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The Boston Globe from Boston, Massachusetts • 60

Publication:
The Boston Globei
Location:
Boston, Massachusetts
Issue Date:
Page:
60
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

62 THE BOSTON GLOBE WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 5. 1986 3 men arrested in Florida homes in connection with 1984 Revere murder TV notes CBS adaptation of 'Deadly Force' draws fire lice intelligence, Simard and Cutler are reputed members of the Hell's Angels, while Bufalino is a close associate of the Trampers. "DeNino gave the Angels bad coke," said one source. "After the Angels put a contract out on him, the Trampers were guarding him for a while, but they set him up." Burke, Simard, and Bufalino are charged with murder and conspiracy to murder. Cutler is charged with conspiracy to murder.

Simard and Cutler, who were arrested by local police and state police assigned to the office of Suffolk County District Attorney Newman A. Flanagan, pleaded not guilty at an arraignment yesterday in Chelsea District Court. Simard was ordered held without bail, while Cutler was being held on $200,000 bail, both pending a Feb. 13 court hearing. Acting on information supplied them by Massachusetts authorities.

FBI agents arrested Burke at his home in West Palm Beach. Proceedings to extradite him to Massachusetts began yesterday. By Kevin Cullcn and Paul Feeney Globe Staff Three men wanted in connection with the 1984 execution-style slaying of a Revere man, which police said stemmed from a drug deal involving members of rival motorcycle clubs, were arrested at their homes yesterday in Massachusetts and Florida. Arrested at about 6:30 a.m. without incident were Edward R.

'Simard, 34, of Chestnut Street. "Lynn, Alan J. Cutler, 34, of Mid- land Avenue, Saugus. and John L. Burke, 36, a former Revere man now living in West Palm Beach, Fla.

A murder warrant has also been issued for Darin Bufalino, -24, of Revere, who has been a fugitive on unrelated charges. The suspects are charged in the shooting death of Vincent "DeNino, 27, of Revere, whose body was found in the parking lot of a Revere supermarket on Feb. 29, 1984. DeNino had been shot once in the left shoulder and four times in b.r 'u-ad, police said. An autopsy determined he had died approximately 24 hours before being found, according to Sgt.

James C. Sartori, a state police spokesman. Assistant Suffolk District Attorney Robert Nelson said when DeNino refused to pay Simard about $10,000 he owed him for a drug deal, DeNino allegedly was lured to Cutler's home, where he was shot in the shoulder with a shotgun. DeNino allegedly was then dumped in his car and was shot in the head execution-style. According to state and local police sources, DeNino was killed in a dispute over a cocaine sale he made to members of the Hell's Angels motorcycle club.

Sources said after learning the Angels had put a contract out on his life, DeNino sought protection from the Trampers, a rival motorcycle gang based in East Boston. However, law enforcement sources said, DeNino's murder was apparently carried out with the approval of members from both clubs. According to state po By Ed Siegel Globe Staff Lawrence O'Donnell author of "Deadly Force," is not particularly happy about the shape the CBS TV-movie based on the book is taking. "That's the understatement of ithe year," said O'Donnell, whose book dealt with James Bowden, a black man fatally shot in Roxbury in 1975 by two Boston police officers. Five years later a federal jury found that the shooting was unjustified and awarded the man's widow $250,000.

"My assessment," said O'Donnell, whose father was one of the lawyers for the Bowden family, "Is that it will be a very good TV-movie because it has a perfect cast and it had a great script which was harmed in small but significant ways. The script (written by Dennis Nemec) was so good at the outset that it couldn't be damaged beyond recognition. The script went from an A to a because of the director Michael Miller." According to O'Donnell, an associate producer on the film, "They tried to insert a character into the scene of the killing who wasn't there. The director wanted to have an altar boy in full dress walking down Smith Street at 6:30 at night. This was to convey he is an innocent young man, the to O'Donnell, eventually said it wouldn't be necessary and t.iat they would reinstate the scene, but he later found out that the scene was shot without them.

The complaints from O'Donnell aren't the only problems the producers have been facing. Boston Police have refused paid security details for the film and the department has had to assign officers on regular duty. According to Frank McGee, chief counsel for the Boston Police Patrolmen's Association, "We met with the producer two months ago and we told him we couldn't see the point of raking all this up after 10 years, that it would dam-) age all the healing that Ray Flynn and others have done. We also mentioned that we thought the O'Donnell book was an attack on the Boston police. He asked us to leave it up to the individual officers regarding paid duty and; that's what we've done.

So far, no officer has accepted that duty." McGee added that the use of" Boston Police on regular beats to supervise the shooting has two negative results: 1) The City of Boston is paying for police super-1 vision rather than CBS or the pro- ducers and 2) areas of the city downtown, East Boston and Charlestown are understaffed. -Nancy Sterling Gleason, spokes-! woman for the department, said that the city would have to pay, but that using policemen on regu-lar details has not had a negative impact on public safety and the police serving on these details could be pulled off if events war- ranted. was rampant Eventually the legal people forced him to take the cassock and surplice off. So he walks down the street in street clothes and then you cut to a police car on a stakeout and you have one of the cops react, 'Hey, that might be The other cop calms him down and then the kid passes out of the scene. It was' reckless for a million reasons.

For one, it's grossly unfair to the police, that they were ready to shoot an altar boy. That was the invention that had to be fought the hardest." Michael Lepner, executive producer of the film, said, "None of that is true, but I'm not going to respond to what Mr. O'Donnell said. The proof is what is ultimately on the screen. I have enormous respect for the director and I have no doubt that this will be a great television movie.

O'Donnell was also upset at the deletion of his mother and sister from the final scene, in which Bowden's widow wins the verdict. "This is a family story It is the coming together of two families in troubled times one white family, one black family in the first year of school busing. For them to become such friends is one of the most fundamental textures of the film. It is absolutely inconceivable when it comes to the climax that the O'Donnell women are busy doing something else." O'Donnell said that when the producers told him the two women weren't available for the scene because of other commitments, he offered to "buy the scene" for $5,000. The producers, according t0- jf -r OiwJimiJL JLUJUL wiflJLij jJLi4A JslLIJIjpdcc IH'rjl pNtfii sA-" only way a hack director like this can convey innocence The director is Irish himself and he likes to throw words like 'blarney' into the script.

He wanted the woman playing my mother to use the word, that kind of stuff Rain tapering to showers, 40s 7 p.m., EDT, forecast and highs for Wednesday, February 5. 4 The cost of medical care is rising at an alarming rate. Why? And, if the current trend continues, how will you be able to afford quality care? Join medical reporter, Jeanne Blake, for an Eyewitness News special series report. Health At Any Cost? Tonight 6pm WBZ-TV 4 The Station New England Turns To. For 10 weeks, seventhgraders at the Agassiz School inCambridge National Weather Service Boston area: Rain, tapering to showers then ending.

Chance of rain 70 percent. Winds becoming westerly at 10-15 m.p.h., highs in mid- to upper 40s (8-9 C). Tonight, fair, lows 30-35 (-1 to 1 C). Tomorrow, becoming mostly cloudy, highs falling through 30s (-1 to 4 C). Massachusetts, Rhode Island, Connecticut: Rain, tapering to showers then ending, highs in mid- to upper 40s.

Tonight, fair, lows 30 to 35. Tomorrow, becoming mostly cloudy, highs falling through 30s. Cape Cod and Islands: Rain, tapering to showers then ending. Chance of rain 70 percent. Winds becoming westerly at 10 to 15 m.p.h., highs in mid- to upper 40s.

Tonight, variable cloudiness, lows 30 to 35. Tomorrow, mostly cloudy, chance of snow late in day, highs falling through 30s. Chance of snow 30 percent. Massachusetts coastal marine forecast: Shifting winds around 15 knots, becoming westerly during day then northerly 20 to 30 knots tonight. Visibility under 1 mile in rain and fog at night.

Average seas 4 to 6 feet. Maine, New Hampshire: Snow north, mixed precipitation ending south, accumulations of 1 to 3 inches north and 3 to 5 inches interior south, highs in 20s north to 30s south. Tonight, clearing, lows 5 to 10 north, teens and 20s south. Tomorrow, partly sunny, highs in teens north and mostly 20s south. Vermont: Freezing rain, tapering to scattered showers or flurries, highs in low to mid-30s.

Tonight, clearing, lows 10 to 20. Tomorrow, mostly s.unny, increasing clouds south of Rutland, highs in 20s. tradedinore wffi lunches. I b. RSV F.

i-hunis: warm rjoio Occluded -w Stationary National Weather Service NOAA. US Dept ot Commerce Showers Rain Flurries Snow THE NATIONAL FORECAST: Showers and thunder-showers will dampen the southern Plains across the lower Mississippi and Tennessee valleys to the southern Atlantic Coast and northern Florida with rain-showers from the mid-Atlantic Coast to the Ohio and middle Mississippi valleys; scattered rain and snow-showers from the central Plains to the Great Lakes; freezing rain, sleet and snow across upstate New York; and rain along the northern Pacific Coast with scattered rain from the northern Plateau to northwest Montana and over northern Arizona. MINIATURE ALMANAC Wednewday, Feb. 1986 (Extern Standard Time) Sunrise 6:54 Moonrise 4:31 am Sunset 5:03 Moonset 1:03 pm Length of day 10:09 Day of year 36 AM PM HIGH TIDE 7:33 8:15 Hgt. of tide 10.1' 8.5 LOW TIDE 1:15 2:05 Hgt.

of low tide 0.6' MOON PHASES Last Quarter March 3, 7:18 am New Moon Feb. 8, 7:57 pm First Quarter Feb. 16, 2:56 pm Full Moon Feb. 24, 10:03 am US CITIES Temperature and precipitation ending 8 p.m. (EDT) yesterday.

Forecast is for today, missing. City High Low Prec. Frett Albany 27 16 0 cloudy Albuquerq 49 24 0 cloudy Anchorage 28 20 0 cloudy Asheville 68 49 0 rain Atlanta 70 49 0 rain AtlanticClty 40 36 .64 cloudy Austin 78 58 .07 clear Baltimore 40 35 .63 rain Birmingham 74 55 0 rain Bismarck 30 23 0 cloudy Boise 47 31 0 cloudy Buffalo 38 28 .25 cloudy Chrlstn.SC 74 57 0 cloudy Chrlstn.WV 68 51 .21 rain Chrltte.NC 71 44 0 rain Cheyenne 37 26 0 cloudy Chicago 37 32 .70 cloudy Cincinnati 61 47 .92 rain Cleveland 58 34 .77 cloudy Colmbia.SC 76 43 0 cloudy "i fi lls FOREIGN CITIES Weather and temps yesterday. Local temp. City Weather Tim Aberdeen ptly cldy noon 39 4 Amsterdam clear 1pm 30 -1 Ankara ptly cldy 2pm 25 4 Athens cloudy 2pm 45 7 Auckland cloudy noon 70 21 Beijing clear 8pm 22 5 Berlin clear 1pm 24 -5 Bonn cloudy 1pm 33 1 Cairo cloudy 2pm 65 18 Casablanca ptly cldy noon 58 15 Copenhagen ptly cldy 1pm 29 2 Dakar ptly cldy noon 66 19 Dublin rain noon 37 3 Geneva cloudy 1pm 32 0 Helsinki cloudy 2pm 21 -6 Jerusalem ptly cldy 3pm 54 12 Lisbon ptly cldy noon 50 10 London rain noon 37 3 Madrid cloudy 1pm 30 -1 Malta rain 1pm 50 10 Manila ptly cldy 8pm 82 28 Moscow snow 3pm 2-17 Nairobi ptly cldy 3pm 81 27 Nassau clear 7am 61 16 New Delhi clear 5pm 74 23 Nice ptly cldy 1pm 55 13 Oslo cloudy 1pm 18 -8 Paris clear 1pm 38 4 Pretoria ptly cldy 2pm 83 28 Riyadh clear 3pm 74 23 Rome ptly cldy 1pm 53' 11 Seoul ptly cldy 9pm 22 -5 Solia cloudy 2pm 20 6 Stockholm snow 1pm 20 -9 Sydney rain 10pm 73 23 i Taipei rain 8pm 56 13 Tokyo ptly cldy 9pm 39 4 Tunis ptly cldy 1pm 54 12 Vienna clear 1pm 28 2 Warsaw ptly cldy 1pm 18 -8 CLIMATE DATA 7 Tuesday.

Febroirt 4. 1986 BOSTON TEMPERATURES 4 Degrws High yesterday 33 tow 19 Mean 26 Departure from normal -3 Departure this month 1 Departure this year 62 BOSTON DEGREE-DAY DATA Degree-day units 39 Total this month 143 Total for season 3171 Total corres. date last year 3298 30-yr. normal, corres. date 3220 BOSTON PRECIPITATION Total 24 hours, ending 7 pm 0 00 Total this month to date 0 30 Departure from normal Total this year 3 72 Departure from normal SNOWFALL Inches Total today 0 00 Monthly total 4 5 Total for season 9 6 BAROMETER AT SEA LEVEL at 1 p.m.

30.29 in. 1025.7 mbs. at7p.m 30.18 in. 1022.0 mbs. 7p m.

relative humidity 82 YESTERDAY'S SUNSHINE INDEX 66 1 1 of possible. Boston record temps for February 5 are 64 in 1890 and -10 in 1918. EXTENDED FORECASTS Massachusetts, Rhode Island, Connecticut: Chance rain or snow Friday and Saturday, fair Sunday. Highs in 30s Friday and Saturday, mid-20s to mid-30s Sunday; lows in 20s Friday and Saturday, teens and 20s Sunday. Maine, New Hampshire: Fair Thursday through Saturday except for chance of snow south Saturday.

Highs 15 to 25 north and 25 to 35 south, lows 5 above to 5 below north and 5 to 15 south. Vermont: Chance of snow Friday, dry Saturday and Sunday. Highs 20 to 30; lows 5 to 15. uaiiasNWth ciouoy Denver 46 21 0 cloudy DesMoines 35 33 .86 cloudy Detroit 35 31 .69 cloudy ElPaso 53 39 .16 clear GrandRapids 33 29 1.02 cloudy GreatFalls 46 28 0 snow Honolulu 81 70 .41 cloudy Houston 73 58 2.69 cloudy Indianapolis 58 44 .80 rain Jcksn.Ms 67 62 1.15 rain Jacksnvll 80 49 0 cloudy KansasCity 40 35 .62 snow LasVegas 64 47 .01 cloudy LittleRock 69 59 .65 cloudy LosAngeles 76 52 0 cloudy Louisville 64 55 .35 rain Memphis 67 60 .90 rain MiamiBeach 75 70 0 clear Milwaukee 35 32 1.20 cloudy Mpls-StPI 32 30 0 cloudy Nashville 71 ,59 .01 rain NewOrlns 77 63 1.35 cloudy NewYork 35 30 .18 cloudy Norfolk. Va.

51 43 .10 rain OklhmaCity 64 49 0 cloudy Omaha 34 33 .19 cloudy Orlando 80 54 0 cloudy Philadelphia 34 33 .70 cloudy Phoenix 62 48 0 cloudy Pittsburgh 55 37 .75 rain Prtlnd.Or 49 44 .08 rain Raleigh 70 43 0 rain RapidCity 29 25 .06 cloudy Richmond 43 38 .36 rain StLouis 69 58 .15 rain StPete-Tmp 79 58 0 cloudy SaltLakeCity 40 33 0 cloudy SanOiego 64 53 .05 cloudy SanFrncsco 63 48 0 cloudy SanJuan.PR 79 70 .37 rain Seattle 50 46 .12 cloudy Spokane 36 33 0 cloudy Syracuse 28 25 .02 cloudy Topeka 40 37 1.15 cloudy Tucson 52 45 .09 cloudy Tulsa 60 55 0 cloudy Washington .38 36 .72 rain WilfSngtn.Del 35 34 .61 rain 'Our said team captain Daniel Thompson, "was simply to watch a stock take a large drop and then to invest in it since it had no place to go but up." "Now," says his teacher, "my students are reading The Globe every day to see what the market is doing." The Boston Globe is an educational tool for every classroom. To find out more, just write to us. It's the kids who profit from the experience. That's because their math teacher, Yolanda Rodriguez, got her class involved in The Boston Globe Stock Market Game. It's more than just a game.

It's a real-life way to reinforce the basics of education. For Rodriguez's kids the Game began with a mock bankroll of $100,000 which they turned into a mock portfolio of common stock worth more than $180,000, simulated money of course, making them winners in the junior highmiddle school division. PAN AMERICA Weather and temps yesterday. Local Temp. City Weather Tim Buenos Aires clear 9am 78 26 Caracas ptly cldy 8am 79 26 Lima clear 7am 69 21 Mexico City clear 6am 47 9 Santiago cloudy Bam 63 17 WEATHER RADIO The National Weather Service broadcasts 24-hour weather Information on 162.475 mHz at Boston and 162.55 mHz at Hyannis and Worcester.

HIGH TIDE AM M. Old Orchard, Me. 7:24 8:09 Hampton Beach, N.H 7:35 8:20 Plum Island 7:33 8:18 Ipswich 7:31 8:16 Gloucester 7:30 8:15 BOSTON AREA 7:33 8:18 Scituate 7:28 8:13 Plymouth 7:38 8:23 Cape Cod Canal (E) 7:32 8:17 Cape Cod Canal (W) 5:23 6:08 Falmouth 7:15 8:00 Hyannis Port 8:34 9:19 Chatham 8:03 8:48 Wellfleet 7:45 8:30 Provincetown 7:47 8:32 Nantucket Harbor 8:38 9:23 Oak Bluffs 8:03 8:48 New Bedford 4:16 5:01 Newport, R.I. 4:03 4:48 CANADA Reports at noon yesterday. Temp City Weather Calgary: clear 41 5 Edmonton clear 35 1 Montreal clear 27 -2 Regina clear 30 -1 Toronto cloudy 32 0 Vancouver cloudy 50 9 Winnipeg 27 -2 YOU'LL FIND IT ALL IN THE GLOBE.

She $oton 01obt To receive information on how to enroll your students write: Stock Game, Boston Globe, Boston, MA 02107. The Boston Globe Stuck Market Game is offered in cooperation with the Center for Economic Education. Boston University; The Business History and Economic Life Program, lc. Northeastern University; Securities Industry Associativa and The Boston Globe Newspaper in the Classroom Prom. MT.

WASHINGTON 6 p.m. Weather: cloudy; wind: SW 31 m.p.h.; temperature: 14; maximum: 15; minimum: precipitation: snow rppth: 6 inches.

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