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Cheating on fire exam is alleged
Written by Donovan Slack   
Monday, 07 January 2008

State officials are investigating whether a group of Boston firefighters cheated during a civil service promotional exam in November, taking turns going to the men's room, tapping out answers on their cellphones, and sending text messages to their colleagues in the testing room.

The state Human Resources Division confirmed that it received an anonymous complaint about cheating during a lieutenant exam taken by 186 firefighters and felt it credible enough to launch an investigation. If proved true, the allegations could force the agency to scrap the test results and administer a new test.

The division did not disclose details of the complaint. But the alleged scheme, said to have been carried out on Nov. 17, was described by three public officials who spoke on the condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the probe. The number of cheaters appears to have been fewer than 10, the officials said.

It would be the second time in less than a year that cheating was found to have occurred on a promotional exam for Boston public safety employees.

Results from a Boston Police Department detectives' exam had to be thrown out in July after officials discovered a number of test-takers had learned in advance that the test did not include questions from part of the study materials. That test was administered by a private contractor hired by the Police Department.

The latest allegations raise questions about the security of civil service examinations.

Last Updated ( Monday, 07 January 2008 )
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DA, lawyers laud Davis for drug evidence audit
Written by O’Ryan Johnson   
Monday, 07 January 2008

Boston police Commissioner Edward Davis is getting praise from defense lawyers and his one-time foe, Suffolk District Attorney Dan Conley, for his work in completing an exhaustive audit of 110,000 pieces of drug evidence that date back to 1990.

“As far as drugs go I don’t know many police departments that want to go back that far,” said Jack King, staff lawyer with the National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers.

King said many states use a system that destroys the drugs immediately after they return from a testing lab. Otherwise, he said, “they have a tendency to grow legs and walk away.”

That is exactly what a 14-month Police Department audit uncovered when it found 700 missing bags of drugs, and another 265 that had been tampered with, including some where a thief replaced narcotics with aspirin.

Davis wants state lawmakers to adopt a similar system to California, where drug destruction is mandated by law rather than on a case-by-case basis by a judge. Under existing law, in order for the Police Department to get rid of all the drugs in its inventory, judges would need to order each from the 74,465 cases destroyed.

In response to the audit’s shocking findings, Davis improved security and record-keeping at the evidence locker, which has been closed since December 2006.

Among the upgrades are a $100,000 computer system used for tracking drug evidence, more personnel added to the facility and a new system for organizing the bags of drug evidence.

“I welcome the commissioner’s reforms, which should avert the type of long-term neglect and mismanagement that allowed this corruption to occur in the first place,” Conley said.

Conley, along with Boston Police Department internal affairs and the FBI, has launched a criminal investigation into the missing and tampered-with drugs. The FBI is on hand for laboratory and technical support, Davis said. Massachusetts-based defense lawyer Tim Burke, who also represents the state police troopers union, said by doing the dirty work and uncovering the scandal, Davis has saved the department’s reputation in court.

“You have to start fresh,” he said. “That’s exactly what he’s done. I think it’s helped the credibility of their drug investigation tremendously.”

 
EMTs and City Reach Contract Agreement
Written by O'Ryan Johnson   
Monday, 31 December 2007

Massachusetts - The 25 men and women who became Boston's newest emergency medical technicians (EMT) graduated a day after their union and City Hall negotiated a landmark contract, and at the end of a year where their fellow workers responded to more than 100,000 calls, a record.

"It really is a new era," said Boston EMS Superintendent Richard Serino, who added that there were just 24 EMTs citywide when he started in 1973, and two ambulances, "Which often broke down."

The contract between the city and the Boston Police Patrolmen's Union/EMS Division was ratified last night, and for the first time gives EMTs the same pension benefits as police and firefighters.

It allows them to retire at age 55 after 32 years of service with a full pension, as opposed to the previous contract, which required EMTs to remain on the job until they reached age 62 in order to get full benefits, said union President Jamie Orsino.

The contract, similar to the previous one, called for a committee to create a drug-testing policy within 45 days. The last called for a committee to create drug-testing policy within a year.

The new contract will "make life easier" for EMTs, including the 25 newest recruits who gathered at Faneuil Hall for their graduation ceremony yesterday afternoon after 12 weeks of riding in Boston ambulances to learn the streets and neighborhoods.

During that training, graduates Kenneth Edwards and Ryan Hickey resuscitated Robert Gilroy, a Boston man who had a heart attack on Newbury Street. Gilroy accepted a bouquet of flowers from the lifesavers yesterday.

"I wouldn't be here without them," he said.

 
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    *13 Year Old Steals Dad's Credit Card to Buy Hookers* A 13 year old from Texas who stole his Dad's credit card and ordered two hookers from an escort agency, has today been convicted of fraud and given a three year community order. Ralph Hardy, a 13 year old from Newark, Texas confessed to...
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