Tuesday, August 21, 2007

Internship Pt. 4: More Murder Story

Once the article appeared on Thursday (August 9), we began to receive feedback. Letters to the editor complained that Monica was much more than the "rocker chick" she was described as in the press. This was certainly true, but as we were putting the story together for deadline, all we (and other papers) had to go on was her myspace page.
The letters to the editor provided a glimpse into another side of her and also gave me sources to call for additional information. I felt that we needed to do more, even though a week after the murder, no new information had been released. I was glad that the editors decided to send me back to Bloomsbury.
My return was exactly one week after my first visit and much had changed. The street was no longer blockaded and there was no visible police presence. Some potted plants were left on Monica's front porch, but other than yellow crime scene tape across a side door, there was no sign a murder had occurred. Children laughed and yelled across the street from the scene at a church's vacation bible school. I wanted to try and find out more information and depict how the town was reacting to the unsolved crime. I talked to the director of the bible school and the pastor of the church. I went to borough hall, but unfortunately it was closed for the week. I talked to a few people on the street and went to the general store again for lunch. I didn't come away with any new information, but I did find that although daily activities were returning to normal, people were scared and frustrated. And that became the story.
When I returned to the newsroom, I called members of the town's Celebration Committee who had sent in a letter to the editor that we were running. This led to a long conversation that really gave readers a new view into who Monica was and how this small town was reacting to her death.
I was proud that we were able to bring attention to this woman and this small town that had been affected by this tragedy. My story ran along with an editorial that criticized the lack of information from public officials. This angered the state police, but really illustrates the role of the press in society. Public officials have a duty to provide citizens with the information they need to live their lives. I know this is an ongoing investigation and the police's first responsibility is to solve the murder and ensure the safety of everyone, but by not telling anyone anything other than "they do not believe anyone in Bloomsbury is in any immediate danger," leads to rumor, fear, and frustration.
It was this environment that I tried to describe in my story. The police weren't happy about it, but I hope the residents of Bloomsbury felt it accurately portrayed what they are going through.
It's now over four weeks since Monica Massaro's body was found. No one has been arrested, and no new information has been released.

28 comments:

  1. Anonymous11:31 PM

    Any connection to Bloomsbury murder?--------------------------

    Man hurt during home invasion
    Two men force their way into Phillipsburg apartment, police say.
    Wednesday, August 15, 2007
    By TOM QUIGLEY
    The Express-Times
    PHILLIPSBURG | Town police are investigating an armed home invasion Monday night at the Village Arms Apartments on Heckman Street, police report.

    Police said two black males in their early 20s and dressed completely in black entered the apartment and demanded money. One of the suspects came armed with a knife and at some point the victim was injured by it.





    The incident was reported to police at 9:05 p.m.

    Police did not identify the victim, who was treated for the knife injury and released. Police did not say if the victim was a male or female. No arrests had been made as of Tuesday night.

    Police said a dog in the apartment was also injured during the incident and the animal's condition is unknown.

    A teenaged boy answered the door at the apartment and said his parents did not want to talk about the incident.

    Neighbors described the victim as an elderly man. One neighbor said the elderly man's knee was bandaged.

    Another neighbor, Dawn Barnes, said police asked her if she saw anyone running from the area. She said she was inside her apartment with the air conditioning on when she noticed the police lights.

    "I came out on the steps watching them," Barnes said. "They were really looking for these two people."

    Barnes wondered why the suspects would choose this man as their victim.

    "They have money problems like everybody else," Barnes said of the victim. "I'm nervous as hell right now. This is too close to home."

    An investigation into the incident is ongoing.

    Police ask anyone with information to contact them at 908-454-1121.

    Reporter Tom Quigley can be reached at 908-475-8184 or by e-mail at tquigley@express-times.com.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Perhaps. There was also a comment left on a Courier-News article(http://www.c-n.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070802/NEWS/708020328)that illustrated violent home break-ins in the general area.
    I wish I knew. I feel bad for the family, friends, and neighbors of Monica. If the police are sure it was someone "knew the victim and her habits" why haven't they arrested anyone yet or at least released more information on the investigation?

    ReplyDelete
  3. Anonymous3:01 PM

    Tom,

    I have literally become obsessed with this case since I have found out about the murder. I have a friend/coworker who lives in Bloomsbury, not too far from Main Street. I was quite shocked to hear about such a gruesome murder happening in that quaint little town. Since reading about it I have done quite a lot of online research. It was extremely easy for me to locate Monica's home address in Bloomsbury using just the info she had provided on her NJragdoll myspace account:


    Screenname (which you could then search and find her firstname from someone else's blog)
    highschool and graduating year, which you could search and find her maiden name using her first name.
    And then her home address which you easily find on whitepages.com with her fullname.

    That was my first gut feeling that someone had found her online, saw her picture, read her blog, felt like they really knew her and then tracked her down. I could see how the police would think it was someone who knew her even if it wasn't.

    But then I started reading up on all the home invasions and crime in the area and saw it from another angle.

    The police have a tough job to do. They have a responsibility to provide some answers to reporters and the public, but they also have to have limits and not do or say anything that may compromise the investigation. I would advise neighbors to lock their doors, be careful and let the cops do what they have to do. I know it makes it a lot hard for a reporter, but you can find a way to work with the police so you both can do your jobs and get the info out there to the public so they can do what they have to do to be safe.

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  4. I know the police have a difficult job to do and sincerely believe they are working hard to find the killer. My only criticism is the lack of information they are releasing about the investigation. No one wants to compromise the investigation (we even decided not to publish some details), but people of that quaint little town deserve to know more than they do. I wish as a reporter I could have provided them with more information.
    But now, I return to my life as a high school teacher. I will be checking for new details on the case. After spending two days talking to residents, I have also become obsessed with it.

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  5. Finally, some news on a suspect! Of course, state police are still not commenting.
    Apparently, a truck driver who lives in North Carolina is being questioned in Massachusetts where he is being held for a home invasion and armed assault.
    Read more here: http://www.nj.com/news/index.ssf/2007/08/north_carolina_trucker_eyed_in.html
    And here is the article from The Sun in Lowell, Mass.
    http://www.lowellsun.com//ci_6592392?IADID=Search-www.lowellsun.com-www.lowellsun.com

    ReplyDelete
  6. Anonymous12:41 PM

    Tom, I believe this is the trucker they are questioning..


    Trucker Charged In Connection With Home Invasion
    Man Held Pending Dangerousness Hearing

    POSTED: 6:19 pm EDT July 30, 2007
    UPDATED: 6:46 pm EDT July 30, 2007

    LOWELL, Mass. -- A truck driver was arrested and charged in connection with a violent home invasion in Chelmsford early Monday morning.

    NewsCenter 5's Jim Boyd reported that Adam Lane, 42, was arraigned in Lowell District Court on Monday.

    "He was dressed in black head-to-toe with a mask. He was wearing gloves. He was in possession of two very large hunting knives," Chelmsford police Deputy Chief Scott Ubele said.



    Lane faces several charges in connection with the Pine Hill Road incident, including home invasion, assault with intent to rape, entering a home while armed, attempted murder and kidnapping.

    "I am terrified and angry. I really am angry that somebody would dare do something like that," neighbor Jo Tambo said.

    Police said Lane, of Jonesville, N.C., has no known ties to the homeowners. He is a long-range truck driver who delivers garden supplies along the East Coast.

    "We received a 911 call from the state police for an intruder in the home, and upon our officers' arrival, they found the homeowners struggling with the suspect," Ubele said.

    Lane was ordered held until Aug. 6 when he returns to court for a dangerousness hearing. Officials along the East Coast are investigating whether unsolved incidents in their communities can be linked to the Chelmsford home invasion.

    Copyright 2007 by TheBostonChannel.com. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

    ReplyDelete
  7. I think so. The mayor has even posted information for residents on the borough's website: http://www.bloomsburynewjersey.com He says a formal announcement will be made a 4 PM.
    He indicates the trucker has confessed and that he tried other houses on Main Street before hs found Monica's door unlocked.

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  8. Anonymous12:46 PM

    I just read your link to the Lowell article.

    What a nut!!! That poor woman. I feel horrible for her family and friends. It's a nightmare and too close to home.

    ReplyDelete
  9. I agree - very scary. What's even more disturbing is that, according to Bloomsbury's mayor, the trucker confessed to trying other doors on Main Street before he found Monica's door unlocked. He apparently walked down from one of the huge truck stops at the edge of town. I wonder if Chelmsford, MA also has a truck stop in it.

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  10. Anonymous12:59 PM

    I remember reading that Monica would leave her door open for the upstairs tenant, who would then lock it when she got home.

    ReplyDelete
  11. Anonymous1:19 PM

    re:Truckstop in Chemsford

    Rest stops a world of transients - and risk
    By Rita Savard, rsavard@lowellsun.com
    Article Last Updated: 08/03/2007 12:13:32 PM EDT


    CHELMSFORD -- Trucks belch exhaust, idling in the blazing afternoon sun.

    After clocking as many as 11 hours on the highway, drivers from around the country pull their rigs into the rest area on the northbound side of Interstate 495.

    It's where Adam Leroy Lane had his tractor-trailer parked about 3:30 a.m. Monday, when police say he armed himself with several knives, cut across the highway on foot and moved through the woods into a sleepy suburban neighborhood. The 42-year-old North Carolina trucker was arrested and charged with committing a violent home invasion on Pine Hill Road. Prosecutors say he planned to rape and murder a 15-year-old girl who was sleeping in her bed.

    From Los Angeles to Boston, to Bangor and back, hundreds of trucks pass through local rest areas on any given day. As law-enforcement officials investigate whether Lane might be connected to unsolved home invasions in other states, state police say area rest stops are being checked frequently.

    Rest areas, including the stations on I-495 north


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    and south in Chelmsford, are checked "a few times a night," said State Trooper Jim Burke of the Concord barracks.
    "We take notice if there's anybody in the woods, or anything else out of the ordinary," Burke said.

    An empty truck cab usually doesn't raise a red flag because "if there's no one visible in the truck, they're most likely sleeping in the back," Burke said.

    Federal law requires truckers to pull over after 11 hours of driving, and mandates 10 hours a day off the road.

    In Massachusetts, there are few commercial travel centers with 24-hour food courts and showers. So truckers depend on highway-shoulder rest areas with vending machines and bathrooms.

    At the I-495 north rest stop, Adrian Vasquez, a trucker from Dallas, sipped a Gatorade and munched on a snack bar. He spent Tuesday night there, sleeping inside his 70-foot rig.

    "At a rest area, you can pretty much do whatever you want," Vasquez said. "There's no one out here, except for a bunch of truck drivers."

    Vasquez, about 6 feet and 270 pounds, always tries to park under lights at night. But not a lot of rest areas are well-lit, he said.

    "The rest stop can be a scary place at night," Vasquez said. "You'll find that a lot of truckers carry knives, bats and guns for protection because you just never know what could happen. You're in a strange place every day, and let's face it, people can be strange."

    Vasquez said a better option for overnight stops, and to increase safety for truckers and residents, would be a 24-hour travel center in the vicinity of 495, equipped with a restaurant.

    Chelmsford Selectman Philip Eliopoulos, who vehemently fought having a truck stop on Route 3, said rest areas bring no value to a town. Also a former member of the Route 3 project advisory committee, Eliopoulos was one of several rest-area opponents who fought to have a former truck stop -- between exits 32 and 33 -- permanently removed from the new plan.

    "I can see how they benefit the highway," Eliopoulos said. "But they don't really benefit the communities that they're in. Just a blanket, no-facilities-type rest area can pose safety concerns. A commercial one is more monitorable."

    Following Monday's home invasion, local and state police are closely monitoring crime logs and travel records in the areas Lane has traveled around the East Coast and throughout the country.

    Lane departed Donald Burcham's Tree Farm in Fancy Gap, Va., last Friday at noon. Besides a couple of stops nearby York, Pa., Lane was headed to Uxbridge, then to Nashua. Burcham, who hired Lane six months ago, said Lane makes an average of four stops a week, all along the East Coast.

    About 4 a.m. Monday, police arrived at the Chelmsford family's Pine Hill Road home to find a masked Lane, struggling in a back bedroom with the teenage girl's parents. Lane, who is married with three daughters of his own in Jonesville, N.C., was wearing a black leather mask and a tool belt slung with hunting knives, a Chinese throwing star and choke wire. Inside the cab of his truck, police found a DVD titled Hunting Humans. The horror flick, about a serial killer hunting another serial killer, won two awards at the 2002 B-Movie Film Festival.

    Truckers are required to keep logs of their stops. By combing through the federal Department of Transportation's databases, police are hoping to gain a clear history of Lane's routes, and then check for unsolved crimes around those areas, according to State Trooper Eric Benson.

    Ted Shufelt, a trucker from Maine, said he believes rest stops are generally safe places for drivers to catch their bearings.

    "In any profession, you're going to find your fair share of weirdos," Shufelt said.

    Lane will reappear in Lowell District Court on Monday for a dangerousness hearing. He is presently being held without bail.

    ReplyDelete
  12. Thanks. You're good!
    It is the two trucks stops that got Bloomsbury listed as having the highest crime rate in Hunterdon county a couple of years ago. It's amazing the number of trucks that pull through there during all hours of the day and night.
    I wonder if there will be some kind of backlash from the town.

    ReplyDelete
  13. Anonymous1:49 PM

    Tom,

    My friend who lives in Bloomsbury mentioned that her neighbors are talking about "demanding" that a NJ State Trooper be stationed to patrol that truck stop area all night.

    My friend though is a lot safer than most there. She has 3 huge tempermental dogs, an alarm system and a loaded gun (licensed of course).

    ReplyDelete
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