http://www.rutlandherald.com/article/20131231/NEWS02/712319949
Published December 31, 2013 in the Rutland Herald Man faces charges in Springfield burglary By ERIC FRANCIS CORRESPONDENT WHITE RIVER JUNCTION — Police say a burglar who tried to crawl through a man’s bedroom window in Springfield was chased down and captured moments later by officers. Adam Currier, 21, of Springfield pleaded innocent Monday to felony counts of burglary and attempted burglary and to an accompanying misdemeanor count of petty larceny before he was released on pre-trial conditions. Springfield police were called out at 1 a.m. Monday after a couple on Hillcrest Road were awakened by the sound of glass breaking on the ground floor of their residence. Homeowner Russell Moore later told police that he ran downstairs and turned on the stairway light just in time to see a young man dash out his door. As the burglar took off down the snowy road on foot, Moore circled his house and discovered that his front door had been broken, a screen had been ripped off a porch window, and the side door to his garage had been pushed open. Moore said both of his cars had been gone through, a GPS unit and set of wrenches had been taken, and the rest of the contents of the glove boxes had been strewn around the front seats and the garage floor. Minutes after Springfield Police Cpl. Chris Norton and a pair of state troopers arrived and began following the footprints on Ellis Street, they received calls reporting that someone had just been seen going through a car on nearby Mary Street and that the suspect was now attempting to break into another home on Ellis Street. Norton said as he drove up to Ellis Street he was flagged down by Wesley Black, a Springfield firefighter returning to his own home from a fire call, who pointed out Currier on a nearby street corner. Norton said that as soon as Currier saw his cruiser, he took off running across the lawn of one of the homes. Norton said he chased Currier, pushed him to the ground and handcuffed him near the back yard fence. A quick pat-down of Currier came up with the GPS unit that had gone missing from the Hillcrest Road home, Norton wrote in an affidavit filed with the court. While Norton and the troopers were taking Currier into custody, Matthew Durham walked up to the officers and told them that he had just surprised Currier moments beforehand, as Currier was crawling through a bedroom window on Ellis Street while Durham’s elderly father was sleeping just a few feet away. Durham explained that he’d been visiting his parents at their Ellis Street residence and had been on the couch watching late-night television, when he heard what sounded like someone moving the front door knob. He got up and looked but didn’t see anyone; however, his mother came in and said she’d heard what sounded to her like an animal brushing up against the house. “Then I heard something moving outside my father’s room,” Durham later recalled in a statement to police, “When I turned on the light I saw a young man’s head sticking in the window. He left and I called 911 (then) I went outside and I saw the police already had (Currier) handcuffed. This was definitely the same person I saw with his head in my father’s window.” Currier was charged with a felony burglary back in 2011 related to a break-in and theft in Weathersfield. Following that incident, Currier successfully completed the court’s “Sparrow Program” counseling and struck a plea deal in which the felony was amended to a charge of misdemeanor petty larceny. He received a three-to-six month sentence which was suspended so that he could “continue to engage in vocational training,” according to court records. Currier faces a maximum potential penalty of up to 26 years in prison if convicted of all the new charges now pending against him.
This hits too close to home! I live in that neighborhood!! The other day the screen door to my cellar was opened, the main door was locked but someone had opened up the screen door.
ReplyDeleteRead the very end of the article....This is just another case that proves this whole pat on the wrist and rehabilitate criminals DOES NOT WORK. This dude went through a program and had charges....ONCE AGAIN...lowered or dismissed and he is back at it breaking in places with a vengeance. BULLSHIT on this. When are people going to demand that the maximum penalty be dished out and HARD time in prison is the only answer. These people should be breaking up rocks until they are so sore from the work they wished they were never born. Then and only then will they stop and change themselves.
ReplyDelete"Currier was charged with a felony burglary back in 2011 related to a break-in and theft in Weathersfield. Following that incident, Currier successfully completed the court’s “Sparrow Program” counseling and struck a plea deal in which the felony was amended to a charge of misdemeanor petty larceny. He received a three-to-six month sentence which was suspended so that he could “continue to engage in vocational training,” according to court records."
ReplyDeleteJust another successful outcome from "counseling" programs!
He needs another 25 years of counseling - behind bars.
at a bargain price of $45,000 a year, paid by taxpayers to corporate "corrections" facilities? I agree that this counseling program was clearly a failure, but can't subscribe to this idiot costing taxpayers over a million bucks in prison rent. I believe in the idea of rehabilitation and separation from society, but it's become a for-profit industry, which is totally sick.
DeleteNot funny living in our town that has become the ghetto. Ironically this delinquent is close friends with the likes of the other gang thug wannabees... Do we see a trend?? The honest folks sure are dwindling in this town!
ReplyDeleteit's too bad he wasn't in Florida; home invasions have gone down considerably since they passed the "domain" act making it legal to shoot an intruder. -- Perhaps the judge who gave this goon a slap on the wrist needs to be held accountable as an accessory to the crimes!
ReplyDeleteThe law you're speaking of is known as the Castle Doctrine.
DeletePoor little Sparrow. Fell out of the nest. Wanta be in a bird program ?
ReplyDeleteI suggest the SKEET program for the lot of ya low life crooks.
(Just have a seat on this spring loaded gizzmo.)
A sincere thank you to SPD for their quick response, pursuit and apprehension of Adam Currier. An element that if removed from this Earth would benefit everyone, including his illegitimate child.
ReplyDeleteUnfortunately again we see how liberal judges and do-gooders are content to unleash the likes of Adam Currier on the community while they profit from a taxpayer funded sham masking as rehabilitation. Would hope reporter Francis would do a follow up and address exactly who is profiting from this "Sparrow Program."
you're not wrong, but imprisonment also costs billions and is a for-profit industry. There's no cheap OR effective solution to this problem. Leashing this character or letting him play contrite - either way, the taxpayers pay.
DeleteJust check out the judges' pay scale and you'll see that they needn't worry about the lowlife elements that they unleash back onto society. Their generous government pay allows them to live in exclusivity, free from the likes of the dregs they slap on the wrist and release. High time taxpayers demand pay reforms for all government positions because we are NOT getting what we pay for. We're getting screwed.
ReplyDeleteLook at it this way: if he were flipping burgers for $8.25 an hour and went to the slammer for 5 years, he’d lose $61,500. But if he flipped burgers for the now-sought wage of $15 an hour, he’d lose $112,000. Also, at $15 an hour, he’d have money to spend on the good things in life, which $8.25 doesn’t allow a single person. Employability has a lot to do with keeping young men straight.
ReplyDeleteAs it is, he apparently has no job that provides him with any money or incentive to stay straight. We actually make it easier for people like him to make better (better for the rest of us, anyway) choices when we have good-paying jobs.
If it was my house he broke into, he would be working on healing from gun shot wounds.
DeleteChuck, maybe if he got an education and EARNED what he was worth he wouldn't need an $8.25 an hour job. I am positive that you would be the first person who went to McDonalds and complained about the price of the new burgers because they HAVE to raise prices to pay for the new wages.
DeleteNow THERE'S some quality thinking: raise the minimum wage to $15 an hour, and there's no further incentive for the likes of Mr. Currier to commit B&Es and steal. The last post from Mr. Currier on his Facebook page reads thusly: "Chillin wit tha boys tonight gettin drunk!!!" And 5 of his FB friends "like" that post. Apparently he's making enough money to buy booze. No question, raise the minimum wage, and he'll decide to become a Model Citizen. Somebody get that kid an application to become a member of the Rotary Club!
ReplyDeleteChuck, your "good paying jobs" advocacy is merely a smokescreen for increasing the minimum wage, which results in reducing the number of jobs available because businesses can't pass on all of the increased costs associated with your heavy handed big government solutions. The fact of the matter in this case is the jackwad isn't losing anything because he probably either lacks a job (who'd hire a thief?) or he lacks the commitment and character to keep a job. Your warped logic is would be laughable if it didn't speak to a more insidious pattern of chronic mental illness sweeping the land.
ReplyDeleteThere are a lot of people who learn that when they break the law, it hits them too hard in the pocketbook. One author of a book about serial killers mentioned that their mental profile is so common we should be surprised that there aren't tens of thousands of them in America. Clearly, people with this profile by and large have learned to control the impulse-- and certainly someone who realizes that he's going to be losing over $100K while he's in jail might be influenced to stay straight.
ReplyDeleteWhen you have nothing to lose, the place Currier seems to be, what's to stop you from criminality?
As for minimum wage, it is known that Wal-Mart pays so little that each one of its stores costs the community $905,000 in taxpayer-funded services. Raising the wage to $15 an hour in Wal-Mart would mean an average increase for shoppers of $0.42-- forty-two cents-- per visit. Remember, Springfield was a great place for retail businesses when floor sweepers in the shops were making the equivalent of $130,000 in 2011 dollars.
I love your smoke and mirrors...
DeleteMost people who get an adequate pay prefer to stay honest and well-behaved.
DeleteMost people who are honest and well behaved, prefer not to go to jail. Cut the government hand outs, cut the support to the bums and let them rot in jail.
Delete10:35 spot on. We spend more money rehabbing these people for no reason. They just offend again and again. Put them away with no luxuries so its actually like prison and they won't want to go back!!
Deletesome people are motivated by the prospect of a little extra money to be honest and well behaved, just as some people are motivated by the prospect of a lot of money to be criminal. Since it costs about $28,000 a year to let them rot in jail, why don't we just execute them all? What should be the lowest-level offense deserving capital punishment? Shoplifting? Child abuse? Road rage?
DeleteAll of the above! If you can't follow the law there should be harsh penalties. It will cut down considerably the amount of crimes Commited. Look at other countries with harsh punishment. It seems to work.
Delete12:24, it's not the harshness of the punishment that is most effective; it's the shortness of time between the offense and the adjudication. Social scientists have recently proposed that the maximum effectiveness of jail time in changing behaviors is six years. And as for other countries with "harsh punishment," I'd appreciate it if you'd produce recidivism rates for them and for the enlightened countries, such as Norway, Sweden, Denmark, England, France and Switzerland.
DeletePERFECT SOLUTION: Chuck Gregory can adopt this offender, allowing him to work as his handyman while paying him a $15 per hour minimum wage and placing him on his insurance policy until he reaches the age of 26.
ReplyDelete11:23, "Freedom's just another word for nothing left to lose." When you know you can't make the money to get what you need or want, you're free to screw up as much as you want to. When you know your income will make the good life possible, you think more carefully about how you want to behave...
Delete"Freedom's just another word for nothing left to lose". Really?
DeleteThis is from a 1970's Janis Joplin song and we all know how her life turned out. Alcohol, drugs and over indulgence.
Sorry, but that's life imitating Art, Kate...
Delete"Me and Bobbi McGee was written, if I remember correctly, by Fred Shields and Kris Kristofferson.
Kristofferson was a brilliant student, good enough that he was selected to be a Rhodes Scholar, after which he joined the Air Force, became an officer and and then after duty at the War College was a classroom instructor (I believe in math) at West Point.
At some point in his military career he visited Nashville and decided to devote his life to the world of popular music. He left the Air Force and took the plunge.
He's still alive and still doesn't have to fall back on a day job.
Janis was already on the personal skids when she recorded that song.
You could look it up. Meanwhile, you might want to re-think what "Freedom's just another word for nothing left to lose" means to somebody who has nothing to lose.
Utopia for $15 an Hour by Chuck Gregory - now available at your local United Electrical, Radio and Machine Workers headquarters. Don't let the "CLOSED" sign fool you. Just use the secret knock and we'll gladly answer and provide you a copy of this latest fictional account of curing all the world's ills!
ReplyDeleteMaby he should go to jail and stay their for a while
ReplyDelete