Christopher Knight, 47, who lived in the Maine woods for nearly three decades, will officially enter a special court for counseling Wednesday.
September 2013
Money sunk into burned Maine sub shows challenges for leaner Navy
The nuclear sub was severely damaged by a fire set by a Maine shipyard worker in May 2012.
Farmington duo pleads guilty after deal reached in drug death
Roy and Seth Gordon, of each face two years in prison in the morphine overdose death of Marilyn Rider, 52, Roy Gordon’s girlfriend.
Renowned architect to design arts center in Rockland
New York-based Toshiko Mori has a home in the midcoast and supervised the redesign of the interior of the Farnsworth Art Museum.
Court upholds slugger Barry Bonds’ conviction in steroids case
An appeals court finds that the baseball player’s response to a question during testimony in 2003 was ‘evasive’ and ‘misleading.’
Marathon bombing suspect’s friends plead not guilty
Three friends of Dzhokhar Tsarnaev enter their pleas to varied charges, including obstruction of justice and hindering the investigation.
U.N.: Report will show chemical weapons were used in Syria
The inspectors have a mandate to determine whether chemical weapons were used – and if so, what kind.
Witnesses in Maine trial say diabetes affected stalking suspect
A medical expert and family members of Benjamin Lee testify that he suffered from an altered mental state because of poorly managed diabetes.
Swan says she tried to bust contractor, but failed
Former Chelsea Selectwoman Carole Swan says her husband abused her for years, which led her to be fearful of powerful men, and that’s why she didn’t tell deputies about her sting of Frank Monroe
BUSHNELL ON BOOKS ‘Reese’s Leap’ and ‘A Flatlander’s Guide to Maine’
REESE’S LEAP: AN ISLAND MYSTERY By Darcy Scott Turtle Pond Press, 2013 218 pages, $14.95 ISBN 978-1-938883-34-7 Gil Hodges, shameless boozer and world-class Lothario, thinks being stranded on a Maine island with five women is a pretty sweet deal, until he discovers they are all liars and at least one might be a killer. […]