Male Arrested for Unlawful Possession of a Loaded Firearm 4th Offense after Shots Fired in Roxbury

mikeyp

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Male Arrested for Unlawful Possession of a Loaded Firearm Fourth Offense Following Shots Fired in Roxbury

At about 1:30 AM on Sunday, June 2, 2019, officers assigned to District B-2 (Roxbury) made an onsite arrest and recovered a loaded firearm in the area of 15 Dalkeith Street in Roxbury. Officers responded to a radio call for shots fired in the area of 21 Balfour Street. On arrival, officers observed a male standing across the street from where the shots were fired. The male appeared to be extremely nervous, breathing heavy and continually looking over his shoulder toward a motor vehicle parked on Dalkeith Street, a short distance away from the male and the shots fired incident. Officers continued their dialogue with the male who stated that he did not live in the area and that his car was parked on Dalkeith Street. Officers approached the motor vehicle and upon opening the passenger’s side door, immediately located a Glock 27 firearm loaded with eight rounds of live ammunition resting underneath the passenger’s seat. The suspect was placed under arrest. Additionally, officers recovered another firearm, a Smith and Wesson model 5906 loaded with ten rounds of live ammunition, from the rear middle seat of the motor vehicle.

Officers arrested Darrel Barboza, 36-years-old, of Allston. Barboza is expected to be arraigned in Roxbury District Court on charges of Unlawful Possession of a Firearm Fourth Offense, two counts of Unlawful Possession of a Loaded Firearm Fourth Offense, and Unlawful Possession of Ammunition Subsequent Offense.
 
Allston man who keeps getting arrested on gun charges gets arrested on gun charges after gunfire in Dorchester, police say

Darrel Barboza, 36, of Allston was charged with unlawful possession of a firearm, fourth offense, two counts of unlawful possession of a loaded firearm, fourth offense, and unlawful possession of ammunition, subsequent offense, police say.

Barboza was convicted in 2002 and 2004 of gun-related offenses. In 2010, he allegedly showed up at with a gun at a polling station in Allston during an election.
 
The court system looks at perpetrators in terms of their ability to pay.

Criminals usually don't have assets, so they are a burden to the system.

However, if someone with assets gets jammed up, they can be "milked"

That is why these people keep getting off.
 
how many times do you get caught before they give you the mandatory 1 year sentence? [pot] come on now, any judges or states attorneys out there ready to answer the question?
 
I guess all those gun laws are working just perfectly.

BTW, What happened to "three strikes and you're out" ????
 
Those are rookie numbers , the guy that killed the collage girl a few years ago had something like 38 prior arrests for violent crimes.
God bless the Commonwealth and our justice system.
Keeping violent criminals on the streets is job number one.
 
Judges used to be lawyers, its a BROTHERHOOD. Bring em in, let em out. Bring em in, let em out. How else would they make any $$$$$$$....

This^

Scumbags like this guy are good repeat customers for lawyers and judges, for them, people like this mean job security, so they don't want to keep them locked up and out of circulation for too long.
 
I guess Rachel Rollins (Suffolk county DA) added firearms violations for inner city dwellers to her list of crimes she wont prosecute.
 
I don't think that they can vote for the democrats if they are in jail? Jack.

Oh, the dems will find a way......voter/election fraud is their profession. You wait and see if MA doesn't follow right in Maine and Vermont's footsteps and repeal the prohibition on incarcerated felon's voting rights.
I'd almost bet it will happen within the year.
 
how many times do you get caught before they give you the mandatory 1 year sentence? [pot] come on now, any judges or states attorneys out there ready to answer the question?
As many times as it takes for the perp to murder someone. Look at the sh*tbag that shot Yarmouth police Officer Sean Gannon in April of last year. He had 114 prior offenses as an adult, and he was only 28 years old. I recall that SEVERAL of the offenses involved illegal possession of a firearm.

If the number of judges and DAs that need to pay dearly for their negligent decisions in this state were to be displayed somewhere in public it would be indistinguishable from the national debt counter.
 
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