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My Turn: Residents write in support of Olson for reelection

March 22, 2025

We, the undersigned, strongly support Margaret Olson for Planning Board. For the past ten years, Margaret has been both a dedicated leader and member of the board. highly hones management skills and her creative mind, Margaret has helped make decisions that serve to protect Lincoln’s character — open space and our landscapes — while promoting necessary policies for our present and future needs.

Effective participation as a member of the planning board requires a person who understands the complexities of zoning and is at home with site plans, as well as understanding Lincoln’s values, its past decisions, and its uniqueness. Members of the planning board must have the ability to create solutions to accommodate both our present and future needs. Members need to be committed to and comfortable with the public process.

Margaret has all those characteristics. She has worked on the Planning Board to:

  • Institute Lincoln’s first Dark Sky lighting regulations
  • Streamline the Site plan review process. This has resulted in benefits for both residents and the planning board, saving time for all
  • Increase multi-generational housing by incrementally loosening the Accessory Apartment zoning requirements
  • Engage cooperatively with a variety of boards and stakeholders to pass the Housing Choice Act that allows the town to qualify for specific grants—resulting in Lincoln already receiving $430,000 for water main replacement
  • Improve safety for all forms of transportation by serving on the Bicycle and Pedestrian Advisory Committee, the Roadside and Traffic Committee and the Transportation Coalition.

Margaret believes in an open and collaborative approach to solving problems. She knows from observation that over-regulation costs the town money and increases a homeowner’s individual costs to get through permitting with no benefit to either the town or their neighborhood. Planning Board reviews should focus on the critical issues in a manner that is thorough, fair, consistent and predictable. 

Margaret’s ten years on the Planning Board coupled with her tenure on Lincoln’s Board of Appeals, her years on planning boards in other towns as well as her professional background have and will serve Lincoln well.  

In addition, Margaret has honed skills central to the management of public processes that have benefited the planning board. She developed these skills when she co-founded two startups, Constant Contact (IPO) and Plum (purchased by Nokia), where she was responsible for all personally identifiable information for a worldwide service, and she has served as chief technology officer at several companies. Margaret’s public process management skills — important for Planning Board public processes — were developed as chair of several technology standards committees.

We believe that Lincoln needs Margaret on the Planning Board for her technical skill, her management style, her deep understanding of Lincoln and its unique qualities and her commitment to consistent, fair, and predictable public process. We hope that you will join us and vote for Margaret Olson for Planning Board. The election is March 31 with early voting beginning on March 22.

Gail Alden
Fran Aschheim
Dea Angiolillo
Michelle Barnes
Ken Bassett
Diana Beaudoin
Cindy Bencal
Alex Benik
Becky Bermont
Sarah Bishop
Paul Blanchfield
Rebecca Blanchfield
John Bordiuk
Janet Boynton
P. Kim Buell
Brian Burns
Karen Carlson
Thomas F. Casey
Ted Chan
Alex Chatfield
Paula Cobb
Buzz Constable
Trisha Deck
John Drew
Leah Drew
Rachel Drew
Nataly Dvash
Jeff Eaton
Andy Falender
Jon Ferris
Kristen Ferris
Jim Fleming
Nancy Fleming
Amy Funkenstein
Gina Halsted
Emily Haslett
Chris Hamilton
Tom Haslett
Jean Hardcastle
Alan Hein
Nancy S.Henderson
Ruth Ann Hendrickson
Lis Herbert
Shira Horowitz
Brian Jalet
Kim Jalet
Joan Kimball
John Kimball
Chris Klem
Sue Klem
Jackie Lenth
Mary Helen Lorenz
Gwyn Loud
Rebecca Lupkas
Sara B. Lupkas
Donna Macdonald
Lucy Makall
Joan Mansfield
Rachel Mason
Lucy Maulsby
Chris McCarthy
John Mendelson
Christopher Mollica
Nicholas Mollica
Christopher Mollica
Staci Montori
Buffer Morgan
Terri Morgan
Brooks Mostue
Chris Murphy
Patricia O’Hagan
Jane K. O’Rourke
David O’Neil
David Onigman
John Nolan
Katherine Hall Page
Laura Protzman
Ginger Reiner
Kurt Reiner
John Rizzo
Travis Roland
Rick Rosenbaum
Rick Rundell
Aldis Russell
Barbara Sampson
Ellen Meyer Shorb
Paul Shorb
Kathleen Shepard
Christine Size
Barbara Slayter
Victoria Slingerland
Joanna Schmergel
Greg Schmergel
Jonathan Soo
Kara Soo
Nancy Soulette
Bill Stason
Sue Stason
Dilla Tingley
Mary Jo Veling
Christina Van Vleck
Katy Walker
Tom Walker
Ben Wells
Bob Wolf
Bryce Wolf
Krystal Wood
Stephen Yankum
Jen Zeis
Louis Zipes
Tanya Zipes
 

“My Turn” is a forum for readers to offer their letters to the editor or views on any subject of interest to other Lincolnites. Submissions must be signed with the writer’s name and street address and sent via email to lincolnsquirrelnews@gmail.com. Items will be edited for punctuation, spelling, style, etc., and will be published at the discretion of the editor. Submissions containing personal attacks, errors of fact, or other inappropriate material will not be published.

Category: elections, My Turn

St. Anne’s creates virtual pilgrimage for Lent

March 20, 2025

One of the images accompanying the third Stations of the Cross, “Jesus Falls for the First Time,” in the St. Anne’s video.

St. Anne’s-in-the-Fields Episcopal church has created an online, self-paced multimedia pilgrimage though the Stations of the Cross for anyone to experience.

Almost immediately after the crucifixion of Jesus, Christians from around the world began traveling to Jerusalem to walk the path where Jesus carried the cross through the winding streets of the city on the way to Golgotha and pray at the 14 shrines and churches that mark the significant scriptural or traditional events of that day, such as where Jesus took the cross, where Jesus fell the first time, and where Jesus was nailed to the cross, explained, Greg Mancusi-Ungaro of Marblehead, a member of the St. Anne’s Worship Commission. About two centuries later, churches and monasteries began installing plaques and other memorials depicting the Stations of the Cross so local worshipers could make personal pilgrimages.

Now St. Anne’s has taken the idea to the next level. Their YouTube video includes prayers and readings from the Episcopal Book of Occasional Services, dozens of artworks, and music excepted from “Vesalii Icones,” a 1969 multilayered fusion of dance and music by Peter Maxwell Davies. More than two dozen church members contributed to the project, including lectors, choir members, and clergy.

Parishioners and others have had high praise for the project. “The combination of music and spoken word and visuals have allowed people to really contemplate [the crucifixion] in ways they hadn’t done before,” Mancusi-Ungaro said.

Other organizations have posted online versions of the Stations of the Cross, especially during the pandemic, but St. Anne’s wasn’t even aware of them when it was working on its project. Once it was posted online, the committee thought perhaps a few hundred other people would see, it but they were in for a surprise.

“Literally thousands of people from all around the world have found our

on YouTube and viewed some or all of it,” Mancusi-Ungaro said. “It’s humbling and deeply satisfying for me personally to have had a hand in creating something that’s been so meaningful.”

Category: religious

Celebration of life on March 28 for Betty Smith, 1933–2025

March 20, 2025

Betty Smith

Elizabeth “Betty” Harris Smith, 91, of Lincoln, passed away peacefully on January 14, 2025, leaving behind a legacy of kindness, optimism, and a passion for education.

Betty was born on September 25, 1933 in Newton to Dorothy Pollard Harris and Stephen Wendover Harris. She arrived with an innate curiosity that guided her through a life filled with educational pursuits and community involvement. Betty attended Colby College in Maine, receiving a bachelor’s degree in English in 1955, and later continued her education at Radcliffe’s adult education program. She worked as the assistant to the president of MIT, James Killian, before leaving that position to marry Harold Dean Smith, a grad student, and become a homemaker and mother.

A talented writer and editor, Betty co-owned the Lincoln Review, a local magazine where her skills shone. Over the years, the Lincoln Review published thousands of news stories, artwork, poetry, historical articles, letters to the editor, and more. Betty enjoyed encouraging new writers and poets from Lincoln. Her love for words extended beyond her professional life; she was known for her friendly and chatty nature, always ready to share a story or lend an ear.

Betty had a zest for life that was evident in her many interests. She loved tennis, travel, writing, and anything to do with Betty Boop. She and her late husband traveled often, going to France, England, Turkey, India, New Zealand, Japan, Hungry, Anguilla, and many other places. Her dedication to tennis went beyond the court as she served on the Lincoln Tennis Committee for many years. Later in life she could be found swimming and relaxing at Valley Pond almost every day. Her commitment to education and community was reflected in her work with the Lincoln Scholarship Committee. A scholarship was established in her name and will continue to honor her legacy by supporting students after high school.

She was predeceased by her beloved husband, Harold Dean Smith, and is survived by her children—Dean Smith and his wife Belinda, Caron King, Eric Smith and his wife Kathy, and Craig Smith — and grandchildren Jessica Smith, Krysta Smith, Susannah King, Kamille Smith, and Stephen Smith, all of whom she loved dearly. Those who knew Betty will forever remember her as friendly, sweet-hearted, and optimistic to a fault.

May Betty’s memory inspire all who knew her to live with curiosity and explore the world, embracing each day as a gift.

Relatives and friends are encouraged to gather for a celebration of Betty’s life on Friday, March 28 at 3:00pm at the First Parish Church. In lieu of flowers, donations can be made to the Betty Smith Honorary Award, Lincoln Scholarship Committee, PO Box 6283, Lincoln, MA 01773.

Arrangements are entrusted to Dee Funeral Home & Cremation Service of Concord, which provided this obituary. To leave a comment on her online tribute wall, click here.

Category: obits

Legal notice: Zoning Board of Appeals hearing

March 20, 2025

The Zoning Board of the Appeals of the Town of Lincoln will hold a virtual online public hearing if the law allows or at 16 Lincoln Rd., Donaldson Room on Thursday, April 3, 2025, at 7:00pm to hear and to act on the following petitions under the Zoning Bylaws:

New:

John Doyle, 30 Old Sudbury Rd., M/P 179-20-0 for transfer of a special permit for an accessory apartment.

Erin Kelly and Lionel McPherson, 2 Forester Rd., M/P 167-7-0 for renewal of a special permit for an accessory apartment.


Note that legal notices often must be posted more than once by law. For previous legal notices and details on how to submit a legal notice to the Lincoln Squirrel, click here.

Category: legal notices

My Turn: Understanding aviation’s “sustainable” aviation fuel

March 19, 2025

By Chris Eliot

The airline industry is desperate to show their environmental progress but jet fuel is critical to the industry. SAF, or so-called “sustainable” aviation fuel, is the idea that synthetic jet fuel can be made from renewable sources. Unfortunately, I think the industry has prematurely endorsed SAF without having a credible plan to implement this solution. Lara Sullivan wrote about this on March 3 (see “My Turn: Kudos for piece on sustainable aviation fuels“). The scale of the aviation industry is the fundamental problem.

There are many ways to create SAF but they all fall into three broad categories.

  1. It is technically possible to produce SAF from energy crops. According to a recent Department of Energy report, BETA-2023, this would require 76 million acres of land worth $76 billion to $760 billion. This amount of land is between the total size of Arizona and New Mexico. On the face of it, devoting this much land to the aviation industry seems excessive. It would result in higher food prices due to the amount of crops that would be used to fuel planes rather than feed people. In addition, it would inevitably lead to deforestation either in the United States or elsewhere, which will increase global warming. This means that producing this form of SAF would cause the very problem that the production of SAF aims to solve. Attempting to produce SAF from energy crops seems infeasible and may not actually address the climate change problem.
  1. It is technically possible to produce SAF from a wide variety of miscellaneous sources such as used cooking oil, wood chips, seaweed, municipal waste, etc. Unfortunately, all of these sources put together only address a small percentage of the quantities needed by the current and projected growth of the aviation industry. These miscellaneous sources do not solve the problem.
  1. Finally, SAF can be produced from component chemicals of hydrogen and carbon. This path is often called “e-fuel.” It may be described as a combination of carbon capture and hydrogen production by electrolysis. Jet fuel is chemically a hydrocarbon and there are industrial processes to combine gaseous hydrogen and carbon dioxide into hydrocarbons, although large amounts of energy are required. This process can be implemented with existing technology. However, it is impossible to scale up in the next half-century. The fundamental problem is that too much energy is needed to produce the required hydrogen.

The energy required would exceed the entire current capacity of the U.S. electrical grid. We already have to significantly increase our production of green electricity to support electric cars, houses, and industry. Doubling this effort in the available time frame would be almost impossible to do. However, aviation might drain our energy supply to satisfy their need for SAF and then disclaim responsibility for the problem.

The aviation industry denies all these problems and proposes that economy of scale is all that is required to cause a transition to SAF. I believe this is wishful thinking at best. The record of the fossil fuel industry as a source of truth about climate change speaks for itself.

The scale of the aviation industry is simply too large to fully transition to SAF, although some SAF will be produced and will contribute to a small percentage of the solution. There will always be a place for aviation, but it cannot massively grow and almost certainly must modestly shrink to fit within a limited supply of climate-friendly fuel. Alex Chatfield wrote on February 23 about the need to limit private jet usage (see “My Turn: Proposed private-jet Hanscom expansion is a climate bomb in sheep’s clothing“). The massive propaganda campaign currently attempting to portray SAF as a viable solution is greenwashing and ignores the fundamental limitations of this technology.

The new CEO of Massport suggested that we should “let them try” to create SAF to address aviation’s contribution to climate change. The problem with this is the same as false medical treatment: while aviation is pursuing the false hope that SAF will solve the problem, they are spending money and time going down a false path instead of investing that money and effort into addressing the real problem. Meanwhile, the Earth is rapidly approaching irreversible climate changes that will make life difficult for everyone, impacting food, water, livable space, and quality of life.

I oppose putting any public money into support for SAF unless and until there is a complete and viable production plan in place. We should not invest in promises that are vague and scientifically unsound. SAF at this time is a fantasy and distracts attention from the real problem. The aviation industry must be forced to develop a credible and executable plan to become climate friendly.

What can you do?

Be informed. Double-check my analysis and satisfy yourself that my research makes sense. Then, talk to your friends and explain the situation to them. This is a large and complex problem that won’t be solved quickly, but we need to convince people to push for a real solution and not to accept the false promise being pushed by the aviation and oil industry.

Chris Eliot of Lincoln is chair of the four-town Hanscom Field Advisory Commission.


“My Turn” is a forum for readers to offer their letters to the editor or views on any subject of interest to other Lincolnites. Submissions must be signed with the writer’s name and street address and sent via email to lincolnsquirrelnews@gmail.com. Items will be edited for punctuation, spelling, style, etc., and will be published at the discretion of the editor. Submissions containing personal attacks, errors of fact, or other inappropriate material will not be published.

Category: Hanscom Air Field, My Turn

Corrections

March 19, 2025

In the caption for image in the March 13 issue headlined “Proposal would clear-cut and replant several wooded acres,” the area on the three lot parcel proposed for clear-cutting and replanting was incorrect; it’s the darker-green portion, not the lighter-green. The article also inaccurately stated the percentage of the three-lot parcel on Old Winter Street that would be — its 33%, not 40%. The article has been updated.

The March 17 article headlined “Lincoln man arrested on weapons charges” had an incorrect name for the man arrested on gun charges. His first name is Daniel, not David. The article has been corrected.

 

Category: police

My Turn: Vote Morton and Ryan for L-S School Committee

March 19, 2025

By Nancy Marshall

Please elect Charles Morton and Jack Ryan to the L-S School Committee I write to enthusiastically endorse Charles Morton and Jack Ryan in their campaign for the L-S School Committee. Charles and Jack are in a three-way race for two vacated seats on the committee. I encourage you to meet Jack and Charles, in the process learn more about LSRHS and its wide and incredible array of opportunities for our children, and to vote Monday, March 31 at the polls in Lincoln for Charles Morton and Jack Ryan.

Charles Morton (CharlesMorton.com) is the father of four elementary and middle school children, all of whom will attend LSRHS over the next ten years. He is active in the Sudbury community as a youth soccer and volleyball coach. In his professional life, he is an academic, teaching chemistry at Brown. Before that, Charles worked with a wide array of learners as a tutor in the metro Boston area, which helped inform him and his wife where they wanted to live, raise and educate their children. From these experiences, he has an astute sense of what it takes to educate the whole child, the need for ongoing, thoughtful educational program evaluation and responsive change, and a full and enthusiastic respect for the teaching and learning that occurs at Lincoln-Sudbury. In my encounters with Charles, I find a calm, reflective, well-prepared candidate ready to roll up his sleeves, impart his perspective, but most of all to listen, learn and contribute fully to the roles and responsibilities of the L-S School Committee.

I have known Jack Ryan (RyanforLS.com) for 20 years. A retired lawyer, Jack and I overlapped as colleagues on the L-S School Committee, early in my tenure and at the conclusion of his first four terms of service. Jack chaired the LSRHS building committee, completed in 2004, bringing the project in on time and below budget. Jack has a wide lens on Sudbury, Lincoln, and our shared high school. He has served in many other capacities in Sudbury (Finance Committee for seven years, Sudbury Council on Aging Board, and other organizations). His pull to run again is multifaceted — policy, governance, funding, and also family, as he has grandchildren who will be attending LSRHS in the near future. Jack is sharp, knowledgeable, candid, and committed. He shares with me a depth of perspective and appreciation for LSRHS that also fuels his call to serve again.

Charles and Jack, both Sudbury residents, will be thoughtful and inclusive in their service to LSRHS, to Lincoln, and to Sudbury.

In addition to their websites, the Sudbury League of Women Voters has a recorded candidates’ forum featuring all the candidates for the L-S School Committee which can be found here. Sudbury Weekly, Sudbury’s online news source, also has “Thoughts in Return,” a Q&A with all candidates.

There will be an opportunity to meet the candidates and ask questions at the candidates’ forum in the Learning Commons at the Lincoln School on Monday, March 24 at 7:00pm. Please remember to vote on Monday, March 31 at the Lincoln School and ink in the circles for Charles Morton and Jack Ryan.

Note: I am an appointed member of the Lincoln Finance Committee. I am writing this letter in my personal capacity as a private citizen. My views are my own.


“My Turn” is a forum for readers to offer their letters to the editor or views on any subject of interest to other Lincolnites. Submissions must be signed with the writer’s name and street address and sent via email to lincolnsquirrelnews@gmail.com. Items will be edited for punctuation, spelling, style, etc., and will be published at the discretion of the editor. Submissions containing personal attacks, errors of fact, or other inappropriate material will not be published.

Category: elections, My Turn

Legal notice: Conservation Commission public hearing

March 18, 2025

Lincoln Conservation Commission – Notice of Public Hearing

The Lincoln Conservation Commission (LCC) will hold a public hearing on Wednesday, March 26, 2025 at 7:05pm in accordance with the MA Wetlands Protection Act and the Town of Lincoln Wetlands Protection Bylaw. This is in response to the duly filed Notice of Intent by Jim Hutchinson for cutting of trees and installation of plantings within the 100-ft Buffer Zone and wetland resource areas at 247 Old Concord Road (156-6-0). Information on how to log onto the virtual public meeting will be included in the LCC Agenda posted on the town’s website at least 48 hours prior to the hearing. More information can be reviewed here.

Category: legal notices

My Turn: Dozens endorse Susan Hall Mygatt for Planning Board

March 17, 2025

It is with great enthusiasm that we, the undersigned, endorse Susan Hall Mygatt to be elected to a seat on the Lincoln Planning Board. We believe her combination of relevant town experience, commitment to balancing town character and growth, and genuine excitement for the role make her uniquely qualified to be an informed, engaged, and effective Planning Board member.

You’ve probably seen Susan around town. She has been an active volunteer in Lincoln for many years, serving in roles including seats on Lincoln’s Zoning Board of Appeal (eight years) and on Lincoln’s Conservation Commission (six years), of which she is currently co-chair. She regularly attends Planning Board meetings and is very familiar with Lincoln’s zoning bylaws, the Planning Board’s regulations, and the issues and requests that the board addresses. She will be a ready-to-go board asset on day one.

As a retired real estate attorney and board member of several nonprofit organizations, Susan brings both attention to detail and great respect for the role of collaboration for the common good. She is comfortable asking difficult questions — always with respect — and is committed to community engagement, timely and open sharing of information, and a clear, transparent public process. This will create a welcoming environment for productive exchanges among and with the Planning Board.

Susan sees an opportunity to value Lincoln’s rural character while respecting the state-wide need for more housing. She believes that the town can find a balance that protects the aspects of Lincoln which we value and at the same time carefully plan for inevitable change. She is a keen listener and believes that open collaboration is a key element to finding and implementing solutions that unite, not divide.

At a time of great change, when we are making decisions about processes and solutions that impact the future of our town, Susan Hall Mygatt is the ideal choice for a seat on the Lincoln Planning Board. Please join us in voting for Susan Hall Mygatt for one of the two seats on the Lincoln Planning Board.

Ramelle Adams
Phil Ayoub
Suzanne Ayoub
Ken Bassett
Diana Beaudoin
Nancy E. Bergen
Penny Billings
Corinne Blickman-Sadoski
Nancy Boulton-LeGates
Sandra Bradlee
Libby Bradshaw
Peter Braun
Irene Briedes
Katherine Brobeck
Mary Brody
Susan F. Brooks
Gus Brown
Bruce Campbell
Irene Chu
Frank Clark
Nancy Constable
Buzz Constable
Jud Crawford
Sandy Creighton
Elizabeth Creighton
David Cuetos
Priscilla Damon
Betsy Danziger
Penny Denormandie
Tom Denormandie
Vicky Diaduk
Carol DiGianni
Robert Domnitz
Jona Donaldson
Moira Donnell
Jeff Eaton
Lisa Elder
Andy Falender
Margaret Flint
Ephriam Flint
Karla Gravis
Laurie Gray
Sandra Grindlay
Josh Grindlay
Tina Grotzer
Thomas Harding
Anna Hardman
Eric A. Harris
Lee Harrison
Sherry Haydock
Bob Hicks
Sally Hicks
Kerry Hoffman
Paul Hoffman
Susan Holland
Deborah Howe
Yanni Ioannides
Susan Abigail Janes
Sonja Johansson
Kim Johnson
Bayhas Kana
Priscilla Kern
Ed Kern
Susan Ketteringham
Ari Kurtz
Ed Lang
Isabel Lee
John LeGates
Barbara Leggat
Virginia Lemire
Mark Levinson
Sarah Liepert
Mary Helen Lorenz
Gwyn Loud
Jeffrey Lukowsky
Mark Masterson
Sara Mattes
June Matthews
Ron McAdow
Linda McMillan
Jim Meadors
Joseph Miller
Carolyn Montie
Paul Montie
Tom Moran
Anne Mostue
Brooks Mostue
Patricia Mostue
Connie Ohlsten
Richard Ohlsten
Timothy Oldfield
Elizabeth Orgel
Rob Orgel
John Ottenberg
Nat Park
Ann Park
Suzanne Parker
Andrea Patton
Ashton Peery
Barbara Peskin
Carol Peskin
Tia Picco
Sarah Postlethwait
Lisa Putukian
Barbara Rhines
Michael Rhines
David Ries
Jean Risley
Charles Rolando
Mary Rosenfeld
Tom Saidnawey
Denna Saidnawey
Susan Sewall
Steven Sewall
Ben Shiller
Collete Sizer
Elizabeth Slater
Jonathan Small
Diana Smith
Lynne Smith
Tucker Smith
Adam Sodowick
Nancy Soulette
Susanna Szeto
Joanne Wise
Katherine Wolf
Edward Young
Anne Young
 

“My Turn” is a forum for readers to offer their letters to the editor or views on any subject of interest to other Lincolnites. Submissions must be signed with the writer’s name and street address and sent via email to lincolnsquirrelnews@gmail.com. Items will be edited for punctuation, spelling, style, etc., and will be published at the discretion of the editor. Submissions containing personal attacks, errors of fact, or other inappropriate material will not be published.

Category: elections, My Turn

Lincoln man arrested on weapons charges

March 17, 2025

The AK-47 , 9mm handgun, and magazines weapons seized by Lincoln police on March 15.

A Lincoln man was arrested on multiple gun charges last weekend after a resident called police to report hearing gunshots shortly before midnight on Saturday, March 15.

Police checked the area of South Great Road near the Weston town line and discovered two men in a car parked in the lot at the entrance to the Twin Pond conservation trails just east of Weston Nurseries. An officer “observed one of the AK47-variant magazines in center console” and detained one of the occupants, though the other one fled, according to Police Chief Sean Kennedy. The suspect couldn’t be located despite a search involving Weston, Wayland, and Concord police assisted by a drone and a police dog from the Massachusetts State Police.

The police body cam photo of Justin Warner of Clay, N.Y., who turned himself in on March 17.

Police arrested Daniel Hoch, 20, of 149 Tower Rd. in Lincoln and charged him with two counts of possession of a large-capacity firearm, three counts of possession of large-capacity feeding magazine, two counts of possessing a firearm without a firearms ID card, two counts of possessing ammunition without a firearms ID card, and one count of possession of a firearm with a defaced serial number.

On March 16, police posted a picture of the escaped suspect taken with a police body camera on the department’s Instagram page on March 16 and identified him as Justin Warner, of Clay, N.Y. saying they believed he as no longer in the immediate area. However, he turned himself in to Lincoln police around midday on Monday and was charged with the same offenses as Hoch.

Kennedy said he didn’t know who owned the guns or why they were fired Saturday night.

Both men will be assigned a court date during their arrangement at Concord District Court. State law calls for a prison term of two and a half to ten years on each count of unlawfully possessing a large-capacity firearm, and one to two and a half years for the untraceable firearm charge.

Category: police

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