Memories for Memorial Day Weekend: Halifax and Good Cops

DSC_0162I was at Market Basket the other day and I met a guy from Halifax. He was not Canadian. He was from our own little Halifax in Massachusetts.

Halifax, MA is one of six places in the United States with that name. Kentucky, North Carolina, Pennsylvania, Vermont and Virginia also have towns or boroughs so named. This suggests they were settle by people from England. No one had sufficient emotional attachment to the name to carry it westward beyond the Appalachians.

Our Halifax has the largest population of those others in the United States with 7,500 people. It was named after the town of Halifax in West Yorkshire, England, unlike the more famous Halifax in Nova Scotia that was named after the Earl of Halifax who founded it.

The Earl achieved fame by authorizing a general warrant in 1763 (our Bill of Rights outlawed these type warrants even though under the Patriot Act they have come back into favor) which resulted in the arrest of John Wilkes and many others. Wilkes, a radical Member of Parliament, was a distant relative of noted British Shakespearean actor Junius Brutus Booth (who happens to share the same birth day as me). He left England (and his wife and child) at the age 25 with Mary Ann Holmes (no relation to Carmel) who was described as a “flower girl.” They settled in Bel Air, Maryland. Their ninth child would be named after John Wilkes.

Our Halifax early on was proposed as a place where a canal connecting Massachusetts Bay with Buzzards Bay should run through. Those plans amounted to very little. That canal would be located further to the south of Plymouth and called the Cape Cod Canal. Had it gone through Halifax it may have been named the Halifax Canal.

Halifax would go on to become a little town safe from the outside encroaching world because no major highway scarred its territory. It has a population density of 430/sq mile compared to its neighbors Brockton, 4,363; Bridgewater 930 and Plymouth 628.

Years ago a young person who lived in Quincy and worked with me in Dedham came to tell me of an upcoming move to Halifax. I expressed my dismay at losing the assistance figuring no one would want to be commuting from Canada. It was then I learned of the town’s existence and the person was staying. Its population then was less than half of what it is today.

Learning this guy lived in Halifax brought back that memory. I will not identify this man. I do not know if he wants me to out him as a resident of Halifax. He was a police officer for almost 40 years so it is best he be unnamed.

I knew him because he was one of the detectives who worked with me when I ran the enterprise known as Franklin and Fletcher which was located in Quincy. It was established in the back offices of the Boston Gear Works; later it moved to a new multi-story office building the North Quincy area adjacent to the Neponset River.

The name Franklin was the middle name of the highly capable  and much loved Lieutenant Dave Rowell of the Quincy police. (He became a captain and a chief of a NH department but he’ll always be lieutenant to me.) Fletcher was the name that I had been dubbed with by members of our group because some believed the state would have been better off had I gone to the Fletcher School of Diplomacy.

Our group was composed of assistant DAs like myself and at different times members of other police departments such as the State Police, Metropolitan Police (remember them), and detectives from local towns like the man from Halifax.

I do not think there ever was before or since such a group in law enforcement in Massachusetts. Our offices were set up as a wiretap operation similar to what the National Security Administration (NSA) would eventually copy and establish. We had the best and latest electronic surveillance equipment in New England. It was an exciting place to work. We were always in the middle of investigations of drug dealers and others.

One of our achievements was recovering the first page of the Massachusetts Charter that had been stolen from the State Archives. It was found hidden in a closet that belonged to long-time criminal Myles Connor in Dorchester. Yes, even though we operated out of Norfolk County we did wiretaps and raids in Suffolk and other counties in the state if the criminal activity spilled over into our county.

The man I met in the supermarket told me those days were some of the most enjoyable he had as a police officer. Others who worked in the team have expressed similar sentiments years later when we met. I attributed it to the esprit de corps of the group and that no one was looking for individual credit. We all wanted to do the job well which is what we did.

It showed me that police work with motivated guys possessing the right stuff working hand in hand with knowledgeable lawyers could be enjoyable, exciting, adventurous, effective, successful, safe, and memorable. We limited our involvement with informants preferring instead the hard work of analysis and observation. We ventured into new areas. We pushed things to the permissible constitutional limits. We learned from each other. We never had a person hurt or lost a case.

It was good meeting a former member of Franklin and Fletcher after many years. It brought back nice memories of good guys I used to know. Here’s hoping they are all well and thriving.

 

 

 

9 thoughts on “Memories for Memorial Day Weekend: Halifax and Good Cops

  1. The canal in Halifax was a proposal to connect the Taunton River to the North River and also to Boston Harbor via the Back River in Weymouth.

    Another proposed route for the ship canal would have it go a more westerly route from the Taunton River to the Fore River in Braintree and Weymouth then to Boston Harbor:
    http://maps.bpl.org/id/12950

    Railroads and the sea level Cape Cod Canal, which followed the Manomet/Monument and Scusset Rivers and did not require locks, eliminated the need for the Taunton River to Boston Harbor canals:
    http://www.nae.usace.army.mil/Missions/Recreation/CapeCodCanal/History.aspx

    The 135 foot clearance of the Cape Cod Canal bridges seems quaint, reflecting requirement from the 1920’s. The Sunshine Skyway Bridge (completed 1987) that crosses Hillsborough Bay near Tampa-St. Petersburg, Florida is now considered by some to be too short at 180 feet. Future cruise ships are expected to be built requiring a 225 foot clearance:
    http://www.al.com/news/mobile/index.ssf/2014/08/i-10_bridge_height_to_accommod.html

    However, lightly loaded U.S. Navy Nimitz-class aircraft carriers now require more than 215 foot clearance.

    1. Ed:

      Thanks for filling in the blanks. Nice comment with lots of good information to digest.

  2. Many citizens of Massachusetts did not join the revolutionaries after 1776 and thousands of them — collectively termed Loyalists – fled to Canada. Halifax, Nova Scotia was very popular and in researching genealogy you often find the descendants of families which fled in 1776 and later returning to the Commonwealth of Massachusetts in the 19th century.

    1. Henry:

      A lot of them went back to England where they stayed and they had their property that was over here confiscated. I read someone saying that Paul Revere could not have said “the British are coming” as I learned in school because most of the people at the time considered themselves British. It is more likely that they said the Redcoats are coming.

      1. Paul Revere claimed that he said “The Regulars are coming out.”

        http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paul_Revere

        The Irregulars were the Massachusetts militia, including Paul Revere and any Loyalist militia who later fought alongside the Regulars. When George Washington was commissioned as a Major in the British Province of Virginia militia, he was an Irregular.

        http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Irregular_military
        http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George_Washington_in_the_French_and_Indian_War

  3. Agreed. Matt writes: “We limited our involvement with informants preferring instead the hard work of analysis and observation,” and yet the only public news that has ever come out about the Gardner Museum Robbery investigation always seems to involve informants.

    With modern technology that didn’t exist 25 years ago, some forensic audio specialists or M.I.T. students, using the guards as a baseline, might well determine quite a lot from the footsteps recordings, like height, weight, and general fitness level of the robbers. They could pretty quickly eliminate middle-aged suspects like 50 year old George Reissfelder and 43 year old former Viet Nam era Marine Corps corporal and unsolved homicide victim Leonard V. DiMuzio or not.

    1. R.

      I agree. The FBI relied and still relies on informants to a great extent (we will never know how much since it can keep it secret.) The article by Tom Mashberg of the Herald in 2009 is interesting in what it tells about the Gardner and the FBI’ dependence on informants which caused it to go to the extent of setting up a sting and having people who they believed knew something about the stolen art get basketball score type sentences hoping they would give up the paintings which they never did but certainly would have done had they had any information on them.

      You are right the modern techniques could offer more clues than what they FBI has done over the past 25 years and which it still does. Here is Mashberg’s take: http://www.bostonherald.com/2009/04/gardner_heist_wheres_fat_man

  4. Would that everyone could have such engaging work experiences such as those of you and your colleagues at F&F!

    FWIW: Leaving out NC and VT, the 4 states with a “Halifax” are the 4 united states that are considered “Commonwealths” rather than states.

Comments are closed.

Discover more from Trekking Toward the Truth

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading