Red sox boston hafiz rahim




















Usaamah Rahim, 26, of Boston's Roslindale neighborhood was shot and killed on June 2, by members of the Joint Terrorism Task Force after allegedly lunging at investigators with a knife when they approached him and about recorded phone conversations.

Rahim was armed with a large, military-style knife and posed the threat of death or serious bodily injury to the task force officers," Suffolk County District Attorney Daniel Conley said at a Wednesday afternoon media briefing. Rahim allegedly plotted with two others to behead conservative blogger Pamela Geller, who organized a Prophet Muhammad cartoon contest in Texas.

They abandoned that plot in favor of one where they attacked police officers. The FBI said they confronted Rahim because he had bought knives and talked of an imminent attack on "boys in blue. Rahim," Conley said. The two other men - Nicholas Rovinski of Warwick, Rhode Island, and David Wright of Everett, Massachusetts - were indicted on conspiracy and terrorism charges in connection with the alleged plot and are being held without bail.

In a page opinion written by Justice David Lowy, the high court ruled that while the FBI file is indeed a public record, 21 entries in the file need not be turned over because they fell under an exemption for records containing sensitive information that would disclose confidential techniques and sources.

The court sent the case back to the Superior Court, saying the district attorney should provide more details regarding the contents of the 18 remaining FBI entries so the judge could determine whether they were also exempted. Those agencies cannot skirt the public records law by calling them a loan, which would have opened the door to a lot of mischief that goes far beyond this individual case.

They kill, and then they want qualified immunity. Hanna Krueger can be reached at hanna. But even with these restrictions, when the Sox reported to camp earlier this month, Manager Ron Roenicke was optimistic. Made the staff feel good, front office and certainly the players," he said.

First the pandemic hit the country. Then a labor dispute between players and owners nearly derailed the season entirely. That conflict got resolved, but Collins says questions still linger, including whether players and staff will be safe and whether coronavirus tests in high demand should be used on baseball teams. I love baseball. My job partially depends on baseball happening," he said. Baseball is back.

There willll still be a pitcher, a batter and a catcher. Four infielders. Three outfielders. One ball.

After months of shutdowns, social distancing and stress, the Red Sox are ready to play ball, to try to bring some normalcy to a summer that has been anything but. Esteban is a reporter for GBH News. Listen Red Sox Home Opener.



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