Mass General Brigham has appointed three new leaders to run cancer care at the state’s largest health system as it prepares for a separation from the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute.
Dana-Farber announced in September that it would end its decades-lo…
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Mass General Brigham has appointed three new leaders to run cancer care at the state’s largest health system as it prepares for a separation from the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute.
Dana-Farber announced in September that it would end its decades-lo…
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If you’re going to TD Garden, they have a new bag policy that takes effect Monday. And they’re asking people to go small or bring no bag at all.
Garden officials say any bag larger than 6 inches by 4 inches by 1.5 inches will not be allowed. Exceptions will be made for diaper bags and for medical reasons.
If you do have a bag that’s too big, you can store it for a fee inside a mobile locker at Legends Way. The mobile lockers will be available two hours before each event and will close 90 minutes after the event concludes.
The new security measures and screening experience, announced last week, are aimed at increasing security and reducing lines at the entrance to TD Garden.
TD Garden will also be using AI-based detection tools from Evolv Technology, which will replace traditional metal detectors. Ticket holders will be asked to remove their mobile devices form their pockets, have their tickets ready to be scanned and walk through. An usher will be on the other side of the unit to scan tickets and direct guests to their seats.
“TD Garden is committed to providing a best-in-class experience for our guests, and safety and security is paramount,” Glen Thornborough, president of TD Garden and COO of Boston Bruins, said in a statement. “Evolv’s innovative technology allows us to do just that, while also streamlining the entry process and minimizing wait times.”
For more on TD Garden’s new bag policy, click here.
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The Lowell, Massachusetts, man accused of killing his girlfriend, leaving her body at Boston Logan International Airport before boarding a flight to Kenya will have to wait a bit longer for his day in court.
Kevin Kangethe was supposed to appear in a Kenyan courtroom on Monday following his escape and recapture by authorities there last week. But Nairobi News Service reports that his hearing has been moved to Feb. 27. The family of his alleged victim, Margaret Mbitu, of Whitman, had flown to Kenya to attend the court proceedings.
Kangethe escaped while awaiting extradition on a Massachusetts warrant alleging he killed his girlfriend and left her body in a car at Logan Airport last fall. But two weeks ago, he slipped out of a police station and jumped into a privately owned minivan.
Kangethe was arrested in Embulbul, Kajiado County, on the outskirts of Kenya’s capital city Feb. 13 as he sought refuge at one of his relatives’ homes, Nairobi police boss Adamson Bungei said. He is now being held in a maximum-security prison ahead of his court hearing.
In a country where corruption endemic and the police force has been ranked for decades the most corrupt institution in the country, Kangethe’s escape raised suspicion the police officers on duty that day may have been bribed to allow his escape.
The four officers who were on duty at the report office that day have been suspended awaiting disciplinary action and may face prosecution.
The officer’s report seen by the Associated Press said that on the day Kangethe escaped, a man named John Maina Ndegwa introduced himself to the officers as Kangethe’s lawyer and said he wanted to speak with his client.
“The officers agreed to his request and removed the prisoner from the cells and took him to (an) office … leaving them there. After a short while the prisoner escaped by running away and left the (lawyer) behind,” the report said.
Officers pursued Kangethe but did not catch him, the police report said, adding that Ndegwa was arrested.
Kangethe, 40, had been detained pending a ruling on whether he should be extradited to face a first-degree murder charge in connection with the death of Mbitu on Oct. 31, 2023.
Massachusetts State Police said in early November that Kangethe had left her body in a car at Logan International Airport and boarded a flight to Kenya. Massachusetts officials said they were working with Kenyan authorities to locate him, and he was arrested in a nightclub on Jan. 30 after being on the run for three months.
A police official told the AP that Kangethe said he had renounced his U.S. citizenship. The police official, who insisted on anonymity in order speak freely about an ongoing investigation, said if Kangethe were an American citizen he would have been repatriated without a court process.
The court approved a police application for him to be detained for 30 days while the extradition issue was heard.
Mbitu, a health care aide in Halifax, was last seen leaving work Oct. 30 and reported missing by her family. The preliminary investigation showed Mbitu had left her workplace and traveled with Kangethe to Lowell, where he lived, the prosecution said.
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Longtime Boston Globe sports columnist Dan Shaughnessy is recovering after heart surgery, the newspaper announced Sunday.
In a brief story posted on the newspaper’s website Sunday night, the Globe announced that Shaughnessy is “resting …
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About half of the Brockton School Committee members have signed a petition calling for the National Guard to assist in monitoring local high school students following a recent increase in violence on campus.
They noted how in the last few months, t…
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Boston firefighters responded to a fire in the city’s Roxbury neighborhood early Monday morning, saving two people who were screaming for help from a second floor window.
The Boston Fire Department said the flames were heavy when they arrived…
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