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DNA is focus as Buffalo man stands trial in Falls home invasion

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LOCKPORT – A Buffalo man, tied to a Niagara Falls home invasion by DNA and seemingly little else, went on trial Tuesday in Niagara County Court.

Brandon D. Green, 31, of Davison Avenue, could face up to 25 years in prison if convicted. He has pleaded not guilty to two counts each of first-degree burglary and first-degree robbery and one count of second-degree kidnapping.

Assistant District Attorney Claudette S. Caldwell told the jury in her opening statement that the case hinges on a DNA sample taken from a pair of handcuffs.

“Those handcuffs will be the central piece of evidence in this case,” Caldwell said.

Defense attorney Thomas J. Eoannou agreed, laying out his plans to try to shake the jury’s confidence in the DNA evidence.

“The DNA doesn’t mean for a second that Brandon Green was in that house,” Eoannou shouted at the jury.

The victim, a 60-year-old Parkview Avenue man, told police he was awakened in the early hours of May 16, 2011, by three men who had entered his dark bedroom. They apparently wore masks and gloves. One put a gun to his forehead, but all three seemed to have handguns, Caldwell told the jury.

One of the intruders snapped a pair of handcuffs around the victim’s wrists. It was on those handcuffs that police later found the DNA of three people, Caldwell said. One was Green, whose DNA was in the state database because of a previous robbery conviction.

Caldwell said Keith P. Meyers of the Niagara County Sheriff’s Office forensic lab, who worked up the DNA profile, found that the odds of the DNA coming from someone other than Green were “1 in 319.5 trillion.”

Eoannou said Green was arrested in Buffalo in February for “a crime he did not commit and had nothing to do with.” He told the jury that DNA can be transmitted through touching and can stay on a surface for years. There will be no evidence placing Green at the crime scene other than “uncorroborated DNA,” he said.

Caldwell said that one of the robbers placed a pillow over the victim’s face and that he could hear them rummaging through drawers and closets. He said they kept asking him, “Where’s the safe?”

The victim at first denied he had one. He was flipped off the bed onto the floor after about 10 minutes, forced into a closet with a shirt over his head and hit in the face, Caldwell said.

She said the man then heard his gas-burning fireplace being removed and knew that the robbers had found the safe. One demanded the combination, and the victim gave it up.

After the safe was emptied, he was sprayed with Mace and left in the closet. He managed to get out a few minutes after hearing a car drive off and called 911.

Green, who was apprehended Feb. 1, is the only person arrested in the case. Eoannou said the victim provided no identification “other than the generic ‘three black males.’ ”

Police reported at the time of Green’s arrest that the items stolen included a wallet, several rings, $80 in cash, and credit cards. Eoannou said the estimates the victim gave started at $50,000 and later grew to $500,000. Caldwell did not mention a figure in her opening statement.



email: tprohaska@buffnews.com

Falls officer fights cancer and fights to return to his job

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NIAGARA FALLS – Veteran Police Officer and Niagara Falls native William J. Gee has been in a battle with stomach cancer for more than six months.

He says he’s prepared to “fight the cancer into submission” and get back to work. Tuesday, he got good news and bad news from doctors at Roswell Park Cancer Institute.

They have been successful in fighting the cancer, but they won’t clear him to go back on the job for at least a few more months.

“The walls are closing in on me at home,” Gee said with a smile. “The cancer is improving and behaving, but I need a few more months to let my bones heal.”

The officer said the cancer caused micro fractures in his bones as it tried to advance. “[Dr. Renuka Iyer] doesn’t want me jumping fences and fighting guys,” Gee said, at least not right away.

Even if he can’t get back on patrol in the spring, he said he still wants to work, helping people.

“I appreciate that every day is different,” Gee said of being an officer. “It’s a nice feeling to help out. You get a rush of adrenaline from catching the bad guys, but at the end of the day it is not about the bad guys, but helping out all the good people. That’s something I enjoy.”

Gee said his doctor told him that he will be on chemotherapy for life and that the toxins he needs to fight the cancer will eventually create other cancers. He also has been told he has a healthy head start and is in good shape.

He appears mentally ready for a tough fight, having spent more than 11 years working as a corrections officer at some of the toughest maximum security prisons in the state before coming to the Falls Police Department in 2002.

Gee said that in May he began having pain in his back, which he first brushed off, figuring he hurt himself working on the house. He said he went to the chiropractor a few times, then went in for X-rays when it wouldn’t go away.

“You know when they call you in after hours that it is not good news,” Gee said. He said the doctor said they had found spots on his spine, and he was sent to Roswell Park, where he got the diagnosis of stage four stomach cancer. He was told it was terminal.

“I’ve been on a chemo cocktail, which is multiple types of therapy to target the stomach cancer, three times a week, every two weeks for the last six months,” Gee said. He said the good news is that the cancer had not spread outside his stomach to his glands or bone marrow.

Looking healthy and in good spirits, he was still waiting for his doctor’s announcement when he stopped into Police Headquarters on Monday to accept a donation of $2,000, in the form of two individual $1,000 checks, one from the Federal Law Enforcement Foundation and another from Niagara Falls Redevelopment. Gee thanked those who had come forward to help and called the support from several fundraisers “incredible.”

A single father of two boys, ages 15 and 20, Gee said that the funds raised have helped defray some of the co-pays and travel costs, and provides a buffer so he doesn’t fall behind. It could be a lot worse," Gee said. “I count my blessings every day.”



email: nfischer@buffnews.com

Plan calls for N.Y. City trash to power Falls incinerator

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WHEATFIELD – Three hundred thousand tons of New York City garbage – enough to fill the Rose Bowl one and a half times – would be hauled by rail to a Niagara Falls incinerator to help power the Cataract City’s industries, under a plan presented Wednesday to the Niagara County Industrial Development Agency.

Covanta Energy, which operates an energy-from-waste incinerator on 56th Street, applied for a tax break on a multipronged $30 million expansion project.

Covanta business manager Kevin O’Neil said the project includes a $7 million steam pipeline to the new Greenpac paper mill; a natural gas-fired boiler to back up the garbage incinerator that produces the steam; a rail transfer station to accept the trash from Manhattan; and a special waste-handling facility to prepare the garbage for burning.

Covanta supplies steam to help power the industrial processes at five plants: Occidental Chemical, Niacet Corp., Praxair, Goodyear and Norampac, the parent company of Greenpac.

“This shows you how the industrial base of Niagara Falls is all tied together, and Covanta is at the center of that,” O’Neil said. “Our steam supply is critical to supporting 600 jobs in Niagara Falls’ industrial area.”

The Covanta expansion is projected to add 23 jobs to the 86-person workforce currently at the incinerator.

O’Neil said the rail transfer station would be built on 15 acres that Covanta intends to acquire from Praxair. It’s part of a 70-acre brownfield next to the incinerator.

Niagara Falls Mayor Paul A. Dyster said that parcel was the subject of a purchase option Praxair gave to a company that had proposed to erect an ethanol plant on the site, but that company sold the option to Covanta.

At present, about 300 trucks a day haul waste to Covanta, which burns about 800,000 tons a year. O’Neil said 60 percent of the trash is trucked from Canada, and that amount is to be drastically reduced as Manhattan municipal waste is brought in through the new rail siding.

“We regarded that as a net improvement,” Dyster said. “This would reduce traffic on the international bridges, which we think is important. … We’re big fans of the expansion of the rail network.”

Dyster said the Big Apple trash will be much the same as the garbage now being trucked in from Toronto. “The materials are containerized, and the containers won’t be opened until just before they’re burned,” he said.

With Greenpac’s opening expected sometime next year, truck traffic in that part of the city would figure to increase, Dyster said, so getting garbage trucks off the streets to and from the incinerator also is a positive.

O’Neil said waste hauling over the border won’t be completely eliminated, since Covanta has contracts with the General Motors plant in St. Catharines, Ont.

He said Covanta has a 12-year contract to supply steam to Greenpac. The 24-inch pipeline to be built would be nearly a mile long.

“It’s a very exciting project,” IDA Chairman Henry M. Sloma said. “The energy is helping to drive all this industrial growth. … They’re going to do their best to hire people locally.”

O’Neil said Covanta’s new jobs will pay up to $100,000 a year, with full benefits.

The company asked for a 15-year payment-in-lieu-of-taxes, or PILOT, arrangement on the value of its expansion, not on the current plant. It also seeks an exemption from having to pay sales taxes on building materials and equipment for the expansion, and an exemption from having to pay mortgage recording tax on the land deal.

IDA staffers estimated that Covanta would save a total of almost $8 million in taxes over the next 15 years, but the payroll for the newly created jobs would be about $2 million a year. Covanta’s current payroll is $8.9 million a year.

IDA attorney Mark J. Gabriele said Covanta just closed on a $165 million refinancing of its debt through a bond issue approved by the Niagara Area Development Corp., an IDA subsidiary. The bonds must be paid off by Covanta, not the county or the IDA.

The incinerator was built by Hooker Chemical Co. in 1980 and was purchased by American Ref-Fuel Co. in 1994. Covanta, based in Morristown, N.J., acquired the incinerator in 2006.



email: tprohaska@buffnews.com

Falls man charged with sexually abusing 14-year-old

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NIAGARA FALLS – An 87th Street man was charged Tuesday with sexual abuse and assault on a 14-year-old girl.

Thomas R. Murray II, 38, was arrested at his home just after 11 p.m.

City police activated the Emergency Response Team after concerns about taking Murray into custody, but Murray eventually was taken into custody without incident.

He is accused of trying to choke the girl, as well as forcing her to touch him sexually, according to detectives.

Murray was arraigned in City Court Wednesday on charges of obstruction of breathing, endangering the welfare of a child, second-degree assault and first-degree sexual abuse. He pleaded not guilty and was remanded to the Niagara County Jail on $10,000 bail.

Falls traffic stop leads to felony DWI charges

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NIAGARA FALLS – A woman found to be driving drunk early today faces a felony charge after officers found she was previously convicted of driving while intoxicated, city police reported.

Cheryl D. Paterson, 52, of 87th Street, was followed from 87th Street and Bollier Avenue to Tuscarora Road and Niagara Falls Boulevard, where she was stopped and charged just after midnight with failure to stop at a stop sign, failure to signal a turn, and felony DWI, police said.

Lewiston man stabbed in face during argument

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LEWISTON – Lewiston Police continue to investigate a stabbing in the 2200 block of Mount Hope Road Sunday.

The victim, John P. Hill, 37, Mount Hope Road, was found walking in front of the house bleeding severely from the left side of his face, according to Niagara County sheriff’s deputies, who assisted in the case.

Hill suffered a cut to his face, which extended from his left eye to his lower jaw, and went completely through his cheek, according to deputies. Hill was taken by ambulance to Erie County Medical Center, where he was treated and released.

Hill named a male relative as a suspect in the stabbing. The suspect left the area before police arrived and deputies said they were unable to locate him.

Lewiston Police have not announced any arrests or any details of the first-degree assault with a weapon case.

Lockport woman pleads guilty in check fraud case

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LOCKPORT – Shana L. Wallace, 21, of Lock Street, one of four women charged in a check fraud scheme, pleaded guilty Wednesday in State Supreme Court, where Justice Richard C. Kloch Sr. set sentencing for Feb. 27.

Wallace admitted to two misdemeanor counts of third-degree criminal possession of a forged instrument.

Co-defendant Tasheen N. Dillard, 32, of Cedar Avenue, Niagara Falls, faces 69 counts of passing bogus checks and fraudulently using credit cards between April and July of this year. Others indicted in the case are Akeyta M. Fambo, 28, of West Avenue, Buffalo; Demetrius M. Davis, 33, of 16th Street, Niagara Falls; and Krystal H. Pesoncko, 21, of Johnson City, near Binghamton.

Grand Island man takes plea during DWI trial

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LOCKPORT – A Grand Island man cut short his jury trial on a felony drunken driving charge in Niagara County Court Tuesday by accepting a plea offer to misdemeanor driving while intoxicated.

Timothy J. Homa, 29, of East River Road, is to be sentenced Feb. 26 by County Judge Matthew J. Murphy III.

Homa was arrested May 20 in North Tonawanda, after his vehicle became stuck after allegedly striking a planter box made of railroad ties in a parking lot on Manhattan Street.

North Tonawanda man sentenced to three years on drug charge

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LOCKPORT – A man who flunked out of court-supervised treatment programs for drug addiction and mental illness was sentenced to three years in prison Wednesday by Niagara County Judge Sara Sheldon Farkas.

Thomas J. Anderson, 40, of Wheatfield Street, had pleaded guilty last year to fifth-degree criminal possession of a controlled substance, for having cocaine with him when North Tonawanda police stopped his car March 7, 2011.

At first, Anderson was assigned to the judicial diversion program of court-supervised drug treatment, but after failing there, Farkas placed him in Niagara Falls mental health court. He failed to follow its rules, too.

“I hear voices all day, every day,” Anderson said in court Aug. 20. “The only way they stop is when I take drugs.”

Lockport teen struck by motorist on Transit Street

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LOCKPORT – Mercy Flight was called when a 15-year-old city boy was injured this morning after he was hit by a car while crossing South Transit Street at Lincolnshire Drive.

The boy, whose name was not released, suffered a leg injury in the crash, which occurred about 11 a.m., city Police Capt. Michael Niethe said.

The driver, who was headed northbound on South Transit at the time of the crash was not charged.

“[The teen] just dashed out of Lincolnshire and ran across the street, the driver never saw him,” Niethe said.

Medina tech firm may relocate entirely to Lockport

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WHEATFIELD – Trek Inc., the Medina electronic instrument company that moved its research and development department to Lockport last year, may move the rest of its operations to Lockport next year.

Trek has agreed in principle to a lease on Building 4 of Harrison Place, the former Harrison Radiator Division plant at Walnut and Washburn streets in Lockport, City Planning and Development Director R. Charles Bell said.

“It’s not a done deal, but we’re on the 5-yard line,” Mayor Michael W. Tucker said.

Wednesday, the Niagara County Industrial Development Agency received an application from 210 Walnut LLC, the city-controlled owner of the plant, for a 20-year property tax break on Building 4. Although it’s controlled by the City of Lockport, 210 Walnut is technically a private, taxable entity.

Bell said Trek’s 10-year lease on the 96,000-square-foot, three-story building includes a five-year renewal clause as well as an option to buy the building outright.

Trek has outgrown its current 30,000-square-foot plant on Salt Works Road in Medina, said Michael C. Dehn, president of the company.

It would be the anchor tenant the city has been hoping for since the Greater Lockport Development Corp., the city’s development agency, seized the 461,000-square-foot Harrison complex in 2006 because a previous owner defaulted on loans from the agency.

“When GLDC took it back a long time ago, this was the dream project,” Tucker said.

Bell said Trek’s original interest was in vacant land at Summit Street and State Road. The city announced during the summer that a “light manufacturing” company was interested in that site. However, the city talked Trek into looking into moving its 72 Medina employees to Harrison Place instead.

Dehn said it took eight to 10 months for the deal to come together, and at first, he was highly skeptical of the old plant.

“It was something that at first seemed really far-fetched,” he said. “We thought it was insane, that’s not a fit for us.”

But upon doing his research about adaptive reuse of old industrial buildings, he came around to the city’s way of thinking. “We wanted to create an image,” he said. “To do that with a new building would have been cost-prohibitive.”

Bell said the GLDC is expected to bear the $4 million cost of making the first two floors ready for Trek’s office and manufacturing operations. He said the city agency needs a bank loan to make that happen, and a low-ball bank appraisal of the property still could torpedo the deal. The Planning Board needs to OK subdividing the property.

Dehn said an internal survey showed about 90 percent of the current Medina workforce is willing to drive to Lockport for work, as the 23 workers in the company’s tech center at 57 Canal St. already do. Also, 24 additional office and production jobs are to be created within three years.

Dehn said the company considered moving to South Carolina or even shifting manufacturing to Japan, where it has some operations. It has not ruled out those options completely, but Trek likes Lockport because it already has a location there and because it is closer than Medina to the University at Buffalo, where it recruits many of its new employees.

Dehn said the existing Trek plant is to be sold to Takeform Architectural Graphics, a Medina sign company that needs more space.

The Building 4 tax break would begin with a five-year, 100 percent property tax exemption, since the complex is located within Lockport’s Opportunity Zone, an IDA program for depressed downtowns.

After that would come a 15-year payment-in-lieu-of-taxes, or PILOT, arrangement. The deal also involves an exemption from paying sales tax on building materials, equipment and furnishings for the plant, and a break on paying mortgage recording taxes.



email: tprohaska@buffnews.com

Lockport receives offer to buy Sprint’s lease

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:LOCKPORT – Mayor Michael W. Tucker and Corporation Counsel John J. Ottaviano told the Common Council on Wednesday that the city has received an offer to buy Sprint’s lease on cellphone tower space atop the Outwater Park water tower.

In 2000, the Council approved a 25-year deal with Sprint, in which the communications company agreed to pay the city $15,408 per year for the use of the tower. The city would collect $184,896 over the next 12 years if it kept the lease. However, Landmark Dividend of El Segundo, Calif., is offering to buy the lease for a lump sum, an amount that Ottaviano said is still being negotiated.

Landmark, described on its website as the nation’s leader in cellular and billboard ground leases, would collect Sprint’s annual payments, while the city would keep ownership of the tower. Ottaviano suggested that the city should seek a bid from one of Landmark’s competitors, Unison Site Management of New York City.

No foul play suspected in Lockport unattended death

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LOCKPORT – No foul play is suspected in the unattended death of a 56-year-old Grand Street woman found in her home on Wednesday.

There were earlier reports that had called the case a homicide, but police say at this point no foul play is suspected.

Capt. Richard Podgers, chief of detectives, on Thursday said the woman was found not breathing Wednesday morning. Lockport Fire Department paramedics responded and the woman was pronounced deceased by the coroner.

“There were no outward signs of trauma,” Podgers said. “At this time it is being investigated as an unattended death.”He said there may have been some misinformation in the public because a police car remained at the house throughout the day and the home was held as a crime scene.

“We were following protocols. The coroner ordered an autopsy and we held the scene pending the outcome of an autopsy,” Podgers said. He said an autopsy was being performed Thursday.



email: nfischer@buffnews.com

Fire destroys Rathke Road house

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WRIGHTS CORNERS – Two volunteer fire departments responded to a fire in a small wood-frame house on a dead-end street behind the Tops Plaza in Wrights Corners just before 1 p.m. today.

No injuries were reported, but the home of Duane and Donna Goff, at 3971 Rathke Heights, was considered a total loss. Red Cross was called to assist the Goffs, who were the only residents.

Niagara County Sheriff’s Deputy Jared C. Ander arrived first, four minutes after dispatchers received reports of a fire, and said he found smoke coming from the eves on the second floor. Ander said he kicked in a rear door to see if anyone was inside and confirmed that the house was empty.

Donna Goff arrived shortly after and told patrol that she had been gone for an hour. She said there were no wood stoves or fireplaces inside the residence. The cause of fire remains under investigation. No monetary estimate of the loss was given.

Wrights Corners and Miller Hose volunteer fire departments responded.

Lockport man charged with rape for alleged relationship with teen

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LOCKPORT – A Lockport man was arrested by state troopers today after an investigation into his allegedly illegal sexual activities with a teenage girl in the Village of Barker last year, State Police officials here reported.

Martimiano Vasquez-Santiago, 32, of Locust Street was remanded to Niagara County Jail following his arraignment in Lockport Town Court on two counts of third-degree rape and charges of child endangerment and unlawfully dealing with a child.

After the State Police received a report about Vasquez-Santiago having sex with a then-15-year-old girl in Barker late in 2011, they gathered evidence indicating he’d had sexual intercourse with the juvenile on two occasions and provided her with alcohol on at least one of those occasions.

He faces further proceedings in Lockport Town Court at 6 p.m. Jan. 3.

Town of Lockport may try to seize GM land

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LOCKPORT – The Town of Lockport is ready to fight General Motors over a plan to expand the town’s industrial park.

The town Industrial Development Agency’s board of directors voted unanimously Thursday to begin the process of using its power of eminent domain to take 91 acres of GM’s land adjoining the industrial park.

The board set a public hearing on the idea for 7 p.m. Jan. 24.

“This is a first step that is required for an eminent domain taking of real property. It doesn’t obligate the board to go forward,” Town Attorney Daniel E. Seaman said.

The IDA has been trying to purchase land from GM since 2010, Executive Director David R. Kinyon said.

“We haven’t come to any meeting of the minds in previous times,” Seaman said.

He wouldn’t say what the hang-up was, but his law partner, Morgan Jones, said at the IDA meeting that GM offered a large piece of property, “including some land we’re not particularly interested in.”

GM owns about 120 acres, roughly bounded by Junction Road, the southern edge of the industrial park and the Lockport Energy Associates cogeneration power plant. The vacant land lies west of the GM Components plant, formerly Delphi and before that Harrison Radiator.

GM spokesman Bob Wheeler did not respond to requests for comment from the company Thursday.

The 200-acre industrial park is home to 15 businesses with a total of 417 employees. As a result of recent deals, including the sale of property for the Yahoo data center and its possible future expansion, and a planned business incubator project by McGuire Development, the park has only 52 unsold acres.

“We’re getting to the point where we need more property to accomplish the mission of the IDA,” Seaman said.

The IDA normally holds breakfast meetings, so Seaman said the nighttime public hearing shows “the importance of the action.”

The list price for land in the industrial park is $25,000 per acre, but the IDA charged Yahoo $15,000 an acre for its first 30-acre purchase in 2009, and $16,237 per care for its 12-acre acquisition in October.

Seaman said that deal is moving faster than expected and may close by the end of the year.

In other matters, the IDA board approved a land swap with McGuire. The developer gave up an option on two acres just south of the Yahoo data center in exchange for an option on two acres to the east, on the side of IDA Park Drive, opposite the data center.

The land McGuire is giving up is just west of the three-acre site of the planned incubator, for which it paid $15,000 an acre.

The board also accepted the resignation of Paul J. Haber, who has served on the board since 1997.



email: tprohaska@buffnews.com

Barker library plans to change funding stream

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The Barker Free Library is seeking a new way to stabilize its finances in uncertain budget times.

The library wants funding from school taxes rather than yearly budget appropriations, which are more uncertain year to year.

Library leaders have completed a petition drive to force a vote on the issue during school budget time next year.

Without the more stable funding stream, the library will have to deplete its dwindling reserve fund and reduce services, officials say.

“There would be reductions for some of our [programs] because we can’t afford to go the way we are,” said Roy Anderson president of the library board.

A “yes” vote during the May budget vote would designate the library as an official “school district public library.”

The label doesn’t mean students will be flocking to the library, and the district would actually have no direct control over the library’s operations.

But taxpayers who cast their vote next year on the Barker school budget would also vote on a funding proposal for the library.

“With community-based funding, we will be able to ensure that our library continues to provide everyone the opportunity for lifelong learning and public access to the latest technologies,” Anderson said.

The move is an attempt to stabilize the library’s finances at a time when towns and villages are confronting worsening budget problems, officials said.

Library officials recently presented the plan to the School Board, which will not actually decide the issue on its merits.

The board instead is charged only with setting a date for a vote on the issue.

“It’s not a contentious [issue],” School Superintendent Roger J. Klatt said. “We just are trying to make sure the procedural details are being followed.”

Library officials said the change also complies with a State Board of Regents policy urging libraries to shift tax support from municipal general funds to direct public votes.

The school district would collect tax money for the library and turn the funds over to the library board, officials said.

Library leaders say enrollment at the branch has tripled since 2005 to nearly 1,000 members.

“We find that as the economy is bad, library users have gone up, because it’s a great, reasonable place to get entertained,” Anderson said.

A vote on the measure is likely to take place during the May school budget vote or around that time, Klatt said. The board will likely determine a final date next month.

More information will be posted online at www.barkerfreelibrary.com, and officials plan a series of public meetings before votes are cast.



email: cspecht@buffnews.com

Restitution, probation ordered in $337,541 theft from employer

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An embezzler who sold her home to pay back some of the money she stole from her Buffalo employer was ordered Thursday to also pay $300 a month in additional restitution for the next 10 years.

Janice Kaled, however, avoided a prison term at her Erie County Court sentencing.

Kaled, 53, was sentenced to five years’ probation for stealing $337,541 between January 2005 and December 2011 from Unlimited Energy Inc. of Buffalo. She pleaded guilty to second-degree grand larceny for the theft and first-degree offering a false instrument for filing for not reporting the money on her state tax return.

The net proceeds from selling her home totaled $40,527, which Kaled has already turned over to the employer. “That’s about all the money she’s got,” defense lawyer Joel L. Daniels said of the sale proceeds.

The company also received $25,000 from an insurer and $40,000 from HSBC Bank, which cashed her forged checks, said John C. Doscher, head of the Erie County District Attorney’s Special Investigations Bureau, who prosecutes embezzlers and others accused of financial crimes.

If Kaled makes all of her monthly restitution payments, that would total $36,000.

In all, the most the company can expect to recoup is $141,527 – about 42 percent of its loss.

“We certainly would have liked it to be more,” Doscher said.

But that is more than victimized companies usually get back, he said.

Erie County Judge Sheila A. DiTullio said she sought to strike a balance with her sentence, one that punishes the Lockport woman but also tries to get back money for the victimized business owner.

The judge called repaying the victim a priority and noted that Kaled sold her home to pay some restitution. “You sold your home, which was big,” DiTullio said.

Kaled now has two minimum-wage jobs, working 40 to 60 hours a week cleaning floors at one job and selling merchandise in a store at her other job.

“I give you credit for that,” DiTullio said.

DiTullio decided not to order Kaled to perform community service, saying she would rather Kaled work and earn money to keep up with the restitution payments.

Living in an apartment with her 16-year-old daughter, “she lives on a shoestring now,” Daniels said.

Kaled’s former employer attended the sentencing and also sent the judge a letter but opted not to make a victim-impact statement during the hearing.

Daniels said Kaled did not have a prior criminal record and did not gamble away the stolen money at a casino.

While the judge referred to financial problems Kaled has experienced, Daniels did not say how she spent the hundreds of thousands of dollars she stole.

“I want to say how truly sorry I am for what I have done,” Kaled said.

She said she let down her former boss. “I’m truly sorry for what I did to him and his family,” she said. “I will do whatever it takes to pay him back.”



email: plakamp@buffnews.com

Schumer urges fast-tracking of parkway reconfiguration

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NIAGARA FALLS — U.S. Sen. Charles E. Schumer, D-N.Y., called Thursday for a regional transportation agency to help speed up the reconfiguration of the Robert Moses Parkway south section.

Schumer urged leaders at the Greater Buffalo-Niagara Regional Transportation Council to prioritize federal highway funds for the final design of the new parkway.

State officials last week unveiled initial designs for the parkway’s southern section near the entrance to Niagara Falls State Park.

The project, which aims to connect the city to its waterfront, still lacks roughly $15 million in funding, officials said.

Schumer said the new design plan is a way of “finally dealing with the poor urban planning choices of the city’s past.”

Lockport development agency gives approvals for Trek deal

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LOCKPORT – The City of Lockport’s development agency met twice Thursday to give the green light to several aspects of the planned move of Trek Inc. from Medina to the former Harrison Radiator plant at Walnut and Washburn streets.

In a morning meeting, the Greater Lockport Development Corp. board gave city leaders the go-ahead to negotiate a lease with the electronic instrument company, which is highly interested in moving its entire operation to Building 4 in what is now called Harrison Place.

Trek’s research and development department moved to Lockport’s Canal Street last year and would stay put.

City Planning and Development Director R. Charles Bell said the Harrison Place lease isn’t complete.

The city is counting on Trek paying enough in the 10-year lease to cover the costs of the bank loan the GLDC will have to take out to pay for the $4 million renovation of the 96,000-square-foot, three-story unheated Building 4 before it’s turned over to Trek.

Bell said the GLDC board has yet to approve the terms of the loan, which is expected to come from Five Star Bank.

But it did approve the use of $250,000 of the development agency’s own money toward the renovation project.

Harry Sicherman, the city’s economic development consultant, said it’s unclear if the loan will be ready for approval at next Thursday’s regular GLDC meeting.

Bell said the city also has applied for a $500,000 state grant for the work, with an announcement of whether that was approved expected to come next week.

And if the grant isn’t approved?

“We’ll be scrambling,” Bell said.

The GLDC board reconvened Thursday evening to approve a contract with David R. Chamberlain of Lockport to be the construction contractor on the Building 4 job, but the financial terms of that agreement aren’t finalized yet, either.

Chamberlain’s job will include asbestos investigation and removal, as well as any interior demolition that may be required.

Trek has outgrown its Salt Works Road plant and aims to move 72 office and production jobs to Harrison Place. It expects to add 24 more jobs within three years. The company already has 23 workers in its research center on Canal Street.

The company had considered relocating elsewhere, but Lockport seems to be its first choice.



email: tprohaska@buffnews.com
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