Tag Archives: Cape Cod

Kelly Rowland Rescued After Private Boat Drifts Offshore

By The Huffington Post News Editors

PROVINCETOWN, Mass. — The Coast Guard says singer Kelly Rowland was among the passengers on a private boat escorted back to Cape Cod after the captain became disoriented.

Lt. Ruairi White tells the Cape Cod Times that the boat’s captain was following a commercial whale-watching vessel Friday, lost sight of the boat and became disoriented north of Provincetown.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Huffington Post

Body of confessed Boston Strangler exhumed for DNA

Investigators have unearthed the remains of a man who once confessed to being the Boston Strangler in a bid to use forensic evidence to connect him to the death of a woman believed to be the serial killer’s last victim.

A bevy of law enforcement officials surrounded Albert DeSalvo’s grave on a grassy plot near a lake for Friday’s exhumation, which lasted about an hour.

DeSalvo admitting killing Mary Sullivan and 10 other women in the Boston area between 1962 and 1964 in a series of slayings that became known as the Boston Strangler case. But he recanted in 1973 before dying in prison, where he was serving a life sentence for other crimes.

Authorities said Friday that they would take DeSalvo’s remains from Peabody to the medical examiner’s office in nearby Boston, where they’d take tissue or bone samples for DNA testing.

Police and prosecutors said on Thursday that, for the first time, they had DNA evidence linking DeSalvo to Sullivan’s death.

With a search warrant, authorities dug up DeSalvo’s remains because testing of DNA from the scene of Sullivan’s rape and murder had produced a match with him that excluded 99.9 percent of suspects. They are after a perfect match.

The breakthrough happened after scientific advances that authorities said became possible only recently. Police secretly followed DeSalvo’s nephew to collect DNA from a discarded water bottle to help make the connection.

Sullivan grew up on Cape Cod before moving to Boston when she was 19. A few days later, she was dead — raped and strangled in her new apartment.

Sullivan’s nephew, Casey Sherman, spent part of his life believing in DeSalvo’s innocence. But he said Thursday that the latest evidence points a different way.

Suffolk District Attorney Daniel Conley said the new evidence applies only to Sullivan’s homicide and not to the other Strangler-linked killings. He said some law enforcement officials still disagree about whether one person committed all 11 slayings.

On Friday, retired state trooper David Raymond and his friend Andy Brancato, whose late father knew DeSalvo and is buried in a nearby plot, watched the digging operation for about 15 minutes before authorities shooed them away.

“My father went to school with him,” Brancato said of DeSalvo. “He always said he was a little crazy but innocent.”

Raymond said seeing the digging brought him back to what he’d witnessed as a child, when he saw a crowd swarming in his neighborhood as police arrested DeSalvo.

“Coming from a police background, maybe we’ll have a case solved,” Raymond said.

DeSalvo, a blue-collar worker and Army veteran who was married with children, was never convicted of the Strangler slayings.

His relatives were “very emotionally distressed” by Friday’s exhumation, family attorney Elaine Sharp said.

“They didn’t even tell us when they were going to do it,” the attorney said. “They didn’t even extend us the courtesy of an invitation.”

Sharp has said that the family believes there still will be reasonable doubt that DeSalvo killed Sullivan, even if additional DNA tests show a 100 percent match. She has said private testing of Sullivan’s remains showed …read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News

Independent Bank Corp. First Quarter Earnings Press Release and Conference Call Announcement

By Business Wirevia The Motley Fool

Filed under:

Independent Bank Corp. First Quarter Earnings Press Release and Conference Call Announcement

ROCKLAND, Mass.–(BUSINESS WIRE)– Independent Bank Corp. (NAS: INDB) , parent of Rockland Trust Company, will release its first quarter earnings press release upon the close of business on Thursday, April 25, 2013. It will host its quarterly conference call to discuss first quarter results on Friday, April 26, 2013, at 10:00 AM Eastern Time. Telephonic access will be available by dial-in at 888-317-6016 reference: INDB. A replay of the call will be available by calling 877-344-7529, Replay Conference Number: 10027151, which will be available through May 9, 2013 at 9:00 AM Eastern Time.

Internet access to the call is available on the Company’s web site at http://www.RocklandTrust.com by choosing investor relations, First Quarter Earnings Conference Call. The webcast replay will be available until April 26, 2014.

Independent Bank Corp., which has Rockland Trust Company as a wholly owned bank subsidiary, currently has approximately $5.8 billion in assets. Rockland Trust provides a wide range of consumer, business, investment, and insurance products and services. Rockland Trust Company is a full-service community bank serving Eastern Massachusetts and Cape Cod. To find out more about the products and services available at Rockland Trust Company, please visit our website at www.RocklandTrust.com.

Independent Bank Corp.
Chris Oddleifson, 781-982-6660
President and
Chief Executive Officer
or
Denis K. Sheahan, 781-982-6341
Chief Financial Officer

KEYWORDS:   United States  North America  Massachusetts

INDUSTRY KEYWORDS:

The article Independent Bank Corp. First Quarter Earnings Press Release and Conference Call Announcement originally appeared on Fool.com.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

Independent Bank Corp. Announces Quarterly Dividend

By Business Wirevia The Motley Fool

Filed under:

Independent Bank Corp. Announces Quarterly Dividend

ROCKLAND, Mass.–(BUSINESS WIRE)– The Board of Directors of Independent Bank Corp. (NAS: INDB) , parent of Rockland Trust Company, today announced a $0.22 per share dividend which will be payable on April 12, 2013, to stockholders of record as of the close of business on April 1, 2013.

Independent Bank Corp., which has Rockland Trust Company as a wholly owned bank subsidiary, currently has approximately $5.8 billion in assets. Rockland Trust provides a wide range of consumer, business, investment, and insurance products and services. Rockland Trust Company is a full-service community bank serving Eastern Massachusetts and Cape Cod. To find out more about the products and services available at Rockland Trust Company, please visit our website at www.RocklandTrust.com.

Independent Bank Corp.
Chris Oddleifson, 781-982-6660
President and
Chief Executive Officer
or
Denis K. Sheahan, 781-982-6341
Chief Financial Officer

KEYWORDS:   United States  North America  Massachusetts

INDUSTRY KEYWORDS:

The article Independent Bank Corp. Announces Quarterly Dividend originally appeared on Fool.com.

Try any of our Foolish newsletter services free for 30 days. We Fools may not all hold the same opinions, but we all believe that considering a diverse range of insights makes us better investors. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

Mobile aerosol observing units deployed at Cape Cod

Bracing against -10 degree Celsius temperatures in Cape Cod, Massachusetts, Brookhaven atmospheric chemist Stephen Springston and his team recently completed a one-week restaging of two portable atmospheric sampling stations used for climate studies. Part of the Department of Energy’s Atmospheric Radiation Measurement (ARM) Climate Research Facility, the Mobile Aerosol Observing System (MAOS) consists of two compact, state-of-the-art instrument suites installed in modified shipping containers. The mobile units have complementary research objectives—one is specialized to conduct on-site measurements of aerosol samples, the other to examine the chemical composition of samples—and the two are deployed together. …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Phys.org

Massachusetts boy, 5, warned by school for making Lego toy gun

A 5-year-old boy in Massachusetts may be suspended after he reportedly built a toy gun out of Legos during an after-school program.

Joseph Cardosa, the student, is part of the after-school program at Hyannis West Elementary School, on Cape Cod, MyFoxBoston.com reported.

A few days ago, his parents received a letter that said the boy has received his first written warning for using toys inappropriately, and that upon a second written warning, he will be suspended from the program for two weeks.

The boy’s parents, Shelia Cruz and Octavio Cardosa, say the school is taking things too far.
“It’s not like he’s designing a machine gun,” said Cardosa. “I can understand with all the things that are going on right now in schools, but on the other hand, kids are taught you know ‘here’s a squirt gun, this is fun”

The principal of Hyannis West Elementary told MyFoxBoston.com “we need a safe enviornment for our students. While someone might think that making a Lego gun is just an action of a 5-year-old, to other 5-year-olds, that might be a scary experience.”

Click for more from MyFoxBoston.com

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News

Depression-era drainage ditches emerge as sleeping threat to Cape Cod salt marshes

Cape Cod, Massachusetts has a problem. The iconic salt marshes of the famous summer retreat are melting away at the edges, dying back from the most popular recreational areas. The erosion is a consequence of an unexpected synergy between recreational over-fishing and Great Depression-era ditches constructed by Works Progress Administration (WPA) in an effort to control mosquitoes. The cascade of ecological cause and effect is described by Tyler Coverdale and colleagues at Brown University in a paper published online this month in ESA‘s journal Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment.
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Phys.org

3 right whales saved from entanglement have babies

Four years after wildlife experts carefully cut away fishing line wrapped tight around its midsection, an endangered right whale that still bears a scar from the encounter returned to waters off the Georgia coast this month along with something to celebrate — a newborn calf by its side.

The new mom, known to its rescuers as Equator for the scar circling her belly, is one of three right whales spotted with babies this month off the Atlantic coast years after the adults had been freed from entanglement by humans. Experts said they rarely saw rescued whales move on to motherhood until a few years ago. They called the January sightings a success story for a critically endangered species believed to number 400 or fewer.

“Just until recently it was very rare. We hardly ever saw it,” said Jamison Smith, who heads the federal whale disentanglement program for the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. “It’s really exciting to see that we have three animals in one season.”

Right whales migrate to the warm waters off South Carolina, Georgia and Florida to give birth each year from mid-November through March. Conservationists conduct daily flights over the water during the calving season to photograph and report any mother-and-newborn pairs.

Two of the formerly ensnared whales were spotted off the 100-mile Georgia coast, said Clay George, who heads the right whale monitoring program for the Georgia Department of Natural Resources.

Equator and her calf were photographed Jan. 13 in waters near Little St. Simons Island. In December 2008, the same whale had shown up in Georgia waters trailing 300 yards of fishing line tangled in a knotted loop that was cutting into her midsection. A rescue team in a boat managed to get close enough to cut two of the three strands the whale was dragging. The last strand later fell off.

“At the time we had no idea if it was a male or female,” George said. “The whole time we’ve been doing disentanglements for the last six or seven years, we’ve been hoping a couple of these might survive and end up producing calves.”

A second whale, known as Arpeggio, was seen with its calf Jan. 14 near Jekyll Island and confirmed to have been saved from entanglement in 1999 in the Bay of Fundy off the coast of Nova Scotia.

Two days earlier, on Jan. 12, another new-mom right whale, nicknamed Wart, was photographed off Cape Cod, Mass., and later confirmed to have been ensnared and rescued in May 2010.

Freeing right whales caught up in fishing gear isn’t easy. It requires humans to get in close to the giant animals, which can exceed 50 feet in length, that are likely in pain and anxious. Some rescues are called off because they’re deemed too risky. And some researchers suspect disentanglement procedures can be so stressful that they inhibit a rescued whale’s ability to reproduce later.

According to NOAA, 40 whales of various species — including four right whales — were reported entangled in fishing gear last year off the Atlantic coast of North America. Rescue crews were dispatched in 18 of those cases, including two for the right whales.

Smith from NOAA said more rescued whales may be giving birth now because of improvements made in the past five years or so.

Wildlife agencies at the state level now have their own teams trained to free whales from entanglement, where once all they could do was attach tracking buoys to the animals and wait for national specialists to fly in a day or two later, Smith said.

And those teams are constantly adopting new tools that help them save whales from a distance. Wart, the right whale seen with her calf off Cape Cod, was freed by using a crossbow to fire a blade that cut lines wrapped over the whale’s head. Smith said other ensnared whales have been treated with sedatives and antibiotics delivered by a foot-long needle fired from a gun.

“This is, I think, a banner year for success of previous disentanglements,” Smith said.

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News