodes of when the show premiered last week, Laughlan had lost 17 pounds. When she talked last week before heading back to Los Angeles, she said the experience has been liberating.

“I didn’t know what a 28-year-old body should feel like until I got started with ‘The Biggest Loser,’ ” she said. “I was so overweight, my legs would burn.”

Now she runs four times a week and is getting closer to her goal of being able to work out with her marathon-running brother. “I’ve always dreamed of running with him. I just never could keep up,” she said. “He was the one who encouraged me to get out there on the road and just try, even if I could … only make it from one telephone pole to the next.”

Laughlan, a 2002 graduate of Wilson High School, said she was one of the bigger girls there, wearing a size 16. In the years that followed, her weight grew. Last May, she finished her undergraduate degree in human resource management at Niagara University, but she felt limited and unhealthy. Recently, a doctor told Laughlan that her legs were swelling because her body wasn’t strong enough to pump out the fluids.

“I don’t shop,” she said. “I don’t go to parties and events.”

Last year, after a friend noticed that there were auditions in Detroit, another friend drove her to try out for the show that she had wanted to be a part of for so long. “I could connect with the contestants so much,” she said. “I could feel their pain.”

Once she got to the ranch, she took pleasure in luxuries such as heading to the pool at 5 in the morning when mist was coming off the water, the moon was out, and she could feel the adrenaline kick in as she swam in the cold water.

The show also is famous for more unpleasant realities: intense workouts and trainers who yell when contestants struggle. In the first episode, Laughlan consoled and hugged a man who was berated for falling off the treadmill. “Get him out of my gym now!” shouted trainer Jillian Michaels, who is lean, muscled and well-known for her abrasive approach.

Laughlan’s Niagara Falls trainer, Gail Vizzi, said her style is a mix of toughness, energy and humor. “Never did I yell,” she said.

Still, when Laughlan was home for the holidays, it was obvious to Vizzi that the show has had a powerful effect.

“I had worked with Cate for a few years. Mentally, she wasn’t ready,” Vizzi said. “When all of this happened, she was ready. When that switch goes off and they’ve had enough and they’re ready to do it, there’s nothing that stops them.”

Laughlan’s new competitive spirit reinforced for Vizzi one of the fundamental secrets to life-changing weight loss: It won’t happen until a person sets their mind to it.

Before Laughlan left Saturday to go back to California and her trainer for the show, Dolvett Quince, her abdominal muscles were obviously stronger, and she was doing well with crunches that involved punching at pads as she pulled herself up. “She was very excited to go back and show him,” Vizzi said. “I’m hoping he’s thrilled for her.”

Laughlan says her career ambition is to get a job in the fitness industry to help others lose weight.

“Being a part of ‘The Biggest Loser’ makes me feel like finally I am getting off the sidelines and participating in my life,” she said. “What I want to achieve isn’t so much a number. What I want to achieve is state of mind.

“The state of mind that I want to achieve is a place where I can go to bed at night and be proud of everything I accomplished in my day. ... Before ‘The Biggest Loser,’ I kind of sat back and let the days roll on.

“What ‘The Biggest Loser’ has given me is a path.”



email: mkearns@buffnews.com

Ernest Murdoch, helped restore Lewiston Landing

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Nov. 11, 1939 – Jan. 11, 2013

LEWISTON – Ernest Murdoch, a longtime Village of Lewiston employee whose work to restore Lewiston Landing led to its renaming as “Murdoch’s Landing” when he retired in 1999 as supervisor of the Department of Public Works, died Friday in Mount St. Mary’s Hospital after a long illness. He was 73.

Mr. Murdoch was born in Niagara Falls and was a longtime resident of Lewiston. He served in the Army from 1957 to 1958 and married Janine VandenBosch on May 26, 1960.

Mr. Murdoch was employed by the Village of Lewiston Department of Public Works for 40 years and was also the former owner of Lewiston Trenching Co.

A member of St. Peter Catholic Church in Lewiston, he was a charter member, governor and trustee of Lodge 584, Loyal Order of Moose; a member of Post 1083, American Legion; and the 3F Club, all in Lewiston; and the Association of Retired Superintendents of New York State.

He was an avid hunter and fisherman.

Besides his wife, Mr. Murdoch is survived by a daughter, Theresa M.; a son, Michael; and a sister, Mary Losell.

A Mass of Christian Burial will be offered at 10 a.m. Tuesday in St. Peter Catholic Church, 600 Center St.

Taylor Devices profits soar as sales shift to domestic market

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A surge in Taylor Devices’ more profitable U.S. markets helped the North Tonawanda shock absorber manufacturer increase its second-quarter profits by 86 percent despite a modest drop in its overall sales.

While Taylor Devices’ construction products business, which makes giant shock absorbers to help protect buildings and bridges from damage during earthquakes and high winds, weakened during the quarter, its sales were more lucrative because more of those revenues came from its more profitable markets in the United States, said Douglas P. Taylor, the company’s president.

“The company continues to perform well,” Taylor said Monday. “We believe 2013 should be another good and profitable year.”

Taylor Devices said its profits during the quarter that ended in November soared to $769,361, or 23 cents per share, from $413,741, or 13 cents per share, a year earlier.

The company’s earnings surged even though its revenues slid by 4 percent to $6.5 million from $6.8 million, as a 13 percent decline in sales at its construction products business more than offset an 8 percent increase in Taylor Devices defense and aerospace product sales.

But the profitability of those sales was much better, mainly because 62 percent of those revenues came from Taylor Devices’ U.S. markets, where company executives said market conditions and the level of competition is more favorable than in Asia, which accounted for a little more than a third of its overall revenues. A year ago, Asian markets provided 57 percent of Taylor Devices’ sales, while 36 percent came from the United States.

At the same time, Taylor Devices said its backlog of orders has shrunk by 49 percent over the past year. The company had $13 million in outstanding orders at the end of November, compared with $25.5 million in open orders at the end of November 2011.

“The U.S. construction markets remain stagnant, with most new orders for seismic and wind dampers used in buildings and bridges continuing to be received from Asian countries,” Taylor said.

While the company’s aerospace and defense business has strengthened recently, Taylor warned that it could take a turn for the worse if automatic spending cuts take effect or defense spending is reduced through negotiations to reduce the budget deficit.

email: drobinson@buffnews.com

Outdoor grill fire damages house in Wheafield

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WHEATFIELD – A 54-year-old Klemer Road man took advantage of the warm weather over the weekend to cook outside on his grill, which ended up catching fire and damaged part of his house, Niagara County sheriff’s deputies said.

Steven S. Waschensky told deputies that about 8:30 p.m. Saturday his granddaughter looked outside and saw flames on the outside of his house at 3652 Klemer Road.

Waschensky said he ran outside and found the gas grill at the rear of the house was on fire. Waschensky was able to put out the fire with a fire extinguisher, but the fire damaged the grill and some vinyl siding.

He said he had been using a outdoor grill earlier in the day and had shut it off.

Adams Volunteer Fire Department responded and the fire.

Falls man indicted in shooting of 2-year-old

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NIAGARA FALLS – The man charged with the drive-by shooting of a 2-year-old girl in November appeared in City Court today on unrelated misdemeanor charges, and learned he was indicted late last week by a Niagara County grand jury on the more serious shooting-related charges.

The felony shooting case will be moved to Niagara County Court.

Willie Scott Jr., 32, of LaSalle Avenue, was named as a suspect shortly after the Nov. 27 shooting in front of the Hometown Market on Pierce Avenue. He is accused of opening fire on a vehicle and striking the child in the face. No one else was wounded in the shooting, but a man who was inside the vehicle with the girl was the likely target, police have said.

Scott turned himself into police last Wednesday and is charged with first-degree assault and second-degree criminal use of a firearm. He remains in Niagara County Jail without bail.

Both Scott’s family and the family of the little girl were in court today.

The girl’s mother was inside the Hometown Market when her daughter was shot. The told The Buffalo News today that her daughter was released from Women & Children’s Hospital shortly before Christmas and continues to recover.

Doctors removed a bullet near the toddler’s right cheek, as well as a bullet fragment on the left side of her face, a family spokesman has said.

Scott appeared in City Court today on warrants, which included charges of bail jumping, fifth-degree unlawful possession of marijuana and third-degree aggravated unlicensed operation of a motor vehicle.



email: nfischer@buffnews.com

Drug activity reported in Woodlands trailer park

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TOWN OF LOCKPORT – Niagara County sheriff’s deputies responding to a call of drug activity found three people in a shed in Woodlands Park surrounded by crushed pills and drug paraphernalia just before 9 p.m. Saturday.

Michael J. Smith, 20, of Chestnut Drive, was charged with seventh-degree criminal possession of a controlled substance and unlawful possession of marijuana. A man and a woman also in the shed off Chestnut Drive with Smith, both 20 and both of Lockport, were not charged, deputies said.

Deputies said they smelled marijuana and heard the three talking about “getting away with doing drugs,” according to a sheriff’s report. Once inside the shed, deputies reported, they found a box of crushed prescription narcotic pills and short straws on the floor. They said they also found drug paraphernalia and a marijuana cigarette.

Smith identified the pills as oxymorphone and told patrol that he had an instrument to crush the pills to make them easier to snort, deputies said.

He was held on $500 bail and Town Court date was set for Thursday.

Sex offender admits concealing Internet use

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LOCKPORT – A Level 1 sex offender pleaded guilty in Niagara County Court Monday to a felony count of failing to inform the state of his Internet identifiers, as required by the Sex Offender Registration Act.

Anthony M. Fiorella, 23, whose last registered address was on Goundry Street in North Tonawanda, told County Judge Sara Sheldon Farkas he intends to live with a friend on Schuler Street in the City of Tonawanda.

Assistant District Attorney Cheryl L. Nichols said Fiorella did not report his screen names for his Facebook and Twitter accounts in 2011.

Fiorella said he is about to be released from jail for violating probation on his original sexual misconduct conviction. Farkas said she will send him back to jail for no more than a year when he returns to court March 14.

Two plead guilty in Falls drug case; third man absconds

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LOCKPORT – Two Niagara Falls men accepted plea bargains Monday in a drugs-and-guns case, while the court-appointed lawyer for a third defendant resigned, as his client reportedly left the state.

DeMario D. Crittenden, 33, of 16th Street, pleaded guilty to attempted fifth-degree criminal possession of a controlled substance. Levester J. Rose, 34, of Dudley Avenue, admitted to seventh-degree criminal possession of a controlled substance and is scheduled to plead to another misdemeanor in Niagara Falls City Court.

Niagara County Judge Sara Sheldon Farkas issued bench warrants for Thomas J. Pryor Jr., 20, whose last known address was on Centre Avenue, after police failed to find him Friday and Saturday. He also is wanted on an unrelated gun possession charge.

The three were arrested Dec. 3, 2011, after a traffic stop at 22nd Street and Willow Avenue. Police said they found nearly one-quarter ounce of cocaine and a .38-caliber handgun. Crittenden and Rose were arrested again Jan. 2 in the Falls, as cocaine was again found in their car. The plea deal settles all pending charges, Assistant District Attorney Peter M. Wydysh said.

As Crittenden and Rose were freed on bond to await sentencing – March 22 for Rose, April 5 for Crittenden – Pryor’s attorney, David J. Mansour, was allowed to quit the case. He said Pryor may have headed for the Atlanta area, where he has relatives.

Past offender arraigned on DWI indictment

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LOCKPORT – A Level 2 sex offender, who was rescued from a burning car in 2004 after a fatal DWI crash, was arraigned on a felony driving while intoxicated indictment Monday in Niagara County Court.

Kelly P. Chellino, 43, of Park Avenue, Waterport, pleaded not guilty to felony DWI, first-degree aggravated unlicensed operation, driving without headlights and a lane violation. He was arrested Nov. 30 in the City of Lockport.

Chellino has been on the sex offender registry since being convicted of having sex with a 14-year-old girl in 1997. On April 14, 2004, he and another drunken driver, Jason D. Jakubec of Wilson, had a head-on crash on Ridge Road in Lewiston. Trooper Anthony LaRock won several heroism awards for pulling Chellino and passenger Mary Sears, then 21, from their burning car. However, another passenger, Christina M. Jones, 18, of Lockport, died in the fire.

Jakubec, whose car crossed the center line to cause the wreck, pleaded guilty to criminally negligent homicide and served 2½ years in prison. Chellino was convicted of misdemeanor DWI in that case.

County agency provides $350,000 to aid Riviera expansion

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WHEATFIELD – A $350,000 grant from a Niagara County agency Monday is the first major step toward realizing a $4 million plan to enlarge North Tonawanda’s historic Riviera Theatre.

The grant from Niagara County Brownfield Development Corp. will pay for the demolition of a former auto repair shop behind the Webster Street theater and the cleanup of the lot where it is located.

James Pritchard, technical and facilities director of the Riviera Theatre and Organ Preservation Society, said the eventual plan is to construct a dramatic modern second entrance to the theater off Main Street.

Five years ago, the society bought the former Competition Transmission, 68 Main St. The crumbling building right behind the Riviera contains mold and asbestos, and the ground beneath it is contaminated with oil and gasoline, Pritchard said.

That makes it a brownfield, eligible for help from the county’s brownfield agency, which provides grants and loans with money the county receives from the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency.

“We’ll be able to use that $350,000 to leverage other funding. We’re going to be very aggressive,” said Gary J. Rouleau of J. O’Connell & Associates, the Riviera’s grant-writing firm. “This was the first big step. Some of the funding sources wouldn’t go forward until the site was cleaned up.”

Pritchard said bids will be sought as soon as possible for the demolition and cleanup of the transmission shop site. The building originally was erected in the 1930s as Lampe Motors, a used-car dealership, and before that, there was a gas station at the site, Pritchard said.

The $4 million project, whose costs include demolition and cleanup at the Main Street lot, calls for not only a new entrance, but major improvements inside the Riviera.

Pritchard said the not-for-profit society envisions a small “black box theater” inside the building for performing arts groups whose events wouldn’t come close to filling the Riviera’s 1,200 seats. “It costs us $400 just to turn the heat on. It’s not worth it for us,” Pritchard said.

There are no showers in the dressing rooms, meaning that the theater cannot host any shows whose cast belongs to the Equity union, which requires showers. Those would be added during the planned improvements. The theater also needs better restrooms, a bigger lobby and an elevator to the balcony, Pritchard said.

Rouleau said $203,000 in grants from the state Office of Parks, Recreation and Historic Preservation and the Margaret L. Wendt Foundation have made a new marquee possible; it is to be installed this spring. Also, a recent $300,000 grant from the John R. Oishei Foundation allowed for the purchase of new stage rigging.

Brownfields Development Corp. is governed by a board headed by Legislature Chairman William L. Ross, C-Wheatfield. Its president is county senior planner Amy E. Fisk.

The agency has funded cleanups such as Dussault Foundry in Lockport, the former missile base in Cambria and Youngstown Cold Storage.



email: tprohaska@buffnews.com

Lewiston receives Greenway funds for Academy Park rink

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WHEATFIELD – The current season of the outdoor ice rink in Lewiston’s Academy Park received Niagara River Greenway funding Monday.

The Host Communities Standing Committee, which controls Greenway grants in Niagara County, gave the Town of Lewiston $156,640 for this winter’s operations of the rink.

Town Supervisor Steven L. Reiter said attendance at the free-admission rink already has matched the 7,500 to 8,000 skaters it drew all last season.

The rink opened Dec. 1 and is scheduled to close Feb. 1, although that may be extended, town grant writer Bernie Rotella told the committee. This is the second season for the refrigerated rink, which can operate even if the temperature is above freezing.

“Every night I’ve gone out there, even with the rain, there are people out there skating,” Reiter said. And many are coming from outside Lewiston. “It’s a regional thing, it’s a community-wide thing.”

The town acquired the 38-by-68-foot portable rink from a company called Ice Rinks 2 Go on a four-year, rent-to-own basis.

The host communities panel gave Lewiston $134,000 in October 2011 for the first season of skating. Reiter said the town expects to return for more Greenway money for the next two years.

“In a couple years, we’ll have it paid off, and we won’t even be talking about this,” he said.

Reiter said the town’s revenue from $5 skate rentals and concessions sales has risen 35 percent from last year, although he didn’t have the dollar figures handy.

Improvements to the park as a result of the rink will help with other events held there, such as the Peach Festival and various art shows, the supervisor said.

A warming tent stands near the rink, and rubber sheeting protects the park’s grass. Reiter said some of the flooring this year was acquired in the dispersal sale of equipment from the London Olympics.

The Host Communities Standing Committee was created in the wake of the 2005 relicensing agreement for the Niagara Power Project. It receives $3 million a year from the New York Power Authority to distribute for Greenway projects in Niagara County.

The committee includes representatives from the county, the towns of Lewiston and Niagara, the City of Niagara Falls, the Lewiston-Porter, Niagara Wheatfield and Niagara Falls school districts, and the Power Authority.

Monday’s was the 51st grant the committee has approved since 2008.

The committee learned it will be looking for a new chairman later this year, as Donald Rappold, assistant superintendent at Lew-Port, will be retiring from the school June 30. Superintendent Christopher Roser announced the news to the committee Monday.



email: tprohaska@buffnews.com

Opinions aired at Monday hearings will be part of decision on CWM expansion

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LEWISTON – Widely differing opinions on CWM Chemical Services’ hazardous waste disposal business will be considered before the state Department of Environmental Conservation makes its final decision on the company’s application to continue operations at its 710-acre site in the towns of Lewiston and Porter.

Molly McBride, an administrative law judge for the DEC, said the opinions expressed by 15 speakers at two public hearings Monday in Lewiston-Porter High School will be considered, along with written opinions that can be filed with the DEC regional office in Buffalo until March 29.

David Denk, the DEC’s regional permit administrator, said the department already “has made a tentative determination” to renew CWM’s operating permit “with some modifications.”

“CWM’s application is technically and administratively complete,” Denk said, “but a final determination has yet to be made.”

Lori A. Caso, public affairs spokeswoman for CWM, said the application under discussion Monday was a routine procedure under which the DEC reviews waste disposal operations at least once every five years; it extends the operating permits if there are no negative findings.

CWM also has applied to expand the size of its operation at 1550 Balmer Road in the hamlet of Model City, but that is a separate application and was not the subject of Monday’s hearings.

Among others who spoke against renewing the operating permit was Nils Olsen, who has served on advisory committees on CWM issues. He criticized a “symbiotic relationship” between CWM and some representatives of the DEC. He said he would submit a written statement opposing the extension of the operating permit, “which permits the storage here of 8 million tons of hazardous waste.”

Bart Klettke of Lewiston, a professional engineer, said, however, that CWM’s landfill is “a proper use of this property: Keep up the good work!” He pointed out that the property was contaminated by the production of World War II munitions and other chemicals long before it was acquired by CWM and that it is not suited for other uses.



email: rbaldwin@buffnews.com

Rohde resigns; deputy pleaded guilty in teen sex case

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LOCKPORT – Niagara County Sheriff’s Deputy Kevin J. Rohde, who was suspended from the force after being charged with having sex with a 13-year-old girl years before he was hired, resigned last week.

The resignation put an end to a hearing process that the county hoped would end with permission from a hearing officer to fire Rohde, whose union hired an attorney to defend him.

“I’ll confirm that he no longer works for us,” Sheriff James R. Voutour said Monday.

Rohde handed in his resignation Thursday, according to the father of the woman who came forward in 2011 to accuse Rohde of having sex with her in 1999.

Voutour said the hearing “was fairly close to being done.” Robert Ravin of Syracuse was the hearing officer.

Rohde, 32, was 18 when the incident occurred.

“The arbitration hearing took place, and he’s no longer employed, which is what our objective was,” the woman’s father said Monday. “This process has been horrible for my family.”

Rohde pleaded guilty Feb. 10 in Lockport City Court to endangering the welfare of a child, a misdemeanor that did not require him to register as a sex offender.

Rohde entered a so-called Alford plea, which involved no admission of actual guilt.

On April 25, Judge William J. Watson granted Rohde youthful-offender status, as he was required to do because the crime was a first misdemeanor committed by a person 18 years old or less. That was true even though when Rohde pleaded guilty, he was 31 and the victim was 26.

Watson gave Rohde a one-year conditional discharge and a $200 fine.

Rohde had been on the force for seven years when he was arrested. He had won several commendations for his patrol work.

Voutour said Rohde was suspended without pay for 30 days after his arrest in September 2011, but after that the county was required to resume paying his full salary, even though Rohde never was permitted to return to duty. He earned $61,000 in 2011.

The victim’s father said the termination hearing began in October. The closed-door session included the woman’s first testimony under oath about what happened to her.

Deputy Timothy E. Callaghan, president of the Niagara County Police Benevolent Association, said the union would not comment on the case.



email: tprohaska@buffnews.com

Niagara County community police academy training offered

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LOCKPORT – The Niagara County Sheriff’s Office will provide members of the community with a look at what goes on inside the department at the Community Police Academy.

The academy, which is free, runs weekly on Thursdays starting at 6 p.m., from Feb. 28 to May 30 at the Niagara County Public Safety Building, 5574 Niagara Street, Ext.

Those interested must be at least 20 years old, live or work in Niagara County and have no prior felony convictions or outstanding warrants.

The classes, which generally last three to four hours, will cover topics including a firearms training simulator, reality-based training and an emergency vehicle operator course.

Class sizes are limited and those interested will be notified of their acceptance and receive further details.

Registration is available online at www.niagarasheriff.com. Information and applications also are available by mail by contacting Capt. Michael P. Dunn at 438-3331 or Deputy Patrick J. Williams at 523-0098.

Gasport residents charged after traffic stop

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James W. Kohl, 32, and Kimberly Ann Leonard, 51, both of Orangeport Street, Gasport, address were arrested on resisting arrest and other charges after being stopped for speeding by Buffalo police about 6:15 p.m. Sunday in the 1700 block of Niagara Street.

Kohl is charged with resisting arrest, escape, falsely reporting an incident and obstructing governmental administration.

Kohl was paroled in April 2011 from the state’s Franklin Correctional Facility after serving a term for a Buffalo-area car theft and attempted burglary. He was captured because of the state Division of Parole ankle monitor he was wearing Sunday, according to a police report.

Leonard faces possible charges for a burnt marijuana “blunt” allegedly found below her front passenger seat and the 15 hydrocodone tablets found in an unmarked container in her purse. Police reported Kohl was accused of driving 40 mph in a 30 mph zone.

Window damaged in attempted break-in at Newfane restaurant

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NEWFANE – The owner of a Main Street business reported an attempted break-in overnight Sunday.

Niagara County sheriff’s deputies reported someone pried open a sliding service window at Tammy Joe’s Cafe at 2911 Main St. A piece of wood was inside the window, preventing it from opening, according to deputies. Damage was listed at $300.

A crime scene unit was called to investigate when a fingerprint was found on the outside of the window, deputies reported.

Suspect in wallet theft leaves her name behind

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TUSCARORA RESERVATION – A woman caught on security tape snatching a wallet in a convenience store this past weekend is now being sought by Niagara County sheriff’s deputies. But the search may be a little easier since the woman used a store loyalty card with her name on it before she left.

A clerk at a convenience store in the 2200 block of Saunders Settlement Road told deputies that she sat down at a table to have some ice cream and set her wallet down on the table at 6:30 p.m. Sunday. She said when she spilled some ice cream on her arm, she left the table briefly to get a napkin and when she returned, her wallet was gone. The wallet contained $110 in cash.

Store security told deputies that the incident was captured on tape, which shows an unknown white woman wearing a brown jacket and blue jeans walk up to the table and take the wallet. Before leaving, the woman went to the register and paid for some items using a store loyalty card.

Store security officers said they would contact patrol with the name on the loyalty card.

Patrol reported that the investigation remains open.

Vandals damage house and car in Falls

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NIAGARA FALLS – Vandals caused hundreds of dollars in damage to a victim’s car and home, spray-painting both the vehicle and car and puncturing a tire, Monday in the 200 block of 83rd Street.

The 45-year-old victim told police that sometime between midnight and 9 a.m., someone came onto his driveway and punctured the passenger side front tire and used white spray paint to damage the hood of the vehicle, the passenger side door, and the fender and then vandalized the house, by spray-painting the siding on the house, a door and a north side window with white paint.

Damage was estimated at $625.

Rifle and ammunition found on roadside in Pendleton

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PENDLETON – A .308 caliber rifle and more than 50 rounds of ammunition were reportedly found by a man who spotted a black case on the side of Lockport Road and stopped to investigate.

A 51-year-old Lockport man told Niagara County sheriff’s deputies Tuesday morning that he spotted the black case while he was driving home at 4:30 p.m. Sunday.

Deputies said the black case contained a .308 caliber Ruger rifle, a full 10-round magazine and approximately 50 rounds of .ammunition, all valued at $1,200.

The man who found the rifle said he brought it home and waited to see if there was any information in the newspaper. He then called police Tuesday after he read a report of guns stolen from a Niagara Falls home last week.

But according to Niagara County sheriff’s deputies, the serial number on the rifle the man found did not match any stolen gun. The case is now under investigation by the Niagara County Sheriff Criminal Investigation Bureau.

Stolen handgun recovered in Niagara County meth bust

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NEWFANE – The owner of a missing handgun identified the firearm Tuesday as the gun recovered in a drug raid on Hope Lane last week.

The 49-year-old Lockport-Olcott Road man told Niagara County sheriff’s deputies his pistol, as well as a Remington shotgun and a PSE bow had been missing from his home for four months. He contacted the Sheriff’s Office when he learned the gun was recovered in raid near his home.

The Niagara County Drug Task Force and state police investigators raided Hope Lane home Friday and discovered methamphetamine and a .22-caliber handgun. Sean Smith, 37, and James O. White, 21, were charged with criminal possession and sale of a controlled substance. The investigation against them is continuing.
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