The Day

SUPPORT, SOLIDARITY IN THE COMMUNITY

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Norwich

Larlon Odgers, 48, of 62 B Church St. was charged Friday with cruelty to animals and failure to license a dog.

Jason Burditt, 33, of 120 Cliff St. was charged Tuesday with driving with a suspended license, driving without insurance, driving with an unregister­ed motor vehicle and following too closely.

Amanda Williams, 33, of Bozrah was charged Friday with first-degree failure to appear in court and second-degree failure to appear in court.

Michael Alan Carr, 49, of no certain address was charged Friday with possession of drug parapherna­lia and driving with an open container.

Algernon Stone, 47, of 31 Maple St., Apt. 6, was charged Friday with disorderly conduct.

Tieara Hall, 27, of 31 Maple St., Apt. 6, was charged Friday with disorderly conduct.

Eldemilk Alves, 21, of 15 Pearl St. was charged Saturday with driving with a suspended license.

Ryan England, 31, of Canterbury was charged Saturday with driving under the influence, breach of peace and third-degree assault.

New London

Jerome Parham, 53, of 268 Bank St. was charged Wednesday with breach of peace.

Richard Wysoczynsk­i, 28, of 707 Colman St. was charged Wednesday with driving with a suspended license and failure to obey stop signal.

Reynaldo Cartagena, 36, of 66 Union St. was charged Thursday with third-degree assault and breach of peace.

Elishsha Vessells, 19, of 31 Acorn Court was charged Friday with reckless driving, interferin­g with police, driving with a suspended license, driving motorcycle without permit, failure to insure vehicle, operating unregister­ed vehicle and failure to obey officer.

Sherry Felt, 59, of 57 Farmington Ave. was charged Friday with evading police.

Amy E. Delmonte, 53, of Westerly was charged Saturday with issuing a bad check.

State police — Montville

Julio A. Santos, 27, of no certain address was charged Friday in Griswold with first-degree assault.

Waterford

William Durant, 25, of Waterbury was charged Friday with driving under the influence of drugs or alcohol and speeding.

Alexandria Reed, 23, of 333 Old Colchester Road, Uncasville, was charged Friday with driving with a suspended license and speeding.

Police logs reflect arrests, not conviction­s. For the outcomes of criminal and motor vehicle arrests, visit bit.ly/CTConvicti­ons.

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 ?? DANA JENSEN/THE DAY ?? Mahmoud Mansour, left, speaks to the crowd gathered at the Islamic Center of New London in Groton for a vigil Saturday. Autumn Hanscom, right, a neighbor of the center who helped organize the vigil, listens after saying a few words. Hanscom, a Representa­tive Town Meeting member, and her family began planning the vigil to show support for the center after an envelope was delivered to the facility Friday containing white powder, prompting a hate crime investigat­ion. A few dozen people showed up for the vigil, which also served as a meet-and-greet of sorts for residents to get to know the mosque, according to Hanscom. The public was invited to bring candles and signs. Town and city officials and neighbors were among those who showed up for the event. The vigil was organized to say “we support you and we’re your neighbors,” Hanscom had said earlier in the day Saturday. The center invited attendees to stay for refreshmen­ts afterward.
DANA JENSEN/THE DAY Mahmoud Mansour, left, speaks to the crowd gathered at the Islamic Center of New London in Groton for a vigil Saturday. Autumn Hanscom, right, a neighbor of the center who helped organize the vigil, listens after saying a few words. Hanscom, a Representa­tive Town Meeting member, and her family began planning the vigil to show support for the center after an envelope was delivered to the facility Friday containing white powder, prompting a hate crime investigat­ion. A few dozen people showed up for the vigil, which also served as a meet-and-greet of sorts for residents to get to know the mosque, according to Hanscom. The public was invited to bring candles and signs. Town and city officials and neighbors were among those who showed up for the event. The vigil was organized to say “we support you and we’re your neighbors,” Hanscom had said earlier in the day Saturday. The center invited attendees to stay for refreshmen­ts afterward.

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