Parole Granted to Pittsfield Man Sentenced for Killing Toddler Son

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PITTSFIELD, Mass. — A city man serving a life sentence for killing his 2-year-old son 43 years ago has been granted parole. 
 
According to the Boston Globe, the Parole Board on Monday voted to release Richard N. Mayes Jr., 78, to a halfway house.
 
Mayes was charged with beating his son to death in 1983 when he wouldn't eat. The child, Lawrence Richon, had received blows to his head, body, arms and legs. Mayes also told police he'd hit his son four times with a plastic baseball bat. 
 
According to media reports at the time, Mayes tried to resuscitate Lawrence when he later collapsed and cried to police that he did it when arrested. 
 
The boy was taken by life flight to Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston, where he died from blood clots in his head. 
 
Mayes was found guilty of second-degree murder by a Superior Court jury and sentenced to life in state prison.
 
According to the Globe, Mayes had been denied parole five times previously but told the board he had been sober for three decades and had not had a disciplinary report in a dozen years. 
 
During his incarceration, he had taken responsibility for his actions, mentored younger inmates and maintained employment. He also had family support and one of his children spoke in his favor. Mayes had four other children in 1983. 
 
He was ordered to maintain a curfew, submit to electronic monitoring for six months, take counseling and keep to his prescribed medication. 

Tags: murder,   parole,   

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Crane Currency Celebrates Milestone 225th Anniversary

By Breanna SteeleiBerkshires Staff

Zenas Crane established his paper mill in Dalton in 1801. 
DALTON, Mass. — Crane Currency is celebrating its 225th birthday, from its start as a papermill in the 1800s to becoming a premier printer of high-tech, international banknotes.
 
Crane NXT CEO Aaron Saak on Tuesday boasted a deep sense of pride in the organization and the more than 6,000 associates that embody the company's deep sense of purpose.
 
"But it was from a small papermill here in Western Massachusetts that Crane Currency has survived, grown, and thrived over the past two centuries, with a Civil War, two world wars, recessions, technological advances, and changes," he said to the gathering in the Crane Museum. 
 
"I think what makes today so meaningful is not just the celebration of a milestone of these 225 years, but the great pride, the great pride everyone in this company takes to the mission that we do for this country and for others, and it's personally moments like this, standing here in Dalton, surrounded by the people that make this company what it is, that reminds me and humbles me about what makes this organization so special. 
 
"It's a deep sense of purpose, and you don't find that everywhere, but you find that here at Crane Currency."
 
Stephen Crane's mill in Boston was used to print money for the colonies; his grandson, Zenas, moved to Dalton to establish Crane & Co., a name that would be linked to fine papermaking and as the lone manufacturer of the nation's paper currency since the 1870s.
 
The stationery lines were spun off some time ago and the currency operations became a subsidiary of Crane NXT. The Dalton mill continues to specialize in U.S. currency. 
 
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