Quantcast
Channel: The Buffalo News - niagara
Viewing all 1955 articles
Browse latest View live

High winds to dwindle, but not before causing problems

$
0
0
Winds gusting more than 40 mph brought down tree limbs and caused scattered power outages across Western New York Monday night. About 100 customers were without electricity in parts of Erie, Allegany and Wyoming counties.

The National Weather Service issued a wind advisory that was due to expire at 5 a.m. Tuesday, but strong west winds of 20 to 25 mph, gusting to 33 mph, are forecast to continue through Tuesday afternoon, diminishing to 10 to 15 mph tonight.

The wind accompanied a cold front which dropped temperatures from a high of 49 late Monday morning to the freezing mark Monday night.

A few snow showers were expected overnight and Tuesday, but accumulation ought to be minor. Temperatures Tuesday should be around 30 with a low tonight in lower 20s. The outlook for Wednesday is mostly sunny and a bit warmer, with highs in the mid to upper 30s.

Doubts cast on circumstances of North Tonawanda slaying

$
0
0
NORTH TONAWANDA – Was Ralph D. Stone Jr. an abusive boyfriend who died at the hands of a girlfriend because he was attacking her?

That’s doubtful, according to a former girlfriend and some of Stone’s friends, who showed up during a court appearance Monday for Jennifer Marchant, the woman charged with stabbing Stone in the chest with a kitchen knife Wednesday in the couple’s Oliver Street apartment.

Carolyn Fuller said that she dated Stone off and on since 2009 and that the two remained friends.

“He was an optimistic, full-life guy,” Fuller said outside North Tonawanda City Court. “He always had high energy, but he was good to me. He never touched me. He never laid a hand on me. When we argued, he would just walk away.”

Marchant, 23, who worked as an adult film actor and model for a Miami-based Internet pornography site, had dated Stone for about a year. She pleaded not guilty last week to a second-degree murder charge and was teary-eyed during a follow-up court appearance Monday. Her family sat in the front row, also distraught.

Her attorney, Kevin S. Mahoney, asked the court for more time to gather information in the case and told reporters afterward that his client acted in self-defense.

“We believe she was trapped and had no choice other than to defend herself. She had no intent to kill him,” Mahoney said.

Friends of Stone – who believe alcohol and drugs may have played a role in the stabbing – spoke to The Buffalo News after court, as well, and said it would have been out of character for Stone to act aggressively toward a girlfriend.

“He was never abusive, ever,” said his best friend, Jeff Alexander, Fuller’s brother.

Before he died, Stone, 24, the father of a 2-year-old girl, was starting a new job and “getting his act together” by attending Niagara County Community College. He hoped to someday attend law school, Alexander said.

Instead of hanging out with his friend this week, Alexander will serve as a pall bearer at Stone’s funeral today.

Alexander said he was with the couple in the hours before the fatal stabbing. Later that night, he said, he spoke on the phone with Stone and heard arguing.

Fuller and Alexander described Stone as unhappy in his relationship. They called Marchant controlling and possessive.

“I’m surprised he would choose someone like that, but he was very forgiving,” Fuller said.

All of his friends suspect cocaine and alcohol were likely factors in Wednesday’s stabbing.

“I knew Ralph had been looking for coke, but that wasn’t something he would have done before he met her,” Alexander said.

North Tonawanda police said Stone died before he could reach the hospital.

Fuller said she found a cryptic note that had been placed on Facebook by Marchant around the same time that said Stone had irritated her and that her feelings toward him apparently had changed. Fuller said the message was taken down, but she was able to share it with Stone’s family, who gave it to police.

Fuller, who is not the mother of Stone’s daughter, Lillianna, added, “His daughter was his world.”

“There is no doubt that people cared a great deal for Ralph Stone,” said Mahoney, Marchant’s lawyer, “but that doesn’t mean he wasn’t the aggressor.”

Marchant is scheduled to return to City Court on March 7.

Stone’s funeral will be at 10 a.m. today in Lighthouse Baptist Church, 383 Wheatfield St.



email: nfischer@buffnews.com

Area Catholics react with hope to Pope Benedict’s resignation

$
0
0
No one had illusions that Pope Benedict XVI was getting younger, but few Catholics expected the aging pontiff to announce his resignation Monday – just two days before the start of the Lenten holy season.

Western New Yorkers expressed a mix of surprise, sadness, optimism and even a bit of confusion over Benedict’s stunning announcement that he no longer had the physical strength necessary to lead the Roman Catholic faithful and will step down Feb. 28.

“I’ve never heard of a pope resigning,” said Michael Godzala, of Cheektowaga, who learned of the pope’s plans following a morning Mass in St. Gabriel Church in Elma.

Indeed, no previous pope in nearly 600 years has voluntarily resigned the office.

The Rev. Martin X. Moleski, a Jesuit priest and professor of religious studies at Canisius College, called the pope’s decision courageous and generous – and potentially benefiting the church for many years to follow.

“It goes so against the grain of recent example,” Moleski said. “This opens the door for subsequent popes. It makes it possible for them to retire at the top of their game, and that can lead to better leadership of the church.”

Area Catholics generally applauded the pope’s decision. Some of them recalled watching the previous pontiff, John Paul II, live out his final days severely infirm and incapable of performing his papal duties.

“This sets a good precedent that we don’t have to have long, drawn-out twilights,” said Michael Toner, an Amherst Catholic.

Godzala said the pope apparently did what his conscience told him was right.

“I don’t know what the circumstances are,” he said. “If he steps down and says, ‘You know I’d rather have a younger, more enthusiastic person take over’ and he gives his blessing. … If that’s what he feels is in his heart, what can I say?”

Bishop Richard J. Malone praised Benedict’s humility in making a decision that was in the best interests of the church.

“This is clearly due to his health,” Malone said. “His mind is as sharp as a tack.”

Malone, whom Benedict appointed as bishop of the Catholic Diocese of Buffalo last May, said this pontiff will go down in history as a brilliant scholar who was never out of touch with how the world was evolving.

“Pope Benedict really had his finger on the pulse of the culture,” Malone said.

At the same time, the bishop added, “I think of Pope Benedict as a man who honored and fostered church tradition.”

Mary Roaldi, of Kenmore, described Benedict as a great teacher of the faith and said she was saddened he is stepping down.

“He was helping us to wake up and see how we are destroying ourselves by thinking that we are independent and don’t need God,” Roaldi said.

But other Catholics criticized Benedict for making overtures to dissident conservatives, while cracking down on liberal thinking within the church.

Under Benedict, the Vatican investigated seminaries in an effort to weed out gay candidates for the priesthood and conducted a controversial “doctrinal assessment” of the Leadership Conference of Women Religious that’s been heavily criticized by supporters of Catholic sisters.

Last fall, the Vatican dismissed Roy Bourgeois from the Maryknoll Fathers and Brothers, where he had served as a priest for more than 40 years. Bourgeois refused to recant his longtime advocacy for women’s ordination in the Roman Catholic Church. He will be in Buffalo next week as part of a tour of upstate New York cities to discuss his dismissal from the priesthood.

“There’s been so many cases where people of good will have followed their consciences, and Benedict and people he’s appointed have come after them,” said Toner, who heads a local branch of Call to Action, a Catholic reform group. “All he did was talk about women’s ordination. He didn’t hurt any children. And he gets excommunicated and thrown out.”

“We’re also seeing that with the nuns, and we’re seeing that with theologians,” added Toner. “Shouldn’t we be acting more out of love than fear within the church?”

Judy Capodicasa, of Buffalo, said the next pope needs to “take an honest look at church history” and revisit its limitations on women.

“The insistence that women can’t be priests and don’t even talk about it – that’s ridiculous,” Capodicasa said.

But Roaldi said women’s ordination is a settled issue in the church.

“Our society is falling apart. Why are we still talking about this?” she said.

And too many nuns were out of step with official church doctrine, she added, forcing the Vatican to act.

“When the world looks at them and they’re saying one thing and the Vatican says another, it causes great confusion,” she said. “The Vatican over and over and over gave the women religious a second chance.”

Benedict also faced criticism for his handling of the clergy sexual abuse crisis, with some Catholics even urging him to resign back in 2010 amid reports in the New York Times and German media that linked him to a cover-up of the scandal during his tenure as an archbishop in Munich and later as prefect for the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, under Pope John Paul II.

But Malone said Benedict deserves credit for requiring bishops around the world to establish and implement policies to remove abusive priests.

Benedict’s departure during the middle of Lent leaves open the possibility that a new pope could be in place by Holy Week and Easter Sunday.

Could the Lenten season – with its focus on prayer, repentance and change – have something to do with the timing of Benedict’s announcement?

Malone said it’s possible the pope wanted the cardinals to make a decision on his successor during Lent.

“That kind of symbolism might be something he had in mind, but there’s all kinds of things we still don’t know,” said the Rev. Joseph G. Hubbert, associate professor of religious studies at Niagara University.

Even if the timing was motivated primarily by a change in Benedict’s health, all eyes will be focused on the Catholic Church for weeks to come, during the height of the Christian calendar, Moleski said.

“Everybody’s going to be thinking about the church and what kind of pope has he been and what kind of pope can we hope for,” he said.



email: jtokasz@buffnews.com

WNYers get millions by winning two games

$
0
0
Sandra Burdick had always told her daughter, Jessica Delario, that if she called in the middle of the night, it meant someone had died or she had just won the lottery.

So when Delario picked up her phone at about 2:20 a.m. Dec. 22 and heard her mother crying, she didn’t know what to think.

It turned out Burdick, 56, who has been playing the lottery since she quit smoking a few years ago, had just won $1 million playing Mega Millions.

“Flip it over, sign it and put it away!” Delario told her mother, referring to the winning ticket.

Monday, Burdick, of Middleport, smiled for the media as she was presented an oversized check for $1 million. She will be taking home a lump sum of $661,800.

Burdick wasn’t the only Western New Yorker to win the lottery recently. Cory and Alexandrea Hayhurst, of West Seneca, are splitting $100,000 a year for life, with a $2 million guaranteed minimum.

Cory Hayhurst, 31, was never a big lottery player. But Jan. 4 he went into the Tops Market on Harlem Road in West Seneca to get some groceries. “I just had some loose cash in my pocket,” he explained Monday at the New York Lottery’s Customer Service Center in Buffalo.

Hayhurst, a warehouse worker, bought several “Money for Life” scratch-off tickets, and when he got to his car, he scratched off three “Win for Life” symbols. In a state of shock, he called his wife, who also thought it was too good to be true.

They still seemed to be in a state of disbelief Monday as they posed with their oversized check.

The couple, who have a young son, will split $100,000 a year for the next 20 years – a net of $33,090 each. Once they get to $2 million, they will continue to receive the same annual amount for as long as Cory Hayhurst lives.

All of the new millionaires said they had no plans to quit their jobs but added that the extra cash would help ease financial stress.

“I think it will be a little more easy peasy,” Alexandrea Hayhurst said. “We can feel a little more comfortable.”

The Hayhursts hope to travel and invest in their future.

Burdick said she hoped to fix up her house, buy a new car and help out her children.



email: mbecker@buffnews.com

Lewiston makes final pitch for disputed property

$
0
0
LEWISTON – In a last-ditch effort to avoid condemning a small sliver of private land for dedication as a public street, town officials will make one more offer to buy the property from its owners.

Town Attorney Michael J. Dowd said Monday that a real estate appraiser has looked at the short privately owned section of Legacy Drive at Northridge Drive and soon will submit his appraisal to the Town Board.

“We will offer the owners the appraised value and hope that they will accept it; otherwise, we can proceed to condemnation,” Dowd told the board.

Long-standing negotiations between the owners and the town have failed to reach agreement on a purchase even though the street already has been built and a couple of residences were built there before it was discovered that it is on private property and the residences are uninhabitable because they have no access to a public thoroughfare.

Because of a misunderstanding years ago over who owned the 81-foot by 150-foot parcel, it never was dedicated as a public street, so not even town snowplows are legally permitted to use it. As originally intended, Legacy was to have run from Creek Road to Northridge, just east of the Village of Lewiston. The street was built as planned, but the short portion near Northridge is not legally open for public use.

The Fire Department considers it a safety issue because the only public access to Legacy is via Creek Road and not from Northridge.

Town officials have been trying in vain to negotiate purchase of the property from its owners, the late Benjamin Sicoli and his heirs. The Town Board issued a finding last month that acquiring the property through condemnation and opening the street would have no harmful impact on the environment.

Board members were poised Monday to authorize condemnation proceedings, but they tabled the matter one more time to see whether the Sicoli estate will accept the appraiser’s price without going to court under eminent domain, where a judge would set the amount.

In other business, board members received a complaint about poor drainage that causes surface water to flood the backyards of three or four houses on Sandlewood Drive. Highway Superintendent Douglas A. Janese said he already has looked at the flooding, which is entirely on private property, and the town probably can do little to alleviate it.

Nevertheless, board members asked Janese and other town officials to look at it again to see whether there is anything the town can do about it.

In another matter, Town Supervisor Steven L. Reiter said the board will meet with representatives of the Lewiston-Porter School Board and others at 6 p.m. March 4 in Town Hall, 1375 Ridge Road, to discuss plans to acquire property in front of Lew-Port High School on Creek Road to build a recreation and senior citizens center with Greenway funds supplied by the New York Power Authority as part of the authority’s state relicensing agreement for the Niagara Power Project.



email: rbaldwin@buffnews.com

Strong winds down trees, leave 100 without power

$
0
0
Winds gusting more than 40 mph brought down tree limbs and caused scattered power outages across Western New York on Monday night. About 100 customers were without electricity in parts of Erie, Allegany and Wyoming counties.

The National Weather Service issued a wind advisory that was due to expire at 5 a.m. today, but strong west winds of 20 to 25 mph, gusting to 33 mph, are forecast to continue through this afternoon, diminishing to 10 to 15 mph tonight. The wind accompanied a cold front, which dropped temperatures from a high of 49 late Monday morning to the freezing mark Monday night. A few snow showers were expected overnight and today, but accumulation ought to be minor. Temperatures today should be around 30, with a low tonight in lower 20s. The outlook for Wednesday is mostly sunny and a bit warmer.

Man charged with pulling knife out at Lockport bar

$
0
0
LOCKPORT – A female bartender at Lock 34 bar told city police she feared for her safety Sunday when a man pulled out a knife inside the bar.

John W. Walsh, 29, of Washburn Street, was removed from the bar, at 80 Main St., about 2:30 a.m. and charged with second-degree menacing, police said.

The bartender told officers Walsh pulled out the knife and slid it across the bar. She told police she was afraid for her safety because she wasn’t sure what Walsh was going to do with the knife.

Lewiston man charged in 2007 assault, robbery

$
0
0
NIAGARA FALLS – A Lewiston man wanted on assault and robbery charges from 2007 was arrested on a warrant this week.

Robert A. Campbell, 36, of Saunders Settlement Road, was charged with third-degree assault, second-degree harassment, second-degree burglary, third-degree robbery and unlawful imprisonment.

The arrest stems from an incident at a motel in the 6800 block of Niagara Falls Boulevard on April 23, 2007, according to city police reports.

Lockport woman accused of stealing mom’s pickup to buy drugs

$
0
0
TOWN OF LOCKPORT – A Lake Avenue woman was charged with drug possession and stealing her mother’s pickup truck, Niagara County sheriff’s deputies said.

Jacqueline P. Barrett, 27, is accused of taking the vehicle without permission late Monday. Deputies said they found Barrett with the truck at 1 a.m. Tuesday on Washburn Street in the City of Lockport. They also found two glass tubes with wire mesh that contained residue of crack cocaine, according to a sheriff’s report.

Barrett was charged with fourth-degree grand larceny, operating an unregistered and uninspected motor vehicle on the highway, and seventh-degree criminal possession of a controlled substance. The young woman told deputies she took the pickup to buy crack cocaine at the home of a local drug dealer, deputies reported.

Her mother told deputies that Barrett tried to leave the house with a bag containing her camera, jewelry and a thumb drive, but she was able to grab the bag away from her before she left. The mother also told deputies her daughter has stolen from her in the past.

Man who crashed car arraigned on assault charges

$
0
0
LOCKPORT – A man whose vehicle snapped off a utility pole and rolled over, injuring a female passenger, was arraigned Monday in Niagara County Court.

Daniel W. Lounsbury, 53, of Portage Road, Niagara Falls, pleaded not guilty to second-degree assault, second-degree vehicular assault, driving while his ability was impaired by drugs and by a combination of alcohol and drugs, misdemeanor driving while intoxicated, speeding, failure to keep right and reckless driving.

Deputy District Attorney Theodore A. Brenner said the crash occurred Oct. 11 in the 700 block of 15th Street. Lounsbury’s blood-alcohol content was measured at 0.12 percent, and he also had allegedly been using marijuana.

Hearing set in ‘86 Lockport murder case

$
0
0
LOCKPORT – Niagara County Judge Sara Sheldon Farkas has scheduled a hearing March 6 on the latest attempt by William J. Barnes Jr. to overturn his murder convictions for the shooting deaths of his girlfriend and her lover in 1986.

Monday, Farkas granted a request for a delay in the hearing from Barnes’ attorney, Dominic Saraceno of the county conflict defender’s office, who hadn’t met or talked to Barnes before Monday.

Barnes, 50, is serving 50 years to life in Wende Correctional Facility for the Jan. 7, 1986, shotgun slayings of Irene L. Bucher, 21, formerly of Pendleton, and William R. Moffitt, 35, of Somerset, in Barnes’ apartment on Park Avenue in Lockport.

Barnes, who has made nine previous attempts to win a new trial, claims that his original attorney, Assistant Public Defender Joseph L. Leone Jr., failed to inform him of a plea offer that carried a maximum sentence of 25 years to life. The U.S. Supreme Court has ruled that under certain circumstances, failure to inform a defendant of a plea deal can be grounds for canceling a conviction. However, Leone says he told Barnes of the offer and Barnes rejected it.

Man gets three years for transporting undocumented workers

$
0
0
A Mexican national was sentenced to three years in prison following his conviction for unlawfully transporting undocumented workers within the United States, U.S. Attorney William J. Hochul Jr. reported Tuesday.

Santos Hernandez-Perez, 36, was in a vehicle with five undocumented workers from Mexico when they were stopped Feb. 10, 2012 for traffic violations by Niagara County sheriff’s deputies.

Hernandez-Perez was driving the men from Tucson, Ariz. to Barker, where two were to work on a farm. The others were destined for North Carolina, according to Special Assistant U.S. Attorney Fauzia K. Mattingly. None had permission to be in the country.

Hernandez-Perez’s sentence handed down by U.S. District Court Judge Richard J. Arcara was above the recommended federal guidelines for the crime.

Shoddy plumbing work sparks Middleport fire

$
0
0
MIDDLEPORT – A fire, which damaged a lower rear apartment in three-unit apartment building today, was caused by someone who had done plumbing work in the basement earlier in the day, according to investigators.

The fire broke out just after 4 p.m. in the two-story brick apartment building at 15 State St., authorities said. The owner, whose name was not immediately available, lived on the second floor and two tenants lived on the lower floors.

“They had been working in the basement soldering pipes. I don’t know how they were doing it, but they likely heated up the wood enough to start the fire,” said Middleport Village Code Enforcement Officer Brian Belson. “They were working without a permit,” he added.

Belson said the plumbing work had been done in the basement below the lower rear apartment and the fire broke out in the floor of that apartment’s back bedroom. It was quickly contained to that area and did not spread to the entire apartment. The other first-floor apartment and second floor were not damaged.

“We emptied the house and turned the power off,” Belson said. “They will need to get a plumbing permit and have it reinspected before anyone can move back in.”

Fire crews from Middleport and Medina responded after heavy smoke was reported this afternoon. The Niagara County Sheriff’s Office also responded. No injuries were reported.

Roads were are closed for a time at Vernon and Park streets and State and Maple streets, according to deputies.

The amount of damages was not immediately known.



email: nfischer@buffnews.com

On 4th anniversary of tragedy, Flight 3407 families cite ‘disconnect’ on new rules

$
0
0
WASHINGTON – The Families of Continental Flight 3407 spent the fourth anniversary of the loss of their loved ones lobbying the Federal Aviation Administration and members of Congress for tougher rules for the nation’s pilots – and in doing so, they found new reason for frustration with the FAA.

Only hours after Sen. Charles E. Schumer, D-N.Y., told them that the FAA had committed to completing long-delayed new regulations for pilot qualifications and training this year, the agency’s administrator and top safety official told the families that the training rule will likely not be completed until June 2014.

“There was a disconnect” that apparently left Schumer with the wrong information, said Karen Eckert, one of the leading members of the families group.

The FAA feels it needs to redo the economic analysis undergirding the proposed new pilot-training rules, said Eckert, whose sister Beverly Eckert, a 9/11 activist, was one of the 50 people killed in the crash.

“They put some sense into some of the delays and explained why they have to go back to the drawing board,” Eckert said. “They said there’s a better way for them to do the cost-benefit analysis” on the training rule.

The FAA officials, including Administrator Michael P. Huerta, assured the families that the new analysis would likely make a better case for the new pilot-training rules, rather than lead to their weakening.

The proposed rules would, for the first time, require pilots to train in a simulator for how to react to unexpected stalls and upsets. The pilot of Continental Connection Flight 3407 did not know how to react to an aerodynamic stall, and his mistakes sent the plane plummeting into a house in Clarence Center.

Still, there was a sharp contrast between what the families learned at their meeting at the FAA and what Schumer announced at a news conference earlier in the day.

“We spoke to the FAA this morning,” Schumer said. “They assured us they are on track to meet both the August deadline for the pilot certification [regulations] and the October deadline for crew member training. They told us they will meet those deadlines.”

Asked to explain the discrepancy between what he had said and what the FAA officials told the Flight 3407 families, Schumer said: “The FAA promised – no ifs, ands or buts – that these regulations would be done by August and October of this year. We will hold their feet to the fire to ensure they live up to this commitment that they made to me, and to the families of Flight 3407. Any other action on their part would be absolutely unacceptable and a violation of the promises they made.”

However, both the Flight 3407 families at the news conference and Rep. Chris Collins, R-Clarence, expressed some skepticism about whether the FAA would meet those deadlines, no matter what Schumer heard.

Noting that Flight 3407 crashed because the pilot did not know how to recover from a stall, John Kausner, whose daughter, Ellyce, was killed in the crash, said: “I will submit to you that the FAA cannot get out of a stall.” He noted that the airline industry is fighting the new rules, suggesting that it would face an undue burden from them. That prompted him to gesture to the families standing with him and say: “You want an undue burden? Look behind me.”

Meanwhile, Scott Maurer, whose daughter, Lorin, was killed in the crash, appealed to President Obama to push the FAA to complete the new rules. “We’ve been patient, Mr. President, very patient,” he said. “But you know that the American people deserve better. You know that and we know that.”

Collins was equally skeptical of the FAA’s ability to complete the new air safety rules.

“I’m sorry, but a new deadline is unacceptable,” Collins said, before he had any reason to know that the FAA had set yet another new deadline. “To say – and I’m sorry, Sen. Schumer – to say they’re going to meet the deadline, they’ve missed the deadline, again and again. That is unacceptable. Words are unacceptable.” Collins, who was the Erie County executive in charge of the emergency response on the night of the crash, choked up during his comments, saying: “It’s hitting me like a tsunami right now.”

Collins’ comments prompted Schumer to return to the podium to reassure the families and the media that he is not going easy on the FAA. If agency officials do not complete the regulations on time, “they will be hearing from us,” he said.

Later in the day, the families held a memorial service for their loved ones in a Capitol Hill committee room. Schumer, Collins and Rep. Brian Higgins, D-Buffalo, joined Deborah A.P. Hersman, chairwoman of the National Transportation Safety Board, in reading the names of the crash victims.

And each of the family members then proceeded to the front of the room and, one by one, laid down a rose to mark their loss.



email: jzremski@buffnews.com

Mayor promises “a year to remember” in Lockport

$
0
0
LOCKPORT – Mayor Michael W. Tucker said in his State of the City address Tuesday that “2013 will be a year to remember” in Lockport because of many major construction and business projects.

“There are no less than eight projects happening this year. This is not a wish list or things that we hope will happen,” Tucker told his audience at the luncheon meeting of the Lockport Rotary Club in the Lockport Town and Country Club.

Those projects will total nearly $28 million in investment in the city’s downtown core, Tucker said during his half-hour speech.

“That’s a huge number for a city like ours. That’s a huge number for the economic times we’re in,” the mayor said. “There’s going to be more construction cranes, more activity in our business district, than we’ve seen for a very long time.”

The restoration of the Flight of Five, the 19th century Erie Canal locks, is to begin June with construction work on two of the five locks. The State Canal Corp. will seek bids in April and award a contract in May, Tucker said.

An economic impact study a few years ago by Camoin Associates estimates that a complete Flight of Five restoration would bring 230,000 visitors a year to Lockport, with $16.9 million in visitor spending and resulting sales tax and hotel and motel “bed tax” revenue of nearly $600,000.

“Some people don’t believe that number,” Tucker said. “Let’s say they’re half right. That’s still $8 million in economic impact.”

Overlooking the locks project is Old City Hall on Pine Street, where the new Flight of Five Winery is to open by Memorial Day. Just to its north, Hydraulic Race Co., operator of the Lockport Cave, started work last week on a new ticket office and visitor center, which is to open in May.

Lake Effect Ice Cream is expected to move into its new factory and retail outlet on Canal Street by May. Last summer, 46,000 customers descended on its former Lock Street location.

In April, the long-closed downtown parking ramp is to be demolished, with work on its removal and replacement with a surface parking lot at Main and Pine streets expected to be done by late June or early July.

Meanwhile, Tucker said he expects Trek Inc., the Medina electronic instrument manufacturer, to be operating in Harrison Place by early spring, bringing almost 100 jobs to Lockport. “They are already talking to their suppliers about moving into the building,” the mayor said.

The Salvation Army will break ground this year on its 7,592-square-foot addition to its Cottage Street headquarters to expand its youth programs.

And on Chestnut Street, demolition of the old Jubilee supermarket is to begin in April or May, with a $12 million twin-rink ice complex to be erected on the site.

Corporation Counsel John J. Ottaviano said once demolition is completed, construction of the indoor rink will take 18 months.

email: tprohaska@buffnews.com

Albert Capozzi Sr. dies

$
0
0
Six years ago, Albert Capozzi Sr. sat in his daughter’s Amherst hair salon and explained how he felt about his son Anthony’s being exonerated after two decades of wrongful imprisonment for rapes he did not commit.

“Have you ever felt pure joy in your heart?” Albert Capozzi asked. “I don’t know how to explain it. We haven’t had any joy for so many years. Now we’ve had the joy back for two days, and we’re so elated.

“I want to thank God,” he added. “I have to thank Him for keeping me alive long enough to see this.”

Albert Capozzi Sr., gracious patriarch of the Capozzi family who never flashed any bitterness over his son’s wrongful imprisonment, died Monday in Millard Fillmore Suburban Hospital, Amherst. He was 87.

Mr. Capozzi was rushed to the hospital after being stricken late Sunday afternoon and died the following morning, family members said.

He and his wife of 57 years, Mary, who died in October 2009, never lost faith in Anthony’s innocence. He was exonerated of the two rapes in 2007, when authorities proved they had been committed by Altemio C. Sanchez, of Cheektowaga, the Bike Path Rapist and Killer.

Family members issued a brief statement Tuesday about Mr. Capozzi:

“He was a wonderful man full of love, compassion and tremendous generosity. We are comforted knowing he’s in a better place with our beloved mother. We thank the caring people of Western New York who have shown our brother and family so much kindness over these last five years.”

Sharyn Miller, one of Mr. Capozzi’s five surviving children, was asked how her parents kept from being bitter or angry during their long ordeal.

“It was their faith that got them through this,” she replied. “My mom and dad always saw the good in people, never the bad.”

A native of Meadville, Pa., Mr. Capozzi graduated from Meadville High School and entered the Navy in April 1944, stationed on the aircraft carrier USS Randolph, which served in the Pacific Theater during the end of World War II. Specializing in fire control, he worked in the ship’s boiler room, surviving kamikaze attacks and room temperatures of 115 to 120 degrees. He later was awarded four naval decorations, including the Pacific Theater Ribbon with three campaign stars.

After the war, Mr. Capozzi worked on the railroad and in a family shoe store in Meadville before moving to Buffalo in 1962 with his wife and their four oldest children to pursue better job opportunities.

“He sacrificed his whole life for his family,” Miller said. “It was never about him.”

Following a short stint working in the flour mills on Ohio Street, Capozzi was employed as a millwright in the General Motors Tonawanda Foundry for 20 years before suffering a broken back in an industrial accident. Mr. Capozzi was active for years at Holy Angels Catholic Church.

The Capozzis lived in the same Jersey Street home on Buffalo’s West Side for almost 50 years, before Mr. Capozzi moved to Williamsville about two years ago to be closer to most of his children.

His son Anthony, diagnosed with schizophrenia, remains in a Buffalo group home.

Surviving, in addition to his daughter Sharyn and son Anthony, are two other daughters, Kathleen Jeras and Pamela Guenther, and another son, Albert Jr. A Mass of Christian Burial will be offered at 9:30 a.m. Thursday in Holy Angels Church, 348 Porter Ave.

Family members no doubt will share the story told by Guenther about visiting her father in the hospital emergency room late Sunday.

“I can’t believe this is happening to me,” Mr. Capozzi told his daughter. “I was always so strong.”

“He always was,” Guenther recalled Tuesday. “We always felt that Dad could do anything.”



email: gwarner@buffnews.com

10-time drunken driver jailed at latest DWI arraignment

$
0
0
LOCKPORT – A North Tonawanda man, arraigned on his latest set of drunken driving charges Wednesday, was jailed in lieu of $50,000 bail set by Niagara County Judge Sara Sheldon Farkas after she learned some of his history.

Raymond B. Miller Jr., 55, of Wurlitzer Drive, pleaded not guilty to felony driving while intoxicated, speeding and failure to signal a turn, stemming from his arrest Aug. 21 in North Tonawanda, where he allegedly refused the breath test.

Deputy District Attorney Theodore A. Brenner said Miller “has a 24-page rap sheet,” and this is his 10th DWI arrest. Brenner told Farkas that Miller had absconded from a Niagara County Court DWI case in 2004 and wasn’t found until he was arrested on another DWI charge in downstate New York two years later. He served 2½ years in state prison in the Niagara County case.

“He’s a flight risk,” Farkas declared as she ordered Miller jailed on the high bail to await trial.



email: tprohaska@buffnews.com

Woman involved in officer injury pleads to drug felony

$
0
0
LOCKPORT – A Lockport woman who allegedly passed tobacco to a Niagara County Jail inmate in 2011, leading to a fight that ended with a career-ending back injury for a corrections officer, pleaded guilty Wednesday to a drug felony charge.

State Supreme Court Justice Richard C. Kloch Sr. placed Jessica R. Broughton in a court-supervised drug treatment program after she admitted to third-degree criminal possession of a controlled substance for having cocaine with the intention of selling it.

Broughton, 22, of Crosby Avenue, also forfeited $700 that police seized when they raided her home and found the cocaine. A prison contraband charge against her remains open in Lockport Town Court.

On Aug. 26, 2011, Broughton was charged with giving tobacco to Ramone D. Walker of Lockport, while she was visiting him in the jail. As officers tried to seize the tobacco, which is not allowed at the jail, Walker fell on Officer Mark A. Crawley, 46, who underwent spinal surgery and is permanently disabled.

Walker, 37, is serving a four-year prison sentence on a drug felony. A grand jury refused to indict him in the Crawley case in November, after two previous indictments were dismissed on technicalities.

Niagara Falls gas station clerk robbed at gunpoint

$
0
0
NIAGARA FALLS – Police were searching Wednesday for two men, one of them armed with a semiautomatic pistol, who robbed a Valero Gas Mart in the 4700 block of Hyde Park Boulevard.

A clerk said one of the men pointed a gun at him shortly before midnight Monday and demanded cash while the other man went behind the counter. The victim said the man with the gun leaned over and took about $600 from the cash register, then the two forced him to hold a bag for them while they filled it with cigarette lighters, cigarettes, cigars and cigar wrappers. The total loss was listed at $1,020.

The suspects fled toward Lafayette Avenue.

Police viewing security video said the suspect with the gun was a white man, 5-feet, 11-inches tall, with a thin build, wearing a gray zip up jacket, a hooded sweatshirt pulled over his head, black trousers, black gloves and a blue and white wrap covering his face. The second man was described only as 5-feet, 10-inches tall, with a thin build, wearing a black hoodie, black trousers, a black face wrap and black gloves.

Tax preparer gets 30 months for fraud, but victims still owe IRS

$
0
0
Elizabeth Wopperer lost everything. She lost her business. She lost $40,000 in cash. And by the time it was all over, she found herself filing for bankruptcy.

On top of all that, the IRS now wants the money that was stolen from her.

The man she blames is going to federal prison for up to 30 months, but that won’t return the cleaning business she was forced to sell or pay the taxes she now owes because of his fraudulent actions.

“She’s an employee of a business she used to run,” her niece, Sara Gruszka, said in court Wednesday.

And Wopperer is just one of Vincent P. Mangione’s victims.

“I feel I’ve been victimized twice – once by Mr. Mangione and again by the IRS,” said Richard Schunke, owner of a West Seneca insurance agency.

Mangione, the operator of a North Tonawanda payroll and tax preparation business, was supposed to pay federal income taxes on behalf of his clients but didn’t.

He chose instead to pocket some of the money, which means Schunke, Wopperer and several others are still on the hook for those taxes.

Wopperer said the IRS is working with her, but Schunke said the government filed a tax lien against his business that makes it difficult for him to continue operating, never mind pay his overdue taxes.

“They’ve ruined my credit,” he said of the IRS. “And I look like a deadbeat.”

IRS officials declined to comment, citing a prohibition on talking about specific tax cases. But in the past, they have made it clear that individuals and businesses are responsible for their taxes, even when they use a tax preparer.

And yes, even when that tax preparer steals from them.

“No logical reason can explain what I’ve done,” Mangione told Chief U.S. District Judge William M. Skretny at Wednesday’s sentencing.

With most of Mangione’s victims looking on, Skretny admonished him for betraying the trust of his clients, many of whom are now facing serious financial problems.

He also ordered him to pay $839,000 in restitution to the victims.

“It comes down to greed more than anything else,” Skretny told Mangione.

“It’s just plain wrong. It’s just plain unfair. It’s just plain criminal conduct, and you have to be held accountable.”

Federal prosecutors claim Mangione, who operated MTS Payroll and Mil-Sher Tax Services Inc., routinely filed false quarterly tax returns on behalf of the small-business owners he represented and then pocketed the difference.

They also claim Mangione bilked a local bank by depositing checks into an account he knew had insufficient funds and then withdrawing the funds before his checks cleared.

Mangione, 49, pleaded guilty in October to bank fraud and tax evasion.

“We can’t lose sight of the fact that the harm Mr. Mangione has done has damaged the victims for a long time,” said Assistant U.S. Attorney Michael DiGiacomo.

Herbert L. Greenman, one of Mangione’s lawyers, countered by reminding the judge that his client is handing over more than $675,00 in cash and property as a first step in repaying the victims.

“They wanted, in the worst way, for this money to be paid back,” Greenman said of Mangione and his wife. “They could have walked away, but they never once faltered.”

The victims, four of whom spoke in court, didn’t buy it. One by one, they outlined for Skretny what Mangione’s actions have done to them.

Camille Kirkland, a small-business owner in Cheektowaga, said Mangione “devastated us emotionally and destroyed us financially.”

“We get accountants because we hope they have our interests in mind,” Kirkland said. “We know Vinnie had only his interest in mind. He stole and cheated for his own personal gain.”

One victim, who asked not to be named, suggested that Mangione’s actions have come close to ruining him and his family.

“It’s been devastating,” he told the judge.

“I can’t pay for my kids’ education in college, and I don’t know how it’s going to end up. It’s devastated my marriage, and now it’s devastating my kids’ future.”



email: pfairbanks@buffnews.com
Viewing all 1955 articles
Browse latest View live